Joaquín Nin
Joaquín Nin | |
---|---|
Born | Joaquín Nin y Castellanos 29 September 1879 |
Died | 24 October 1949 Havana, Republic of Cuba | (aged 70)
Spouse | Rosa Culmell |
Children |
|
Joaquín Nin y Castellanos[a] (29 September 1879 – 24 October 1949)[1] was a Cuban pianist and composer. Nin was the father of Anaïs Nin.
Biography
[edit]He was son of the Catalan writer Joaquin Nin Tudó and Àngela Castellanos Perdomo, a Cuban from Camagüey.[2] Nin studied piano with Moritz Moszkowski and composition at the Schola Cantorum (where he taught from 1906 to 1908). He toured as a pianist and was known as a composer and arranger of popular Spanish folk music. Nin was a member of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando of Madrid and the French Legion of Honor.[3]
Married since 1902 with the Cuban singer Rosa Culmell, they were the parents of writer Anaïs Nin, businessman Thorvald Nin, and composer Joaquín Nin-Culmell.
Joaquín Nin appears as one of the characters in the novel The Island of Eternal Love (Riverhead, 2008), by Cuban writer Daína Chaviano.
Memory
[edit]In her memoirs and fiction, his daughter Anaïs Nin often attempts to consider aspects of her own nature by recalling how her father treated her as a child. Her "unexpurgated" diary volume Incest: From a Journal of Love describes an incestuous relationship with him in adulthood. She described him as an egotistical Don Juan and would often imitate him by affecting a "Doña Juana" persona.
Notes
[edit]- ^ In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Nin and the second or maternal family name is Castellanos.
References
[edit]- ^ Latin American Classical Composers. A biographical dictionary. First edition. Edited by Miguel Ficher, Martha Furman Schleifer, and John M. Furman.
- ^ «Joaquim Nin i Castellanos». L'Enciclopèdia.cat. Barcelona: Grup Enciclopèdia Catalana.
- ^ Taylor, Deems. "Dictionary of Musicians". Music Lovers' Encyclopedia. 4th ed. 1950. Important works for Violin and Piano: Seguida Española (Vieja Castilla, Murciana, Catalana, Andaluza), En el Jardin de Lindaraja.
External links
[edit]
- 1879 births
- 1949 deaths
- Musicians from Havana
- Cuban people of Catalan descent
- Schola Cantorum de Paris alumni
- Academic staff of the Schola Cantorum de Paris
- Piano educators
- Spanish classical pianists
- Male classical pianists
- Spanish composers
- Spanish male composers
- Cuban classical pianists
- Cuban composers
- Cuban male composers
- Cuban people of French descent
- Cuban male musicians
- North American composer stubs