Go Away With … Yo-Yo Ma

Photo © JEREMY COWART
Photo © JEREMY COWART

By Jae-Ha Kim
Tribune Media Services
October 11, 2011

Born in Paris and raised in New York, cellist Yo-Yo Ma is one of the world’s most famous classical musicians. But with his latest CD “The Goat Rodeo Sessions,” Ma tackles a different genre: Americana. The record is a collaborative effort with fiddler Stuart Duncan, bassist Edgar Meyer and mandolinist Chris Thile. Ma, 56, has won several Grammy Awards. He has also been honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Ma resides with his wife in Cambridge, Mass.Q. What is your favorite vacation destination?

A. Years and years ago, my wife and I went to Charleston, S.C., for the Spoleto Festival. We fell in love with the town itself and had a wonderful time discovering islands like Seabrook and Kiawah. I have such fond memories of that trip and the people we met.

Q. Where would you like to spend more time?

A. Someday I hope to spend some time exploring the Pacific Northwest — Portland, the fishing in Eugene, the beautiful islands around Seattle and the wineries.

Q. You’ve traveled so much in your career. In what areas have you seen the biggest changes?

A. I was in the Soviet Union in the early ’80s and then back there after Glasnost. The changes were really striking. It was the same soulful people, but the circumstances around them had completely changed. South America has changed a lot, too. I think the way that the Internet diminishes great distances has really had an impact there. Pre-Internet I could feel the continental distances between countries. Now ideas flow in a different cross-border way, especially between young people. It’s exciting to see that change.

Q. Where are your favorite weekend getaways?

A. I lived in New York City as a kid and it’s fun to go back now and play tourist, whether we’re going to the theater, seeing an opera or checking out a museum. Also, Maine. We were just there for the wedding of the daughter of our dear friends. I love the rocky terrain and the rich and changing American traditions in the Bar Harbor area.

Q. In what city did you have your first concert?

A. Paris. I was young and naive enough to be completely unselfconscious.

Q. What are your favorite cities?

A. I would probably have a different answer any day you asked me. My favorite anything tends to be in a constant state of evolution rather than constant. That said, here’s my answer for today: Florence, Jerusalem and Castle Combe, which is an amazingly beautiful, picture-perfect English village. It looks like a postcard. I love the American Rockies and my friends tell me I absolutely have to get to Telluride for the Bluegrass Festival someday. And I love Chicago. It’s both a world city and a worldly city. Chicago has long been a hub of trade, transportation and culture and like so many major cities today, people from around the globe live there. It’s a city that celebrates innovation and diversity.

Q. Where have you traveled to that most reminded you of back home?

A. Well, today the demographics of any mid-size city represent the population of the world, so almost anywhere I go I can find resonances to my immediate neighborhood.

Q. Where would you like to go that you have never been to before?

A. So many places! Machu Picchu, Lhasa in Tibet, New Zealand, Mongolia, Bhutan, Isfahan…

Q. Which city do you think is the most romantic?

A. I can’t pick just one! Boston, Charleston, Paris and Buenos Aires come to mind for me.

Q. What are your favorite restaurants?

A. Oh, too many to name. Some place I haven’t been to yet but want to go to is Milk and Honey in New York City. (Mandolinist) Chris Thile is a fabulous mixologist and he raves about it.

Q. What is your guilty pleasure when you’re on the road?

A. Food! Of course, it depends on where I am and what the food is. Some highlights: Joe’s Stone Crab in Miami; okra and she-crab soup in Charleston; oysters in New Orleans; sausages and cheese almost anywhere; and I always try to eat fresh local fruits and vegetables.

Q. What kind of research do you do before you go away on a trip?

A. I try to talk to people who know the place well. If you can find someone who deeply loves a place, they can take you inside their world. That way you don’t just get information, you find a way in. Most of my best memories of faraway places involve wonderful hosts who wanted to share with me something that was precious to them.

© 2011 JAE-HA KIM
DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

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