For centuries, Japan’s brewing heritage has centred on sake. Yet one man’s determination would change the country’s relationship with distilled spirits forever. Masataka Taketsuru did not simply introduce whisky to Japan. He studied its origins, understood its principles, and reimagined them for a completely different landscape.
Learning Whisky at Its Source
Born into a family that had operated a sake brewery since 1733, Taketsuru grew up surrounded by fermentation and craftsmanship. In 1918, he travelled to Scotland to study whisky production, becoming one of the first Japanese students to receive formal training in the country’s distilleries. During his apprenticeship, he documented every stage of production, from water sources and still design to cask selection, warehouse conditions, and maturation.
His time in Scotland shaped more than his technical knowledge. There he met Rita Taketsuru, whom he married before returning to Japan. Together, they embarked on a journey that would lay the foundations of an entirely new whisky tradition.
Building Japan’s First Whisky Legacy
Back in Japan, Taketsuru joined forces with Shinjiro Torii, whose vision for a domestic whisky industry matched his own technical ambition. Together they established Yamazaki Distillery, completed in 1924 as Japan’s first commercial malt whisky distillery.
Rather than copying Scotland, Taketsuru adapted Scottish methods to Japan’s climate, water, and environment. The first Japanese whisky, released in 1929, reflected those decisions. It respected Scottish tradition while expressing a character that belonged entirely to Japan.
Taketsuru later founded Nikka Whisky, including Yoichi Distillery, where he pursued his own vision of whisky making. Together, Suntory and Nikka established the foundations of an industry that would earn international recognition throughout the twentieth and 21st centuries.
At Barlist, stories like this remind us that innovation rarely begins with imitation alone. Masataka Taketsuru‘s achievement was not bringing Scotch whisky to Japan. It was understanding why it worked, then creating something unmistakably Japanese. Today, Japanese whisky stands among the world’s most respected whisky traditions, celebrated for a character shaped by both Scottish heritage and Japanese craftsmanship.