Claudio José Domingo Brindis de Salas Garrido (4 August 1852 – 1 June 1911) was a Cuban concert violinist.
In 1864 he toured with his father and his brother José del Rosario in the Cuban cities of Matanzas, Cárdenas, Cienfuegos and Güines; in 1869 to Veracruz, México.
[4] Claudio composed a few works, but he was primarily a concert performer, and to judge from critical notices, one of the best in the world at that time.
Alejo Carpentier called him "the most extraordinary of the black musicians of the nineteenth century... an unprecedented case in the musical history of the continent".
[5] The French government made him a member of the Légion d'Honneur, and the German Kaiser gave him the title of "Baron de Salas".