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Dan W. Quinn (1859 – November 7, 1938) was one of the first American singers to become popular in...

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Dan W. Quinn (1859 – November 7, 1938) was one of the first American singers to become popular in the new medium of recorded music. Quinn was a very successful recording artist whose recording career spanned 1892 to 1918. Quinn recorded many of his hits in the legendary "Tin Pan Alley" of New York City. Dan W. Quinn was born in 1859 in San Francisco, California. There he began singing in an Episcopal choir as a child. As an adult, he was a performer on the Vaudeville stage. In January 1892, Quinn made his first recording in New York City and quickly achieved success. During Quinn's recording career, he scored 34 top ten hits. As was custom at the time, Quinn was not tied exclusively to any one record company. He recorded for all the major record labels of his day, including Berliner, Columbia, Edison, Gramophone, Paramount and Victor. Quinn himself estimated cutting some 2,500 titles during his recording career. Quinn retired from recording in 1906. He briefly returned to recording in 1915 to 1918, but went back into retirement soon after. Dan Quinn died of intestinal cancer in New York on November 7, 1938 at age 79. In those early days of recording, the songs were pressed onto tin

Created by: Freebase Data Team Jul 28, 2007
Last edited by: Freebase Data Team Jul 28, 2007

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