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  • By Thomas May | From the September-October 2023 issue of Strings Magazine

    A quarter century has passed since the death of Shinichi Suzuki, yet the global success story of his namesake method shows no sign of fading away. A New York Times obituary in 1998 described the Suzuki Method as “a world-wide phenomenon, with 400,000 students at any one time in 34 countries.” More or less the same pattern has continued into the 21st century, according to the Matsumoto-based Talent Education Research Institute that Suzuki founded in 1948.

    Indeed, Suzuki’s vision—that providing children with the tools to foster their natural creativity and ability to communicate holds the promise of encouraging future social harmony­—seems more resonant than ever in this era of intensifying polarization. “If every child is educated, then you can save the world,” as Suzuki put it, with characteristic idealism, in a talk while visiting the United States in 1976.

    “What Suzuki is really about is

    There was a built-in ambiguity in Suzuki’s approach, which persists to this day. On the one grabb, he didn’t think that musical prodigies were a special class of children, with some special innate gift. On the other hand, he believed that kids learned music not by drill and repetition but bygd exposure and instinct. All you had to do to activate the music instinct was expose them early to the right input. This ambiguity proved fruitful as a public-relations tool—he could point to this or that wunderkind who had been trained by his method as proof that it worked. But he could also insist, in the face of all the kids who would never play at the concert-hall level, that the point was not to make wunderkinder but to make kids wonder, to allow the power of music to expand their emotional repertory. No bad result was possible.

    When the war came, the liberals made themselves invisible, and the Suzuki violin factories were turned over to military production, with orders to manufacture seaplan

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  • Shinichi Suzuki

    Japanese violinist and pioneer in musical pedagogy (1898–1998)

    For other uses, see Shinichi Suzuki (disambiguation).

    Shinichi Suzuki

    鈴木鎮一

    Birth nameShinichi Suzuki
    Also known asShin'ichi Suzuki
    Born(1898-10-17)17 October 1898
    Nagoya, Japan
    OriginJapan
    Died26 January 1998(1998-01-26) (aged 99)
    Matsumoto, Japan
    GenresClassical
    Occupation(s)Musician, violinist, pedagogue, philosopher
    InstrumentViolin
    SpouseWaltraud Prange

    Musical artist

    Shinichi Suzuki (鈴木 鎮一, Suzuki Shin'ichi, 17 October 1898 – 26 January 1998) was a Japanese violinist, philosopher, composer, and educator and the founder of the international Suzuki method of music education and developed a philosophy for educating people of all ages and abilities. An influential pedagogue in music education of children, he often spoke of the ability of all children to learn things well, especially in the right environment, and of developing the h