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・ Antonio López (shipwreck)
・ Antonio López de Ayala Velasco y Cardeñas, Count of Fuensalida
・ Antonio López de Santa Anna
・ Antonio López Fajardo
・ Antonio López García
・ Antonio López Habas
・ Antonio López Herranz
・ Antonio López Muñoz, 1st Count of López Muñoz
・ Antonio López Ojeda
・ Antonio López-Istúriz White
・ Antonio Jackson de Oliveira Alcántara
・ Antonio Jacobsen
・ Antonio Jakoliš
・ Antonio James
・ Antonio James (disambiguation)
Antonio Janigro
・ Antonio Janni
・ Antonio Jasso
・ Antonio Jerkovic
・ Antonio Jesús López Nieto
・ Antonio Jesús Martín Gaitán
・ Antonio Jesús Regal Angulo
・ Antonio Jesús Seoane Ochoa
・ Antonio Jesús Vázquez Muñoz
・ Antonio Jiménez
・ Antonio Jiménez Rangel
・ Antonio Johnson
・ Antonio Joli
・ Antonio Jose Guzman
・ Antonio Joseph


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Antonio Janigro : ウィキペディア英語版
Antonio Janigro
Antonio Janigro (21 January 19181 May 1989) was an Italian cellist and conductor.
== Biography ==
Born in Milan, he began studying piano when he was six and cello when he was eight. Initially taught by Giovanni Berti, Janigro enrolled in the Verdi Conservatory of Milan, where he was instructed by Gilberto Crepax. By 1934 Janigro was studying under Diran Alexanian and Pablo Casals at the École Normale in Paris. He graduated from the school in 1934 and began performing solo and in recitals with Dinu Lipatti and Paul Badura-Skoda.
An unfortunately timed vacation in Yugoslavia left Janigro stranded in that country for the duration of World War II. He became a professor of cello and chamber music at the Zagreb Conservatory, where his influence developed modern cello playing in Yugoslavia. He also performed as part of the Maček-Šulek-Janigro Trio. At war's end Janigro travelled throughout South America and the Far East as a soloist. In 1959, he was Fritz Reiner's soloist, along with Milton Preves and John Weicher, in a renowned Chicago Symphony Orchestra recording of Strauss's ''Don Quixote''.
An extraordinarily gifted teacher, Janigro educated many cellists around the world. Most of them studied at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst Stuttgart and the Mozarteum Salzburg. Among his students were Julius Berger, Mario Brunello, Thomas Demenga, Michael Flaksman, Michael Groß, Antonio Meneses, Andrej Petrac, Mario de Secondi, Giovanni Sollima, Gustavo Tavares, Enrico Dindo and Christoph Theinert.
Janigro was a highly regarded conductor who led a symphony orchestra for Radio Zagreb and guest-conducted throughout Europe. The chamber orchestra I Solisti di Zagreb was created by Janigro, who lived the rest of his life in Zagreb, where he died in 1989.

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