Albums by Takako Nishizaki
ALBUMVivaldi: The Four SeasonsTakako Nishizaki, Capella Istropolitana & Stephen Gunzenhauser
ALBUMMozart: Violin Sonatas, K. 378, K. 376 and K. 296Takako Nishizaki
ALBUMHong Kong TV & Movie ClassicsTakako Nishizaki & Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra
ALBUMPopular Chinese Violin PiecesTakako Nishizaki, Siu Fan Chan & Kwok Kuen Koo
ALBUMDu Mingxin: 10 Xinjiang DancesTakako Nishizaki, Singapore Symphony Orchestra & Hoey Choo
ALBUMThe Song of Yang Guan: Ancient & Modern Chinese ClassicsTakako Nishizaki, Singapore Symphony Orchestra & Choo Hoey
ALBUMSuzuki Evergreens, Vol. 7Takako Nishizaki
ALBUMSuzuki Evergreens, Vol. 5Takako Nishizaki
ALBUMKraus: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, Olympie Overture, AzireNew Zealand Symphony Orchestra, Takako Nishizaki & Uwe Grodd
ALBUMVivaldi: The Four SeasonsCapella Istropolitana, Stephen Gunzenhauser & Takako Nishizaki
Artist Biography
Violinist Takako Nishizaki is perhaps the most frequently recorded concert violinist of the digital era. She was also the first violinist to learn by way of the Suzuki method; her father, Shinji Nishizaki, worked with Shinichi Suzuki in developing the method, and Takako Nishizaki took instruction from both teachers. She made her debut at the age of 9, and further studied with Broadus Erle, starting in Japan and later at Yale University. Nishizaki finished her violin studies at Juilliard under Joseph Fuchs and in 1967 won second prize in the Leventritt International competition behind Pinchas Zukerman.
One would surmise that with her talent and beauty that American record companies would be getting in each other's way to obtain Nishizaki's recording contract. But they weren't, and by 1974 Nishizaki settled in Hong Kong, where she established a career as the pre-eminent violin virtuoso on the Chinese concert circuit. This was no small feat, as in China they take the violin seriously and its literature is central to the entire establishment of Chinese classical music. Along the way Nishizaki met and married German businessman Klaus Heymann, founder of HNH International, the corporate parent to the popular classical label Naxos. Heymann sponsored Nishizaki in an extensive series of recordings of Chinese classical music on his Marco Polo label. Some of these recordings sold into the millions of copies in China, providing the nest egg that launched the Naxos label in the late 1980s.
With Naxos, Nishizaki has recorded much of the standard Western violin literature, as well, but has made a special mission of recording key violin literature that is known in concert and in the classroom, but seldom represented on records. The most celebrated example of this tendency is her recordings of the concertos of Chevalier de St-Georges, but it also includes her interpretations of Charles August de Bériot, Louis Spohr, and Joseph Joachim. All of Nishizaki's recordings are notable for her generous, singing tone; flexible rhythmic sensibility; her sense of architectural symmetry in regard to whole movements; her ability to excite; and the sheer beauty of Nishizaki's sound.
Hometown
Japan
Genre
Classical