Bautista, Julián
Bautista, Julián
Bautista, Julián, Spanish composer; b. Madrid, April 21, 1901; d. Buenos Aires, July 8, 1961. He studied violin with Julio Francés, piano with Pilar Fernández de la Mora, and composition with Conrado del Campo at the Madrid Cons., where he taught during the Spanish Civil War. After Madrid fell in 1939, Bautista fled to Argentina, where he was on the faculty of the National Cons, of Buenos Aires. His music, delicately colored and rhythmically robust, invariably reflected Spanish folk melodies.
Works
Juerga, ballet (1921); Colores, 6 piano pieces (1922); Sonatina for String Trio (1924); Obertura para una ópera grotesca for Orch. (1932); Tres ciudades for Voice and Orch. (1937); 4 poemas gallegos for Voice, Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Viola, Cello, and Harp (1946); 2 syms. (Sinfonia breve, 1956; 1957); 3 string quartets; songs.
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire