Mitsuko Uchida

Japanese-born British pianist and conductor
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Also known as: Dame Mitsuko Uchida
Quick Facts
In full:
Dame Mitsuko Uchida
Born:
December 20, 1948, Atami, Shizuoka, Japan
Also Known As:
Dame Mitsuko Uchida

Mitsuko Uchida (born December 20, 1948, Atami, Shizuoka, Japan) is a Japanese-born British classical pianist and conductor whose dynamic and emotional interpretations of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Franz Schubert, and Ludwig van Beethoven made her one of the leading classical musicians of her day.

Uchida was raised in the coastal town of Atami, about 60 miles (almost 100 km) southwest of Tokyo, the youngest of three children of a diplomat. She studied piano as a young child at her father’s behest, but her musical training began in earnest after her family moved to Vienna when Uchida was 12 years old. There she enrolled in the Vienna Academy of Music and took lessons with celebrated pianist Richard Hauser, giving her first recital at age 14. When her father’s job moved the family again, Uchida elected to stay behind in Vienna to continue her musical training and eventually became a student of Wilhelm Kempff and other famous pianists. She lived there for another decade, earning awards and recognition on the competition circuit, and moved to London in the early 1970s.

In the 1980s she made a name for herself, mostly by favourable word of mouth, as an interpreter of Mozart—having devoted much of her musical career to the study of not only his works but his life and times—and released a critically acclaimed set of recordings of his complete sonatas. She subsequently began expanding her repertoire with the works of other composers and gained renown for her recordings of Claude Debussy’s etudes, Schubert’s sonatas, and Beethoven’s concerti. Uchida was praised for her intelligent and thoughtful interpretations, to which she added her own deep musical and emotional insight. She served as a soloist and conductor (from the keyboard) with the English Chamber Orchestra (1985–86) and as artist in residence with the Cleveland Orchestra (2002–07) and the Berlin Philharmonic (2008–09), and she performed with orchestras all over the world.

Uchida was the recipient of many awards and honours for her work. She won a Grammy Award for best instrumental soloist (with orchestra) in 2011 and for best classical solo vocal album in 2017. In 2012 she received the Royal Philharmonic Society’s Gold Medal, one of the highest honours in the field of classical music, and in 2015 she was awarded the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale prize for music. Uchida also participated in music education for young artists as a codirector of Marlboro Music, a summer music program in Vermont. For her contributions to music, she was made an honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2001. She gained British citizenship shortly thereafter, and she was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 2009.

Alison Eldridge The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica