Shinichi Suzuki was born in Nagoya, Japan, on October
17, 1898. He was the son of a violin maker and grew up in
his father's factory. When hearing a recording of the
famous violinist Misha Elman, Suzuki was inspired to learn
the instrument. He spent months studying the recordings of
Misha Elman, attempting to imitate the sounds he had heard.
This began his training as a violinist. When he was older,
Suzuki studied violin for 8 years in Germany and returned
to Japan as an accomplished and celebrated performer. In
Japan, he was appointed as a violinist to the Imperial
Court and he formed the Suzuki Quartet with his brothers.
When Suzuki was asked by a man to teach his young son,
Suzuki started to ponder the ways to teach music to
children. He was struck by the seemingly obvious
realization that children in Germany spoke German fluently,
while children in Japan spoke Japanese fluently. Although
these languages are vastly different, it occurred to him
that children were able to learn their mother tongue with
ease, with little regard to the relative complexity of each
language. He noted that it all boiled down to the
environment in which the child lives. A child raised in a
household that speaks Japanese will learn to speak
Japanese, while a child raised in a household speaking
German will learn German.
Suzuki began to apply these observations to the teaching of
children. Suzuki started with the idea that all children
can learn if the environment is conducive to learning. He
exposed his students to recordings of the masters and
encouraged his students to imitate what they heard and what
they saw in their lessons. After World War II, Suzuki went
to Matsumoto, Japan to help start a music school. He spent
the remainder of his career concentrating on teaching. His
movement and philosophies became known as Talent Education
(or as Dr. Suzuki translated it, Ability Development) and
the Suzuki Method.
In 1964 Suzuki introduced his style of teaching to the
United States. Since then, Suzuki's training philosophies
and methodologies have slowly been gaining a following here
and around the world.
Dr. Suzuki died on January 27, 1998.