THE CUATRO PROJECT PERSONNEL
A deep commitment to our traditional music
Founding members Juan Sotomayor is co-founder of the Puerto Rican Cuatro Project. His function is to conduct and collect oral history interviews; compile musical field recordings; investigator of published and archived sources; collector of recovered photographs and creator of an extensive archive of new photographs; and finally creator of a historic chronology of the cuatro, its music and craft. Juan Sotomayor was born in New York City in 1940 of Puerto Rican parents. Until his recent retirement, Juan was a prize-winning photographer living in New Jersey and working on the New York Times staff since 1966. He is also an accomplished guitarist and cuatrista, previously a member of numerous professional groups, having recorded for the Ansonia label in 1957. Currently, he lives in Moca, Puerto Rico and is devoted full-time to the Cuatro Project, completing work on an upcoming textbook on the national instrument, and after that commencing work on a series of teaching methods for the instrument CONTACT JUAN SOTOMAYOR |
Juan Sotomayor was the first Puerto Rian photographer to be employed by the New York Times. He is now retired--a resident of Moca, Puerto Rico, and works full time for the Cuatro Project.
Our head researcher Juan Sotomayor recorded on the Ansonia label in 1955 as first guitar for the Trio Los Duques (at left) The trio members were: Juan Sotomayor, Filo del Moral and Vitín Pagán. Listen to two recordings made by Juan and theTrio Los Duques in 1955
|
William Cumpiano is co-founder of the Puerto Rican Cuatro Project. To date, his function has been as organizer and transcriber of the graphic and textual materials, and as facilitator, conceptualizer and coordinator of the project. William Richard Cumpiano was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 1945. He has lived in Western Massachusetts for the last eighteen years. After graduating with a bachelor in Industrial Design from Pratt Institute in New York City in 1968, he worked for several years in New York as a professional furniture designer. During this time he met master guitarmaker Michael Gurian, under whom he apprenticed as a guitarmaker. In 1974, he opened his own guitarmaking studio in Massachusetts. He has been been a professional guitarmaker and teacher of his craft since then, currently in Northampton, Massachusetts. William's guitarmaking webpage here. Wilfredo Echevarria is an expert in media communications, who has directed numerous important projects for the Puerto Rican Cuatro Project, including the video documentary NUESTRO CUATRO, Volumes 1 and 2, and a series of short features. You can communicate with Wilfredo Echevarria here. Project members and associates is a foremost expert in the field of vintage jíbaro music recordings, and owner of one of the largest--if not the largest--private collections of early and modern recordings of traditional Puerto Rican music. His seminal research on the lives and work of some of Puerto Rico's most admired traditional singers includes an important work on the history and career of the great poet-singer Chuíto el de Cayey--until that point, a life shrouded in mystery and destined for oblivion-- which was published in the annual journal, La Canción Popular. David is deeply involved with the Puerto Rican community, being past president of El Jogorio de Massachusetts, a Boston non-profit agency which trains young Latinos to become leaders, the Bowdoin College Alumni Council, and is an active member of the Golden Fleece Masonic Temple, a service organization. David Morales lives in Lynn, with his wife Samanda and son Anthony. You can contact David Morales here.
Myriam Fuentes is an outstanding media specialist, writer, researcher and historian who has been invited to join the Cuatro Project team to assist in the preparation and realization of educational materials for the Project. She directs her own media production company and directed the recent Cuatro Project video documentary titled "The Decima of Borinquen." She is currently working on the organization and editing on the Cuatro Project textbook, "Searching for the Puerto Rican Cuatro" which covers the history and development of the family of traditional stringed instruments of Puerto Rico. You can communicate with Myriam Fuentes here.
Carlos Flores the polifacetic writer, photographer, historian, cultural promoter and community organizer is also Chicago coordinator for the Puerto Rican Cuatro Project. You can reach Carlos Flores here. The web page, Puerto Rican Chicago features his life and work.
Luis Torres was born in Santurce, Puerto Rico. He graduated from Central High School and left the island to study for his B.A. at Muhlenberg College, Allentown, Pennsylvania. After three years of military service, he pursued graduate studies at the University of Minnesota, where he earned both an M.A. and Ph.D. in modern European history, with a specialty in the history of Germany in the 19th and 20th centuries. After several years as a history professor, he accepted a position in Washington, D.C. with the National Geographic Society. He filled various posts at the society. His last position before retirement was as regional editor for the U.S. Southwest and Mexico on the staff of National Geographic TRAVELER magazine. In retirement, he moved to San Antonio, Texas, where he continued working as a freelance writer and editor. Torres has carried out several oral history projects under contract with the National Park Service and has written two books about San Antonio’s Spanish colonial missions, one about the history of the missions and the other an oral history of the missions. Torres states that “as a project of his old age” he began studying the cuatro. With several friends, he organized ECOS DE PUERTO RICO, a cuatro orchestra, which he directs. ECOS has achieved great success in San Antonio and the southern region of Texas. To contact Torres by e-mail, use
|
Project coordinator William Cumpiano is a full time guitar-making artisan and author of the widely-used guitarmaking textbook, GUITARMAKING
Cultural researcher David Morales (right) examines the personal collection of old 78 rpm records of the legendary bolero singer and guitarist Efraín Berrios, during a visit to his home in Carolina PR.
Carlos Flores, Chicago coordinator for the Cuatro Project
|
Support personnel
Néstor Hérnandez, professor University of Puerto Rico
Gustavo Batista, professor University of Puerto Rico
Nestor Murray Irizarry, Folkloric researcher, lecturer
Graciela Quiñones Rodriguez, instrument maker
Roberto Rivera, microbiologist, cuatro-maker, cuatrista
Benjamin Lapidus, ethnomusicologist, tresista
Ramón Gómez, architect and musician
Participating Consultants
The following have shared their time and stories to make the Cuatro Project knowledge base grow.
MUSICIANS Joaquín Rivera Family Norberto Cales Family Maso Rivera (deceased) Yomo Toro Pedro Guzmán Efraín Ronda (deceased) Edwin Colón Zayas Emma Colón Zayas Nieves Quintero Modesto Nieves Sarraíl Archilla Elba Lugo Gladys Jiménez José González Alvin Medina Roque Navarro (deceased) Ismael Santiago Tulio Kercadó |
Neri Orta Jim Pérez Nicanor Zayas José Pérez Totín Vale Tito Báez (deceased) Millito Cruz Tuto Feliciano Tony Rivera Paco Marrero Pancho Cintrón Pedro Guerrero Paul Kaplan US Bob Zentz US |
MAKERS PR Rosendo Acosta Family Familia Franquiz descendientes] Miguel Méndez Eugenio Méndez (deceased) Miguel Acevedo Antonio Rodríguez Navarro Julio Negrón Jorge Santiago Mendoza Jaime Alicea Efraín Ronda (deceased) Juan Reyes Torres José Reyes (deceased) José Pérez Eleuterio Quiñones Epifanio Valentin Vicente Valentín Cristobal Santiago Heriberto Rivera Felix Haddock Fidencio Díaz |
USA: José Rivera, MA, Tito Báez, NY (deceased) Natividad Tirado, DE Andrea Restivo, NJ Marcos Matías, NJ Diómedes Matos, NJ Vicente Esteves, NJ Roberto Rivera, NJ |
ACADEMICS/ RESEARCHERS/ COLLECTORS
Roberto Márquez
Francisco Lluch
Jose Manuel Dufrasne
Ratito Prieti
Marcelino Canino
Ricardo Alegría
Mario Ramos
Phil Skyler
Walter Murray Chiesa
Ted Solis
Héctor Vega Druet
Cristóbal Diaz Ayala
Gustavo Batista
Juan Carlos Montalvo
Amilcar Tirado, film maker (deceased)
E. Cruz Andino
Edgardo Delgado Figueroa
Michael Kasha
Pedro Malavet Vega
Henry Geddes