Āé¶¹AV

April 24, 2020

Nothing is Getting in the Way of Cellist's Future - Not Even a Global Pandemic


Bella
Photo by Dana Jackson

Isabella ā€œBellaā€ Lorenzo-Giguere may not be attending the Āé¶¹AV in person at the moment, but she’s still enjoying learning and isn’t 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 CIM’s 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 CIM’s cello department.  

ā€œFor my lessons, everything has been going pretty smoothly,ā€ Bella said. ā€œI 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. 

ā€œRemote learning has been a little challenging, but it isn’t as bad as I thought it might be in terms of the relaying of information,ā€ she said. ā€œI 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 ā€œcomplaint,ā€ she quipped, is that she’s ā€œdefinitely 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, ā€œI’m 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. ā€œI 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 I’m playing, so I’d 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, aren’t letting a global pandemic get in the way of their dreams. While the online learning has been going well, she adds, there’s nothing like being at CIM in person. 

ā€œI can’t wait to get back to school!ā€ she said.