°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp News
Cellist Returns to Perform at MAW
By
Scott Craig
°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp alumnus and local resident ā18 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.
āI have lots of memories embedded throughout °µĶų±¬ĮĻappās campus from my time as an undergrad,ā he says. āBeing back with a different organization and as a different person myself feels quite surreal, as the old memories bleed into the present. Iām glad to be back, and I look forward to making more great memories in this beautiful setting.ā
Beccue, who completed a masterās degree in cello performance at the Peabody Institute in Baltimore, wanted to continue to grow as a performer through the summer. āI had my eye on this particular festival in part because Santa Barbara is my home,ā he says. āIām 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. āWith orchestra concerts every week, Iāll get the chance to perform so many incredible works,ā he says. āIām especially excited for Dvorakās āSymphony No. 9ā from the āNew World Symphony,ā and Mahlerās āSymphony No. 6.ā Perhaps it will be like drinking from a firehose, but I canāt wait.ā
In keeping with °µĶų±¬ĮĻappās mission as a liberal arts college, Beccue graduated with a degree in physics while playing in the collegeās orchestra. He took the initiative to learn how to take photos with the Keck Telescope on campus. āItās 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. āSoftware 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. āIām excited because Iāve always dreamed of playing in a fulltime string quartet and I value the programās unique vision for musicians to live and work in underserved communities in Baltimore,ā he says.