Lucio D. San Pedro
Lucio San Pedro | |
---|---|
Born |
Lucio D. San Pedro, Sr. February 11, 1913 Angono, Rizal, Philippine Islands |
Died |
March 31, 2002 89) Santa Teresita Hospital, Quezon City, Philippines | (aged
Resting place | Angono, Rizal |
Nationality | Filipino |
Other names | LSP |
Occupation | composer, teacher |
Known for | National Artist of the Philippines for Music, composer of hymns like Nuestro Padre Jesús Nazareno |
Spouse(s) | Gertrudes San Pedro (née Díaz) |
Children |
Rhodora San Pedro Bienvenido San Pedro Ma. Conchita San Pedro Ma. Cristina San Pedro Lucio San Pedro, Jr. |
Lucio D. San Pedro (February 11, 1913 – March 31, 2002) was a Filipino composer and teacher.
Career
San Pedro came from a family with musical roots and he began his career early. When he was still in his late teens, he succeeded his deceased grandfather as the local church organist. By then, he had already composed songs, hymns and two complete masses for voices and orchestra. After studying with several prominent musicians in the Philippines, he took advanced composition training with Bernard Wagenaar of the Netherlands. He also studied harmony and orchestration under Vittorio Giannini and took classes at Juilliard in 1947.
His other vocation was teaching. He has taught at the Ateneo de Manila University, virtually all the major music conservatories in Manila, and at the College of Music of the University of the Philippines, Diliman, where he retired as a full professor in 1978. He later received the title Professor Emeritus from the University in 1979. He also became a faculty member of the Centro Escolar University Conservatory of Music in Manila.
National Artist
On May 9, 1991, President Corazon C. Aquino proclaimed San Pedro a National Artist of the Philippines for Music.[1]
Personal Life
He married Gertrudes San Pedro with whom he had five children: Rhodora, Bienvenido, María Conchita, María Cristina and Lucio, Jr.
Death
San Pedro died of cardiac arrest on March 31, 2002 in Quezon City, at the age of 89. Many peers from the Order of National Artists attended his tribute at the Tanghalang Pambansa, including: Napoleón Abueva, Daisy Avellana, Leonor Gokingco, Nick Joaquín, Arturo Luz, José Maceda, and Andrea Veneración. He is buried in his hometown of Angono, Rizal.
Notes
- ↑ National Commission for Culture and the Arts. (n.d.). National Artists of the Philippines. Manila: National Commission for Culture and the Arts.