Seiji Ozawa

Japanese conductor
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Quick Facts
Born:
September 1, 1935, Hoten, Manchukuo [now in China]
Died:
February 6, 2024, Tokyo, Japan (aged 88)

Seiji Ozawa (born September 1, 1935, Hoten, Manchukuo [now in China]—died February 6, 2024, Tokyo, Japan) was a groundbreaking conductor especially noted for his energetic style and his sweeping performances of 19th-century Western symphonic works. He had a long career in Europe and North America—most notably as music director for the Boston Symphony Orchestra—while maintaining strong ties to his native Japan.

Ozawa was born to Japanese parents in Manchukuo, created by imperial Japan in China during the 1930s. His family later moved to mainland Japan, where he showed interest in Western music as a child and hoped to become a pianist. At age 16 he sustained injuries to his hands and turned to conducting, studying with Hideo Saito at the Toho School in Tokyo.

After conducting with the NHK (Nippon Hōsō Kyōkai, or Japan Broadcasting System) Symphony Orchestra of Japan and the Japanese Philharmonic, in 1959 Ozawa went to Europe, where he won the Besançon International Conductors’ Competition. During the following summer he traveled to the United States and studied with Charles Munch at the Berkshire Music Center in Massachusetts (now Tanglewood Music Center). There he won the Koussevitzky Prize, awarded to the best student conductor.

Ozawa was music director of the Ravinia Festival in Chicago from 1964 to 1968, of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra from 1965 to 1969, and of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra from 1970 to 1976. For an extraordinarily long period—from 1973 to 2002—Ozawa served as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. In 1998 he described his feelings toward Boston in an interview with the Boston Globe: “My house is there, my study, my life’s work. I understand that Boston people feel I am their partner, and I also feel at home there. BSO and I are like family now.… But I never lost my contact with Japan, because I am really Japanese—and not just because I like Japanese food or drink.”

During his time with the BSO, Ozawa was also guest conductor for major opera and symphony orchestras around the world. In 1984 he established the Saito Kinen Orchestra to honor his teacher at the Toho School, and in 1992 he cofounded the Saito Kinen Festival in Matsumoto, Japan.

Ozawa was principal conductor of the Vienna State Opera from 2002 to 2010. Early in 2010 he underwent surgery for esophageal cancer, which forced him to retreat from the public stage for the better part of the year. He made his return to public performance at the Saito Kinen Festival that September, conducting the opening movement for each of four orchestral programs. Ongoing health issues continued to severely restrict his performance schedule, but he nonetheless made occasional appearances, notably at the Saito Kinen Festival, which was renamed the Seiji Ozawa Matsumoto Festival in his honor in 2015.

Ozawa’s discussions with Japanese author Haruki Murakami were published in 2016 as Absolutely on Music: Conversations with Seiji Ozawa. He was nominated for several Grammy Awards, winning for best opera recording for Ravel: L’Enfant et les sortilèges; Shéhérazade (2015; “The Bewitched Child; Shéhérazade”). In 2011 Ozawa received the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale prize for music. He was named a Kennedy Center honoree in 2015.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by J.E. Luebering.