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[Deathwatch] Genichi Kawakami, Japan's Piano Man and Motorbike King, 90
- Date: Sun, 26 May 2002 22:53:10 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Deathwatch Central <cdw@slick.org>
- Subject: [Deathwatch] Genichi Kawakami, Japan's Piano Man and Motorbike King, 90
Japan's Piano Man and Motorbike King Dies, Aged 90
Sun May 26, 7:31 AM ET
TOKYO (Reuters) - The man who made Japan's Yamaha a household name
around the world through an odd mix of musical instruments and
motorbikes, died Saturday at the age of 90, local media reported.
Genichi Kawakami, who shunned publicity despite his business success,
lived and died in the industrial town of Hamamatsu, 125 miles west of
Tokyo, where his two companies were based.
In 1950 Kawakami took over his father's musical instrument company,
which had been established in the 19th century, and developed it into
the world's largest maker of pianos, in the process helping to fuel a
music boom in Japan.
A visit to America and Europe in 1953 convinced Kawakami that the
recreational market had a bright future in Japan.
The company went on to make an extremely popular range of wind and
stringed instruments and also developed Japan's first electric organ,
the "Electone," and a range of audio equipment.
The author of several books on music, Kawakami in 1966 established the
Yamaha Music Foundation, which drove the popularity of the company's
products by setting up music schools and competitions in Japan and
abroad.
LEAP OF FAITH
The apparently bizarre leap to motorbike production came after Yamaha
had used its knowledge of wood products gained from piano-making to
diversify into the manufacture of wooden airplane propellers during
World War Two.