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Alumni spotlight: Andrew Briggs

andrew briggs with cello

For me, fear doesnt necessarily mean you shouldnt do something. It might mean finding the courage to step into it, says cellist Andrew Briggs.

Cellist (BM 12) is living the dream.

Praised as an artist with an already expanding reputation and great future (The Well-Tempered Ear), the 28-year-old Colorado native has made a splash locally and is the current recipient of the Harriet Hale Woolley Scholarship from the in Paris, France.

Its a scholarship for American artists, explains Briggs, who earned the College of Musics Outstanding Graduate Award, having excelled in his studies here with Professor of Cello Judith Glyde. The scholarship funds a nine-month project based on some aspect of French culture. My project is focused on the cello 矇tudes of Jean-Louis Duport, a prominent French cellist of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Duport premiered the Op. 5 sonatas with Beethoven and composed many cello pieces; a master pedagogue, Duport also wrote a 175-page treatise on cello-playing technique.

Im studying French cello playing with a focus on bowing technique through the 矇tudes of Duport, continues Briggs, who also earned a masters degree at The Juilliard School, a doctorate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a diploma from the Schola Cantorum de Paris. Duport was one of the first cellists in France to describe how to play with the Tourte [or modern] bow, and his ideas led to a lineage of French string playing. Im working on these ideas with Professor of Cello Daniel Grosgurin at the Schola Cantorum and the Geneva Conservatory in Switzerland.

The scholarship also entails monthly recitals with Briggs colleagues in the programemphasizing the works of Duport, as well as Claude Debussy and Francis Poulencculminating in a final solo recital in June 2019. Hes well-prepared, given his most recent stints as section cellist of the Colorado Symphony and principal cellist of the Crested Butte Music Festival this summer. Previously, he performed in a number of other festivals (including the Colorado Music Festival and the Aspen Music Festival), with several more orchestras, as a member of numerous trios and quartets and as a soloistboth nationally and internationally. Hes also been awarded a series of prestigious fellowships and appointments, including that of Lecturer of Cello and Music Business at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

Briggs credits the amazing faculty at the College of Music as key to his development as a well-rounded artist. Judith Glyde, Associate Professor of Viola Erika Eckert and all the string facultyand the Tak獺cs Quartetare at such a high level, he says. I remember such great insights from Gerry Walther [Tak獺cs violist] The quartet is one of the best groups in the world!

The same goes for the really great coaches in the Collaborative Piano program, including Margaret McDonald and Alexandra Nguyen. Briggs says he also greatly benefited from the experience and insights of young quartets in-residenceincluding the Tesla Quartet, in residence at the College of Music during Briggs studies here. At the time, and as a dedicated performer of all eras of music, Briggs went on to win the colleges Honors Competition and performed Antonin Dvo獺ks Cello Concerto with the CU and Longmont symphonies.

I remember how gracious, respectful and helpful Gary Lewis was, says Briggs of the colleges longtime director of orchestras and professor of music. I did an independent study with him on orchestral excerpts which really helped prepare me for auditions, like Aspen and Juilliard.

Briggswho started private cello lessons in 7th gradebalances his performance career with teaching. As an educator, he was involved with The Juilliard Schools Educational Outreach Department, performing outreach concerts as a Gluck Community Service Fellow and teaching at the Harlem School for the Arts as an Arts Enrichment Fellow. He also taught in the classroom at Juilliard as an Ear Training Teaching Fellow, while mentoring the Juilliard Pre-College String Ensemble.

Over the course of my education, there were definitely ups and downs, concludes Briggs. There were lots of successes, but also lots of disappointments and rejections. I learned to take it all in stride and to remain unwavering in my decision to do what Im doing.

Someone once said follow your fear Ive been thinking about that this year. What Ive found is that whenever theres something I really wantbut maybe it feels even slightly beyond what I think I can doI feel vulnerable and afraid. But if I go for it anyway, even if things dont work, I always learn something.

For me, fear doesnt necessarily mean you shouldnt do something. It might mean finding the courage to step into it.

Briggs doctoral projectPiatti and the Body: An Integrative Approach to Learning the 12 Caprices, Op. 25can be found on .