Cambridge, Mass. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma is talking about Central Asia while, thousands of miles away, the United States is bombing it.
For years, Ma has been planning a project that's now come to fruition: an East-meets-West musical overview of the cultures and countries linked by the network of trading routes known as the Silk Road. On Saturday, an international gathering of 13 musicians � dubbed the Silk Road Ensemble � will join Ma in Washington for the first concert of its American tour.
AP Photo
Yo-Yo Ma, the world's most celebrated cellist, plays in this scene from "The Music Garden," one of the PBS series of filmed performances called "Yo-Yo Ma: Inspired by Bach." Ma's Silk Road tour kicks off Saturday in Washington.
The Kennedy Center Concert Hall performance will launch, in this country, the ongoing Silk Road Project, which includes commissions, educational events and even a book; it will continue at least through next summer, when the music of the Silk Road will be the subject of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival on the Mall.
Saturday's program, presented by the Washington Performing Arts Society, includes new music by composers from Mongolia, China, Iran and Azerbaijan. The historic Silk Road, which thrived for a millennium before and after the birth of Christ, passed through all of them, linking the ancient Mediterranean world to the empire of China.
Culture was exchanged as readily as dry goods, and as Ma points out, the West imported from Silk Road societies important catalysts to its future technological and military pre-eminence, including the magnetic compass, gunpowder and the printing press. There was also an exchange of poetry, literature, art and music, and that exchange has fascinated Ma for years.
"The more we look at these cultures, the more we understand the people and their music, it gets more and more difficult to see boundaries between them," the 46-year-old Ma says. For him, music is about communication, learning, epiphanies, sharing; different cultures go in different directions and develop diverse preoccupations, but a deeper commonality links them. As one scholar involved in the project puts it, the Silk Road is about "both transnational music and local musical traditions." Ma, it seems, also believes in an even higher power for the art form, a power to make universal connections and an ability to influence people and cultures toward harmony and away from division and strife.
"It's not about McWorld," he says, meaning it's not meant merely as theme-park ethnography. Nor does it aspire to be strictly a preservation project for foreign music.
"The idea is to make innovation and tradition sit down together," he says. Translation: The project will commission new pieces rather than merely present folk musicians playing traditional music alongside Western players.















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