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Vivir Quintana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mexican singer and composer (born 1985)
Vivir Quintana
Born
Viviana Monserrat Quintana Rodríguez

(1985-09-17)September 17, 1985 (age 40)
Francisco I. Madero, Coahuila, Mexico
EducationEscuela Superior de Música,Escuela Normal Superior del Estado de Coahuila
Occupation(s)singer, interpreter
ParentGloria Rodríguez (mother)Tomás Quintana (father)

Vivir Quintana (bornViviana Monserrat Quintana Rodríguez; Francisco I. Madero, Coahuila; 1985) is a Mexican singer and composer. Quintana penned the song "Canción sin miedo", or Song without Fear, which has become a feminist hymn against gendered violence and femicide.[1]

Background

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Viviana Monserrat Quintana Rodríguez was born in Francisco I. Madero, Coahuila, Mexico in 1985 to Gloria Rodríguez, a retired educator in social sciences and geography and Tomás Quintana, a mathematics professor. She has two brothers.[2]

Quintana comes from a musical family, as her grandmother was also a singer but did not pursue in career in music due to opposition from her parents.[2] Quintana began to play the guitar when she was 12 years old; she was taught her first chords in a community park by a local carpenter.[3] At this same age, she became aware that she could sing when she performed the song Paloma Negra byTomás Méndez.

When she was 17 years old, Quintana began her academic studies at the Escuela Superior de Música in Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico. She also completed a bachelor's degree in Spanish at the Escuela Normal Superior del Estado de Coahuila. For three years, Quintana was a middle school Spanish teacher where she would use music as a pedagogical tool. During this time, she would also play in various bars.[4][2][3]

Musical career

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Quintana's music is a blend of Mexican Regional Music and folk music. She has composed more than 150 songs and has shared the stage with renowned singers such asArmando Manzanero, Mauricio Díaz Hueso, and Imma Serrano, among others. While Quintana's songs center around common themes such as love, her songs also speak on femicides, particularly those cases that have not yet achieved justice. Quintana has stated that her creative process involves writing the music at the same time as writing the lyrics to her songs.[4][3][5]

In 2004, Quintana was selected to represent Mexico in the International Festival of the Arts in Europe: Belgium, Italy, and the Netherlands.[3]

Quintana is one of the founders of the project Las Hijas de Libertina Hernández, a collective that seeks to amplify the voices and works of female singers and artists.[6][3]

Quintana has also completed the project "Rosita Alvirez, maté a Hipólito", with support from thePrograma de Estímulo a la Creación y Desarrollo Artístico of Coahuila, which is a series of corridos told in first-person that speak to the cases of women who killed their aggressors in self-defense.[7][8]

In 2020, she was listed in Forbes México's 100 Creative Mexicans for her musical works.[9] In 2024, she was presented with theLeading Ladies of Entertainment award bythe Latin Recording Academy.[10]

Canción Sin Miedo

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Main article:Canción sin miedo

Vivir Quintana composed "Canción sin miedo" as a commission fromMon Laferte, who was scheduled for a performance in Mexico City on March 7, 2020, as part of the musical festival, "Tiempo de Mujeres, Festival por la Igualdad," in commemoration ofInternational Women's Day.[11][12] The song became viral before its public performance at the festival through the messaging app,WhatsApp.

Canción Sin Miedo was featured in the ending credits of the Netflix original documentary filmThe Three Deaths of Marisela Escobedo, which details the story ofMarisela Escobedo Ortiz, a mother from Ciudad Juárez who was murdered while seeking justice for the killing of her daughter, Rubí Frayre.[13]

Discography

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Singles

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  • Enamorada (2018)
  • La Casita de la Selva (2019)
  • Yo Te Espero (2019)
  • Huracán Kathy (2020)with Silvia Palumbo & Desbandadas
  • Canción Sin Miedo (2020)with Mon Laferte
  • No Estás Sola - Llamadas de Emergencia (2020)with Snowapple & El Palomar
  • Llora Llora (2021)with La Catrina Son System & Nana Mendoza

Compilations

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  • Yo Vengo a Ofrecer Mi Corazón (2020)as part of Las Voces de Latinoamérica
  • Gracias a La Vida (2020)as part of Las Voces de Latinoamérica

References

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  1. ^""Canción sin miedo": el himno de las protestas feministas que pone voz al dolor de mujeres en México".infobae (in European Spanish). 8 March 2021. Retrieved2021-03-19.
  2. ^abcChile, C. N. N."Vivir Quintana por "Canción sin miedo": "Yo digo que ya no es mía, que es de todas las compañeras que no están"".CNN Chile (in Spanish). Retrieved2021-03-18.
  3. ^abcdeValladares, M. (July 21, 2017).""Mi formación surgió de la necesidad de contar mi manera de entender el mundo": Vivir Quintana".La Union de Morelos. RetrievedMarch 18, 2021.
  4. ^ab"Vivir Quintana, la cantante de Coahuila que alza su voz contra el feminicidio".Vanguardia MX (in Spanish). Retrieved2021-03-18.
  5. ^Vivir Quintana con Adela Micha, retrieved2021-03-19
  6. ^"Hijas de Libertina Hernández".Twitter. RetrievedMarch 18, 2021.
  7. ^Embargo, Redacción / Sin (5 October 2019)."Vivir Quintana, la joven cantante que levanta su voz y guitarra contra los feminicidios en México".SinEmbargo MX (in Spanish). Retrieved2021-03-18.
  8. ^quimeras, Autor Voces de (2020-10-28)."La lucha feminista de Vivir Quintana a través de la música".Voces de quimeras (in European Spanish). Archived fromthe original on 2021-06-23. Retrieved2021-03-19.
  9. ^Escamilla, Viridiana Mendoza (2020-12-14)."Vivir Quintana, la canción de protesta que dio la vuelta al mundo".Forbes México (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved2021-03-18.
  10. ^Garcia, Thania (15 October 2024)."Julieta Venegas, Vivir Quintana, Diana Rodríguez and Ana Rosa Santiago Named Latin Recording Academy's Leading Ladies of Entertainment".Variety. Retrieved16 April 2025.
  11. ^""Canción sin miedo", el himno feminista mexicano contra los feminicidios que retumbó en el Zócalo y en la marcha".CNN (in Spanish). 2020-03-09. Retrieved2021-03-18.
  12. ^"Vivir Quintana, la mujer que canta sin miedo y contra la violencia de género".ADNPolítico (in Spanish). 2020-11-25. Retrieved2021-03-18.
  13. ^Las tres muertes de Marisela Escobedo | Un himno de Vivir Quintana, retrieved2021-03-19

External links

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