[custom_adv] In 1979, Mortazavi moved to the United States, continued his music and engineering education at Texas State University and eventually settled in California in 1985. There he started composing and arranging music for pop singers, and playing the violin in the background for singers such as Moein, Hayedeh and Sattar. [custom_adv] He released his first album, Bijan Mortazavi: Magic of His Music and His Songs, in 1990, and it became a best-seller among Persian albums that year. [custom_adv] He was trained in improvisation, orchestration, arrangement, quarter tone technique, and dastgah by various well-known violinists. [custom_adv] Mortazavi started learning the violin under the supervision of Masoud Namazian when he was three years old. In a Nowruz 1991 interview with Alireza Amirghassemi on The Tapesh Show, Mortazavi claimed that as part of his tutelage, Namazian had him focus for the first three months only on music theory in order to learn the notes and scales and then apply them to the violin, as Mortazavi did not attend music school, and advised his parents to not let him touch the violin during that time. [custom_adv] Mortazavi claimed his mother hid his violin in a cupboard for that period, although he would often play on the violin in secret until his mother eventually caught him. [custom_adv] He would later take lessons from Ali Tajvidi, Parviz Yahaghi, Habibollah Badiei, Jahangir Kamiyan, Hasan Shamaizadeh. [custom_adv] At the age of seven, he also started playing the piano, guitar, percussion, and folk string instruments such as oud, tar, and santur. [custom_adv] Mortazavi won his first prize at the age of eleven in a national music contest among students of all ages. [custom_adv] He was fourteen when he conducted a 32-person orchestra, performing his own compositions and arrangements at the Ramsar Summer Camp.