Japan's Seiji Ozawa, one of world's best-known conductors, dead at 88
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[February 09, 2024]
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Seiji Ozawa, one of the best-known
orchestra conductors of his generation, died on Tuesday of heart failure
at the age of 88, public broadcaster NHK announced on Friday.
Ozawa, who was born in China, spent decades in the rarefied atmosphere
of top orchestras around the world but wore baseball-themed ties to
interviews and preferred to be called by his first name, not "maestro".
His bushy hair and smile charmed audiences, especially in the United
States, where his tenure as music director of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra spanned nearly three decades.
In 2020, Boston proclaimed his birthday, Sept. 1, "Seiji Ozawa Day",
prompting a pleased Ozawa to remark that Boston was his second home.
"That was a really important time in my life," he was quoted as saying.
"No matter where I go, Boston is a part of my heart."
Years later, back in Tokyo, the unpretentious Ozawa was sometimes
spotted on subway platforms dressed in a jacket and cap of his beloved
Boston Red Sox baseball team and would stop to chat to admirers.
"I'm the complete opposite of a genius, I have always had to make an
effort," he told a 2014 news conference.
"I don't really like studying, but I had to do it if I wanted to make
music. Anybody with genius can easily do better than me."
A stint with the Vienna State Opera was overshadowed by ill health,
including a diagnosis of oesophageal cancer in 2010, the year he left.
He later had surgery for a back injury and suffered bouts of pneumonia,
which often kept him sidelined but failed to dent his enthusiasm.
"I will continue doing everything I have always done, teaching and
conducting orchestra, until I die," Ozawa told Reuters in a December
2013 interview, at which he wore a Boston Red Sox baseball tie and black
jacket.
LOOKING AHEAD
The down time had advantages by freeing him to study music, talk with
friends, such as best-selling Japanese author Haruki Murakami, and to
think, Ozawa said.
"I had always been looking ahead, since if you don't forget the piece
you conducted at one day's concert you can't prepare for the next," he
wrote in a 2014 essay for the Nikkei newspaper.
"I had never reflected on the past. There had simply never been enough
time."
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Japan's maestro Seiji Ozawa gestures during a news conference in
Tokyo December 19, 2013. REUTERS/Yuya Shino/File Photo
The third in a family of four boys,
Ozawa was born in Shenyang, China, in 1935 where his father, a
dentist, had settled. They later moved to Beijing.
His mother, a Christian, took him to church to sing hymns, and the
family sang at home, sometimes accompanied by one of his brothers on
an accordion.
"That was how I met music," he wrote later.
The family returned to Japan in 1941, taking only some clothes, an
album of pictures and the accordion, and Ozawa began learning piano.
When he sprained his finger playing rugby and could not continue, he
switched to conducting.
In 1959, Ozawa set out for Europe on a cargo ship, taking two months
to reach France, where he was determined to test his skills at a
young conductors' competition in Besancon.
He won, opening doors around the world and allowing him to work with
greats such as Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein.
Stints in Toronto, San Francisco and Singapore followed. In 1973 he
became director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, starting a 29-year
relationship.
A rabid sports fan, Ozawa's heart was in Boston with the Red Sox,
the New England Patriots football team and basketball's Celtics.
Though Ozawa devoted time to teaching - in Boston, he held weekly
classes for children, who all called him "Seiji" - his passion was
for nurturing classical music in Japan, where he set up a summer
music festival in the city of Matsumoto named for Hideo Saito, his
first mentor.
The festival became such a success that music fans flocked to the
city in the mountains and even taxi drivers became well-versed in
classical music.
Ozawa has two grown children. His daughter, Seira, is an author and
his son, Yukiyoshi, an actor.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Gareth
Jones)
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