Equally at home on television or stage, Xiaohui Ma toured extensively across Europe, Asia, and the Americas since the late 1990s, appearing with noted orchestras in more than one hundred concerts in addition to presenting several-fold more lectures. European appearances have included the Berlin Chamber Orchestra, the
Hamburg Philharmonic Orchestra, the French National Symphony Orchestra, Switzerland's Symphony Orchestra St. Gallen, and the
Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra (their first Chinese performer). Many of her recitals featured her global "Erhu Dialogues," a musical conversation encompassing Oriental and Western civilization. Notable recent European performances included a recital for the
King and Queen of Sweden (2007) along with Chinese President
Hu Jintao. In North America, her programs included performances with conductor
David Stern at Colorado's Crested Butte Music Festival (2007) and the
American Youth Philharmonic Orchestra of Washington, DC (2007), as well as the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (1999, 2006) and at Mt. Vernon for the White House Historical Society (2007). She also appeared at the United Nations, at
New York Philharmonic conductor
Lorin Maazel's Castleton Theater (
Châteauville Foundation), with the Mexican National Symphony Orchestra, and at an internationally televised program at the famed
Crystal Cathedral in Orange County, California. In 2008, Miss Ma performed in New York City for her debut at the Weill Hall at
Carnegie Hall. In Asia, Xiaohui Ma has performed with the National Symphony Orchestra of China, the
Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, Japan's
NHK Symphony Orchestra, the Singapore National Symphony, and at Classical Concert Hall in Seoul, Korea, among others. Chinese Premier
Wen Jiabao's Shanghai African summit in Shanghai presented Miss Ma's artistry to African heads of state (2006) and she earlier represented China at Bravo China in Athens, Greece (2002) and as lead musician for the
APEC meeting in Shanghai (1999). Miss Ma is often seen in television music specials on Chinese CCTV and Chinese MTV. Appearing in over 40 CDs, Xiaohui Ma has also composed numerous pieces, including her major works "The Spirit of My Erhu" (琴韵) and "The Story of Two Strings" (弦之炼, premiered at the Beethoven House in Bonn, Germany). Among her significant adaptations of Western and Chinese classical compositions are
Béla Bartók's "
Romanian Folk Dances,"
Johann Sebastian Bach's "Inventions II" and Sonatas,
Fritz Kreisler's "
Liebesleid," and the Ping Tan Opera "Call Mother in the Nunnery." World premieres include "Wailing Waters," "Chant & Allegro," "Maiden Lan Hua-Hua," "Genghis Khan," "The Shepherd Girl," "Hard to Say Good-Bye," "Night Color in the Desert," and "Deep at Night." A respected music scholar, she has also lectured at dozens of world universities, including the
University of Notre Dame,
Northwestern University,
University of Michigan,
Pomona College,
Fudan University, and
Jiaotong University. In 2007,
Azusa Pacific University hosted her as World Music Scholar-in-Residence, and she conducted a concert at
Scripps College in collaboration with
Claremont Graduate University's transdisciplinary course, "Shanghai Rising." ==Reception==