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Artist
Toshiko Akiyoshi is a Japanese American jazz pianist, composer/arranger and bandleader. Among a very few successful female instrumentalists of her generation in jazz, she is also recognized as a major figure in jazz composition. Toshiko Akiyoshi was born in Manchuria, China, and was considering a career in medicine when her family returned to live in Japan. "Japan was still heavily occupied then, and our resort city of Beppu was flooded with soldiers. One day I happened to pass one of the many dance halls that were set up for the occupation soldiers, and I noticed a sign: 'Pianist wanted'." Toshiko, who had some training as a classical pianist went in, and the manager asked her to start right away. Toshiko's family wasn't thrilled with the idea, but they finally agreed that she could play until the school year began. "But March came and went," she remembers, "and no one noticed. I just kept playing." Toshiko soon grew restless and moved to Tokyo, where there was an active jazz scene. One thing led to another, and she started her own group in 1952. "It was an exciting time. Many jazz giants were touring Japan, and many of the would stop by the club, and we'd play together." It was though these musicians that she learned about the Berklee School of Music in Boston. In 1953, during Norman Granz's JATP (Jazz At The Philaharmonic) tour of Japan, Toshiko was spotted by Oscar Peterson, who told Granz she was "the greatest female jazz pianist" he'd ever heard. This lead to Toshiko