Thomas Vincent Cator
Thomas Vincent Cator (23 March 1888 in Jersey City – 9 April 1931 in Carmel) was an American composer.
Biography
Thomas Vincent Cator was the son of Thomas Vincent Cator senior (1851-1920), a lawyer and politician who ran for office for the Populist Party in California in the late 19th century. He had a sister Marie, who became a writer and poet.
Thomas Vincent Cator became popular in the late 1910s and 1920s with his songs. A notable story was when renowned singer Eleonora de Cisneros sang his song "The Kiss" in a Liberty Bonds Sale in New York in early 1919 and received 43 million dollars for 43 kisses to bankers.[1] He also invented the Aura-Modal Scale, in which he composed several piano pieces.[2]
Compositions
- The Kiss, for voice and piano
- To Ramona, for voice and piano
- The pool of quietness, for voice and piano
- St. Moritz, for voice and piano[3]
- One Day, for voice and piano[3]
- Zamboanga, for voice and piano
- Clorinda sings, for voice and piano
- Three melodies for violin and piano
- Operetta Inchling (text by Rem Remsen)
- Violin sonata (1929)[4]
References
- Boston Pops Orchestra concert programs, concert from 2 July 1919, page 3, retrieved from archive.org on 06.06.2021
- Catalog of Copyright Entries 1930, Musical Composition, page 6; retrieved from archive.org on 06.01.2021
- "20th century violin concertante - Cator, Thomas Vincent". www.tobias-broeker.de.
- Recital Programs of the Curtis Institute for Music of the year 1929/30, program from 2 December 1929; retrieved from archive.org on 06.01.2021
External links
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