Nick Krewen
Special To the Star
Yo-Yo Ma, the Paris-born, New York-raised world-renown cellist, has packed a lot of living into his 65 years.
He’s recorded more than 150 albums, earned 18 Grammy Awards and performed in every place imaginable around the world.
But until the pandemic hit earlier this year, there was one thing that Ma had never experienced: regular business hours.
“I’m realizing for the first time that I have a 9-to-5 job, Monday-to-Friday and that the weekends are off,” he stated from his Cambridge, Massachusetts home on Tuesday during a Zoom interview to promote Songs Of Comfort And Hope, his latest album with British pianist Kathryn Stott that’s out December 11.
“I can’t wait for the weekends,” he laughs. “I always used to work the weekends and I worked nights. I never could hold a day job. I now know what a day job feels like.”
Since his last performance in front of audience in New York on March 10, Ma – who has 45 years of deep ties with Toronto, ranging from studying here with classical pianist Anton Kuerti and filming the Emmy-winning Rhombus Media series Inspired By Bach to assisting in the creation of the Music Garden on the Toronto waterfront and helping the Toronto Symphony Orchestra celebrates its 90th anniversary – has been spending his days “reading, with family, friends just trying to keep it together, that’s full-time.”
And although he’s occasionally performed virtual concerts for frontline health workers and educational institutions in the interim, Ma admits his curtailed concert activity has found him contemplating the role of music in our lives a bit more intensely.
“Maybe this is age-related, but what is music for?” Ma queries. “What is its purpose? What is its meaning? They’re the same old questions, but kind of amplified: essentially, how can we help?
“I’ve been thinking of music as one of the things we’ve invented that actually helps us survive and thrive. It gets to our state of mind. It helps us: it’s energy that is meant to do something for us.
“So, in a way, I’ve thought of it as a service. And in this sense, during the pandemic, I was thinking , ‘Gee, the role of the musician often is to ease the transition between life and death.
“There was a doctor who wrote about caring for his dying father. I realized that there was nothing in his training that taught him how to care for his dying father. And at the end, what he realized was that the thing he could do best for him was to ask him what he wants, what makes him comfortable, because it’s beyond, this will keep you alive, this will save you.
“And I think, sometimes in that sense, that’s what music can do.”
It was this thought process that led, in part, to the creation of Songs of Comfort and Hope, a 21-song album that includes “Ol’ Man River” from the musical Showboat, Harold Arlen’s “Over the Rainbow” from The Wizard of Oz, the traditional Zulu lullaby “Thula Baba,” Francis Poulenc’s “Les Chemins de l’Amour” and Antonin Dvorak’s “Goin’ Home” among its selections.
The album’s concept came from some of those earlier virtual performance, that eventually reached an audience of 18 million people.
“We were in the office and thought, maybe we’re going to close the office,” says Ma, who not only won the 1999 Glenn Gould Prize but also has Yo-Yo Ma Lane – located off Queen’s Quay near Spadina – named after him.
“And one of my colleagues said, ‘Why don’t we do what we’ve done in the past?” Whenever there was a natural disaster someplace – an earthquake or tsunami – we would send some music and words to people that we know there, like a postcard.
“I had my cello in the office that day and my colleague Jonathan said, ‘Let’s do songs of comfort and hope.’ I said, ‘Fine, just take out your smartphone and I’ll play a couple of songs.’
“Then it became much bigger and I started to do this from home and Zooming into hospital rooms and health workers and essential workers, students, teachers, graduations, high schools, middle schools, colleges and missed graduation ceremonies: individuals who needed something.
“Then the recording came sort of as a result of that, because Kathy, who – we’ve been friends and colleagues for about 40 years – she lives in Manchester in England. We were talking and her festival in Australia was canceled.
“I said, should we do something not unlike The Songs of the Arc Of Life that we did in 2015. We can do something that might be meaningful to people around the world.”
Ma says Stott did the majority of the work while he made some suggestions and enlisted “my buddy”, British/Australian pianist Steven Hough, for a couple of arrangements, while Stott reached out to Pulitzer-Prize winning violinist and composer Carolyn Shaw for arrangement helps.
“The hard part was not to include certain songs because we loved so many,” notes Ma.
It should be noted that a conversation with Yo-Yo Ma is not so much a typical interview. An interviewer is requested to provide some bio information because the cellist likes to know a bit about his interviewer.
In my case, he asked about a spinal tumour I had experienced when I was in college that ended up curtailing my ambition to be a professional pianist. It was an experience that robbed me of some of the feeling in my left hand and left me in a temporary state of paralysis to the point where I had to learn how to walk again.
The event was a major catalyst towards me pursuing a writing career.
“Let me ask you a personal question,” he asked within the first five minutes of the interview. “Having gone through something so incredibly dramatic, and having to live with the consequences of giving up playing and remaking and reforming your life, how does that give you perspective on a pandemic year?”
I told him that I had always appreciated life, so my attitude and gratitude hadn’t changed, but that I was disappointed in the way some of the human behaviour I was witnessing: people refusing to wear masks and therefore, in my opinion, showing a callous disregard for other’s safety in the process. I told him I was surprised there are people out there who do not believe COVID-19 exists.
“Obviously when someone doesn’t believe something, there’s a breakdown in the ladder of trust,” he reasoned. “At some point, someone must have said, ‘Ok, those guys – they’re off my list. I won’t listen to anything that they say anymore because they blew it – they blew it for me. I’m not going to listen anymore. And then you can’t get to the next step.
“I wonder when something like that happens, because when you and I say, ‘We do believe in what people tell us “ – that’s because that ladder is intact. Somehow it was successfully built or maybe there’s redundancy so if we get screwed by somebody, and you had a terrible doctor, but that doesn’t make you say all of medicine is terrible.”
He shared with me later that he could relate to me because when he was younger, he had suffered scoliosis, a sideways curvature of the spine that had also threatened his career.
“I actually had a total spinal fusion when I was 25, and I was in a cast for six months,” Ma admits. “It was the only other time that I completely stopped playing. In the same way, it had so many good parts to it, in spite of the experience because it just makes you think differently.
“It made me think differently. If you’re lucky enough to be in a state where you’re not about to be kicked out of your apartment or scrounging for food and worried about immediate safety, I think it makes you think about a lot of things: what is important and what’s meaningful – and just being grateful.
“I knew about it when I was 19, and there was a risk that the operation wouldn’t work. My wife married me, knowing I was going to have that operation, which I’m really deeply grateful for.
“Also, I felt that if it did not work, I was going to do something else. I was okay with saying, ‘Well, I’m 25, I’ve done a bit of playing, loved it, had a good time and thank goodness, not that I was such a great student, but I did go to college – I’ll find something.
“So, the fact that I could play again – that was extra. In that sense, it gave me a sense of saying, ‘yeah, it’s okay – you’re given something, it could be taken away, it’s alright, I can live with that.”
As for the reason he’s so prolific in terms of making albums – Songs of Comfort and Hope is his third release in 2020 – Yo-Yo Ma says it’s his opportunity to learn about mankind in general.
“I’m generally a curious kind of guy and I get extremely stimulated when I meet new people or I’m introduced to new ways of thinking and new ways of expression,” he explains.
“I get very excited about something to be able to explore and – I resisted this for many decades but I’ve found that music is a really good way to explore human nature.”