New faculty: Colin Britt

For Colin Britt, new faculty member at 麻豆传媒高清, choral music is a calling, both professionally and even physically.

鈥淚鈥檓 a big Bach fan. I have a Bach tattoo on my arm. And I love me some Brahms,鈥 laughed Director of Choral Studies Colin Britt during a recent chat. He takes music seriously 鈥 but, clearly, not too seriously.

Britt grew up playing the piano, singing in children鈥檚 choirs and acting in musical theater as a kid in Lewiston, Maine. (He鈥檚 used to college towns: His dad was a professor at Bates College.)

He headed slightly south for college to Hartford鈥檚 Hartt School, the conservatory of the University of Hartford, where the choir director recognized his innate talent.

鈥淗e recognized this spark in me, this drive toward choral music, and he offered to give me conducting lessons. Through that mentorship process, I determined that I wanted to go to grad school for conducting,鈥 he said.

After that it was on to the Yale School of Music for his master鈥檚 degree in choral conducting. Over the past decade he and his wife lived in New Jersey, where he earned his doctorate in choral conducting at Rutgers University while performing at legendary venues such as Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. He was also the longtime choir director at Rutgers Preparatory School. Britt still hasn鈥檛 left the mid-Atlantic entirely: He鈥檒l continue to conduct the West Village Chorale, traveling weekly to Manhattan.

It鈥檚 a commute. But for Britt, choral music is a calling, both professionally and even physically.

鈥淲e鈥檙e elevating poetry 鈥 telling a story dramatically 鈥 doing something with our voices that, I think, is so central to our human experience. Singing with other people is transformative,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen people sing in a choir together, their metabolisms, their physiologies start to connect with other people, and their heart rates start to sync up. There鈥檚 just something that happens with other humans singing together in the same room that I think is really special.鈥

He thinks Mount Holyoke is special, too.

鈥淓very time I speak with students, faculty or staff, people are just happy. There鈥檚 a sense of feeling seen, of having opportunities, of being able to pursue interests or to discover new passions. You have the opportunity to try out different things, to become a more curious human. And I think that the music department really lives up to that mission in a wonderful way. A sense of possibility exists here,鈥 he said.

There鈥檚 even more possibility post-COVID: Britt is excited to resume events that were restricted during the height of the pandemic, including a signature campus Vespers performance in December (he鈥檚 also expecting his second child in December, so it鈥檚 a busy time).

The traditional biennial wintertime Vespers performance at Old South Church in Boston is also back in the works. Up next: potential international tours and a new composition competition called the Pioneering Voices Choral Series, with the winners having their works premiered next spring.

鈥淭here are a lot of traditions on the campus, and the choral program is a very visible manifestation of those traditions,鈥 he said.

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