One of the best-known cellists of his generation and of the recording era overall,
Yo-Yo Ma is recognized not only for his technical virtuosity but for his engaging interpretative ability, whether the tone is delicate, plaintive, playful, or impassioned. After breaking through with a collection of
Bach cello suites in 1983, his ambitions and his appeal stretched far beyond the classical sphere via popular collaborations with such artists as jazz vocalist
Bobby McFerrin (1992's Hush) and bluegrass musicians
Stuart Duncan and
Chris Thile (2011's
The Goat Rodeo Sessions). Within the classical repertoire, his performances have spanned the Baroque era through works of his contemporaries, and among his repeat collaborators are pianist
Emanuel Ax, violinist
Isaac Stern, and bassist
Edgar Meyer.
Ma is also founder of the
Silk Road Ensemble, a collective of musicians with a multicultural Eurasian focus. He won his 18th Grammy Award in 2017 for
Silk Road Ensemble's
Sing Me Home, his first in the category of Best World Music Album.
Yo-Yo Ma was born in Paris, France in 1955. The child of two musicians, he began music lessons very early, trying piano and all the string instruments before settling on cello. His first public performance was at the age of five.
Ma's family moved to New York when he was seven so he could study with Janos Scholz. Before the age of ten,
Ma had performed for
Dwight D. Eisenhower and
John F. Kennedy, and had appeared on television with his sister in a concert led by
Leonard Bernstein and on The Tonight Show.
Ma became a student of
Leonard Rose at Juilliard, but did not complete his studies there. Inspired by seeing the commitment of nonagenarian
Pablo Casals at the Marlboro Festival, he enrolled at Harvard to finish his bachelor's degree, graduating in 1976.
Following
Murray Perahia and
Lynn Harrell,
Ma became the third recipient of the Avery Fisher Prize in 1978. A year later, he made his recording debut as main artist with
Finzi's Cello Concerto, alongside the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. He then signed with CBS Masterworks, which released recordings of
Saint-Saëns,
Haydn, and
Beethoven (
Sonatas 1 & 2, with
Emanuel Ax), among others, before 1983's
J.S. Bach: The 6 Unaccompanied Cello Suites proved to be his breakout album. He returned quickly with more
Beethoven sonatas with
Ax and a
Schubert quintet album with the
Cleveland Quartet as well as
Claude Bolling's
Suite for Cello & Jazz Piano Trio. He also recorded an album of
Japanese Melodies with accompaniment by bass, percussion, and flute. In 1985, he released
Elgar and
Walton's cello concertos, performed with
André Previn and the
London Symphony Orchestra. Some of his other albums in the '80s included recordings with
Seiji Ozawa and the
Boston Symphony Orchestra,
Lorin Maazel and the
Berlin Philharmonic, and, in 1988,
Brahms' Double Concerto with violinist
Isaac Stern and the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra led by
Claudio Abbado. The following year brought
Anything Goes: Stephane Grappelli & Yo-Yo Ma Play (Mostly) Cole Porter.
In the 1990s, amid a stream of annual classical releases,
Ma continued to raise his profile with mainstream audiences on crossover albums such as 1992's Hush with vocalist
Bobby McFerrin. Issued by Sony, that record reached the top half of the Billboard 200 and was followed by a duo tour. In 1996, he appeared with bassist
Edgar Meyer and violinist
Mark O'Connor on the folk-inspired album Appalachian Journey, which went to number one on the Billboard classical chart. The year 1997 saw
Soul of the Tango featuring the music of composer
Astor Piazzolla, and
Ma was the featured soloist on composer
Tan Dun's
Symphony 1997 (Heaven, Earth, Mankind) and on
John Williams' score for the film Seven Years in Tibet. That year, he also appeared on the soundtrack to the documentary mini-series
Liberty!, which featured
O'Connor along with
Ma, trumpeter
Wynton Marsalis, and singer/songwriter
James Taylor. In 1998, he returned to the
Bach suites with
Inspired by Bach: The Cello Suites, recording them for six short films in collaboration with director
Atom Egoyan, ice dancers Torvill and Dean, dancer Mark Morris, and other artists. He then recorded 1999's
Simply Baroque with the
Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra, and they followed it a year later with
Simply Baroque II. Also in 2000, he reunited with
O'Connor and
Meyer for Appalachian Journey (another classical number one) and with
Tan Dun for the soundtrack to
Ang Lee's
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. After establishing the
Silk Road Ensemble to bring together musicians from diverse cultural backgrounds along the ancient Eurasian trade route, he issued Silk Road Journeys in 2001. Credited as
Yo-Yo Ma & the
Silk Road Ensemble, they presented music such as a Mongolian love song, traditional Chinese songs, and Finnish folk songs. That year,
Ma was awarded the National Medal of the Arts by the NEA.
In 2002, Sony Classical released
Yo-Yo Ma Plays the Music of John Williams, an original recording produced and conducted by
Williams. That year,
Silk Road Ensemble cracked the Billboard 200 with
Silk Road Journeys: When Strangers Meet, and
Ma's cello could be heard on
Philip Glass' score for the film
Naqoyqatsi. Featuring over a dozen guests, including bossa nova singer
Rosa Passos and the guitar duo of
Sergio & Odair Assad,
Obrigado Brazil arrived the following year and returned him to the top of the classical chart. He released a concert version of the album in 2004, a year that also saw Silk Road Journeys: Beyond the Horizon,
Vivaldi's Cello, and Yo-Yo Ma Plays Ennio Morricone. The latter two charted on the Billboard 200. A year later, he appeared with
Itzhak Perlman on the
John Williams film score Memoirs of a Geisha. It, too, landed on the U.S. album chart.
Silk Road Ensemble's
New Impossibilities was recorded at Symphony Center with the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2007, and 2008's
Yo-Yo Ma & Friends: Songs of Joy & Peace featured collaborations with names like
Dave Brubeck,
Renée Fleming, and
Diana Krall, just to name a few. It was
Ma's highest-charting album to that point, reaching number 20 on the Billboard 200. After an appearance at
Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration, he climbed two spots higher with 2011's
The Goat Rodeo Sessions, a collaboration with
Meyer,
Stuart Duncan, and
Chris Thile that also marked
Ma's debut on the Bluegrass Albums chart. The album took home the Grammy Awards for Best Folk Album and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. That year,
Ma was also a recipient of a Kennedy Center Honor, the Glenn Gould Prize, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Another
Silk Roads Ensemble album,
A Playlist Without Borders, followed in 2013. Issued in 2015,
Songs from the Arc of Life presented well-known classical tunes such as
Schubert's (and
Bach-
Gounod's) Ave Maria and
Brahms' Lullaby. It went to the top of the classical chart, as did
Silk Road Ensemble's 2016 LP
Sing Me Home. His next classical number one came just a year later with
Bach: Trios, a set of keyboard pieces rearranged for
Ma on cello,
Meyer on bass, and
Thile on mandolin. Also that year, the
Silk Road Ensemble with
Yo-Yo Ma performed the music for the
Ken Burns-
Lynn Novick documentary series
The Vietnam War, and
Ma collaborated with chamber orchestra the Knights on
Azul. It offered a performance of the
Osvaldo Golijov concerto alongside pieces by
Dvorák,
Karlheinz Stockhausen, and
Sufjan Stevens, among others. In 2019,
Ma issued
Six Evolutions: Bach Cello Suites, his planned final studio recording of the famed suites. He then reunited with
Chris Thile,
Edgar Meyer, and
Stuart Duncan for
Not Our First Goat Rodeo, the follow-up to their acclaimed 2011 collaboration
The Goat Rodeo Sessions. ~ Marcy Donelson & Patsy Morita