JOSE IGNACIO QUINTON (1881-1925)
Jose was born in Caguas, Puerto Rico. He was a composer and pianist who learned at a very young age from his father, Don Juan Bautista, who was a church organist and graduate of The Paris Conservatory. He was taught harmony, counterpoint, and composition. He was influenced by Spanish pianist Ernesto del Castillo and Puerto Rican composer, Angel Mislan. He had his first concert at age nine and at age eleven, he played piano accompaniment for famous violinist Brindis de Salas, who was impressed with the boy. Jose went on to teach instrumental music at Coamo Municipal Academy of Music and organized musical groups and a band. As a pianist, he was one of the first to perform Debussy, Ravel and Schoenberg in Puerto Rico. He elevated the danza to a level of concert music. He was a pioneer of his time, always looking for new sound, or "the music of the future" as he called it. His most popular and recognized piece is "El Coqui, " where he simulated the sound of a tiny frog found only in Puerto Rico on his instruments. After his death in 1925, the town of Coamo honored him by naming one of its' principal avenues after him and preserving his childhood home as an historical landmark. There is also The Quinton Academy of Music in Coamo named for him.
Discography
Amor Imposible
Cuarteto para instrumentos de cuerdas
Contia
El Coqui
Mi Estrella
Misa de Requiem
String Quartet in D
Varaciones
Bibliography
Oxford Music Online-Healy Library June 27, 2012
http://www.ladanza.com/quinton.htm#english
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