Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Yo-Yo Ma reunites with John Williams for 'Geisha' score
(AP)
Updated: 2005-12-23 10:42

Several years ago, Yo-Yo Ma got a book in the mail from Oscar-winning composer John Williams.


(L-R)US film director Rob Marshall poses with the cast of his latest movie 'Sayuri' ('Memoirs of a Geisha'), Japanese actress Kaori Momoi, Malaysian actress Michelle Yeoh, Chinese actress Zhang Ziyi and Japanese actor Ken Watanabe at a press conference in Tokyo. [AFP]

Even though there were no concrete plans then to make a film out of "Memoirs of a Geisha," the cellist recalls Williams was already thinking of a way to illustrate the project musically.

"Early on he was thinking somehow in the recesses of his mind that 'Hey, maybe we should do that,' and I know he was interested in the possibility of setting the book to music," Ma told The Associated Press.

Williams' vision came true when the best-selling novel about the geisha culture in Japan was made into a film. And when Williams needed someone to perform the sumptuous music for the movie, Ma, who has worked with Williams on previous film scores, was one of the first on board, along with friend Itzhak Perlman.

"I think it's pretty rare to have the opportunity to work with so many people that I admire in one project," said Ma, the score's featured performer.

The score for the film, which stars Ziyi Zhang, Ken Watanabe and Michelle Yeoh, was recently nominated for a Golden Globe and is available in stores as a soundtrack. Williams' sweeping compositions utilize Japanese instruments for an overall sound that complements the era it was made for.

"He made a score that in some ways is very spare, which fits with the period that is represented in the film, which is actually a unique period in Japanese history because it was a period of transition," said Ma. "Hence, you have all these instruments in transition as well."

Still, despite the Japanese influence, Ma says the soundtrack is unmistakably a Williams score, which he describes as "always just right on the dot."

"He's just so much a master of the material, and that's also based on the deep knowledge of the jazz world, of the American musical theater," Ma said. "By having had such a wide and deep history in all these different musical genres he can pick and choose at any moment what needs to be and it's always organic, it's always him, because all of these worlds are a part of him."

One of the compositions Williams wrote for the piece had a sentimental element for Ma; the composer came up with a duet for Ma and his good friend, fellow cellist Steve Erdody, on the final day of recording.

"It was just so sweet," said Ma. "It was personally sweet but what he did was actually emotionally right, for the score."

The "Geisha" score is the second Ma project this year with an Eastern accent; earlier, he released his second album with his Silk Road Ensemble featuring musicians from countries ranging from China to Iran.



Zhang Ziyi clinches magazine cover
The Promise premieres in Taiwan
A Chinese Tall Story premieres in Singapore
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Japan FM's 'China threat' remarks criticized

 

   
 

Reforms of SOEs will push ahead next year

 

   
 

42 dead, 11 injured in Sichuan gas explosion

 

   
 

China to embark on road of peaceful rise

 

   
 

Optimism increases in epidemic battle

 

   
 

Guangdong dam slows down cadmium slick

 

   
  Tabloid gives Kate Moss drug-snorting video to police
   
  Doctors promote natural births
   
  Yo-Yo Ma reunites with John Williams for 'Geisha' score
   
  Double-mouthed fish pulled from Neb. Lake
   
  Ice Age footprints said found in Australia
   
  Desperate 17-year-old attempts suicide for Jay Chow
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Culture wars: Chinese actresses, Japanese roles
   
'Memoirs of a Geisha'
   
Eastern lore, Western allure
   
China and Japan in a culture clash
   
'Geisha, one of the Best Jobs in Japan'
   
'Memoirs of a Geisha' posters released
   
Zhang Ziyi to star in 'geisha' movie
  Feature  
  Could China's richest be the tax cheaters?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement