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Cellist Returns to Perform at MAW

Tim Beccue Performs at the °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Christmas Feistval

°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp alumnus and local resident ā€™18 has returned to campus as a fellow of the Music Academy of the West. Each summer since 2016, °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp has housed 140 exceptional young classical musicians for the academy, which provides live events through Aug. 3. Visit for a full calendar of concerts.

Tim Beccue at Peabody Conservatory
(Photo by Alyssa Beccue)

ā€œI have lots of memories embedded throughout °µĶų±¬ĮĻappā€™s campus from my time as an undergrad,ā€ he says. ā€œBeing back with a different organization and as a different person myself feels quite surreal, as the old memories bleed into the present. Iā€™m glad to be back, and I look forward to making more great memories in this beautiful setting.ā€

Beccue, who completed a masterā€™s degree in cello performance at the Peabody Institute in Baltimore, wanted to continue to grow as a performer through the summer. ā€œI had my eye on this particular festival in part because Santa Barbara is my home,ā€ he says. ā€œIā€™m really excited to perform where I can invite my family and friends to attend.ā€

He looks forward to a repertoire he describes as wonderfully challenging, both in quantity and quality. ā€œWith orchestra concerts every week, Iā€™ll get the chance to perform so many incredible works,ā€ he says. ā€œIā€™m especially excited for Dvorakā€™s ā€˜Symphony No. 9ā€™ from the ā€˜New World Symphony,ā€™ and Mahlerā€™s ā€˜Symphony No. 6.ā€™ Perhaps it will be like drinking from a firehose, but I canā€™t wait.ā€

tim beccue 2016
Tim Beccue as a °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp undergrad in 2016.

In keeping with °µĶų±¬ĮĻappā€™s mission as a liberal arts college, Beccue graduated with a degree in physics while playing in the collegeā€™s orchestra. He took the initiative to learn how to take photos with the Keck Telescope on campus. ā€œItā€™s a fun toy, and I had it all to myself,ā€ he says. See the images he created at .

After graduating, he got a software position with Las Cumbres Observatory in Santa Barbara, a small nonprofit with a worldwide network of robotically operated telescopes that astronomy researchers use to monitor targets and events. ā€œSoftware engineering felt like a natural continuation of my physics background,ā€ he says.

Next year, Beccue returns to Baltimore for a string quartet residency with Mount Vernon Virtuosi, an organization founded by his former teacher, Amit Peled. ā€œIā€™m excited because Iā€™ve always dreamed of playing in a fulltime string quartet and I value the programā€™s unique vision for musicians to live and work in underserved communities in Baltimore,ā€ he says.