April 24, 2020
Nothing is Getting in the Way of Cellist's Future - Not Even a Global Pandemic
Isabella āBellaā Lorenzo-Giguere may not be attending the Āé¶¹AV in person at the moment, but sheās still enjoying learning and isnāt letting COVID-19 get in the way of her education and dreams for the future.
Now in her second year at CIM, the 20-year-old native of Washington, DC, started playing cello when she was 5, deciding as an eighth grader at Maret School that she wanted to pursue music as a career. Like all of CIMās talented classical music students, Bella is currently learning remotely due to the current health crisis. She is currently a student in the studio of Richard Weiss, co-head of CIMās cello department.
āFor my lessons, everything has been going pretty smoothly,ā Bella said. āI did have some issues with the sound but I figured out how to connect my Zoom recorder to my computer, which I was very proud of. Some days can be more challenging than others, but I have definitely learned a lot since spring break about 20th century music and serialism in particular, which is really cool.ā
Still, she says, she misses CIM and everything it has to offer when the building is bustling with students and the sounds of music.
āRemote learning has been a little challenging, but it isnāt as bad as I thought it might be in terms of the relaying of information,ā she said. āI really do miss school, though. I miss going to live concerts and supporting my friends and seeing The Cleveland Orchestra. I also miss the small interactions I have with people at school every day. I always bump into people on the way to and from rehearsals and classes and miss those impromptu conversations in the hallways.ā
Back home in DC, Bella says she has been very happy to be able to spend more time with her family. Her only ācomplaint,ā she quipped, is that sheās ādefinitely been eating too well.ā
Through it all, however, she is completely focused on her education and pursuing her dream of performing in an orchestra, or perhaps playing in a local quartet and teaching.
As for her future, āIām open to just about anything. In addition to performing in an orchestra or quartet, I would also love to do interactive/lecture performances,ā she said. āI went to the conference earlier this semester and there was a quartet that performed, playing the kind of concert that involved audience participation and interaction, which I thought was really fun and fulfilling for everyone. I enjoy talking to people and telling audiences about what Iām playing, so Iād like to keep doing something like that.ā
As students have shifted to online learning for the rest of the semester, Bella says she believes that while some students may be having a hard time right now, they, like her, arenāt letting a global pandemic get in the way of their dreams. While the online learning has been going well, she adds, thereās nothing like being at CIM in person.
āI canāt wait to get back to school!ā she said.