piano

Amy Briggs has established herself as a leading interpreter of the music of living composers, while also bringing a fresh perspective to music of the past. Based in Chicago, she is a featured soloist and chamber musician on the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s MusicNOW series (since 2000), and has played world, US and Chicago premieres of works by Pierre Boulez, Oliver Knussen, Augusta Read Thomas, David Lang, Simon Bainbridge, Tania Léon, Esa-Pekka Salonen, David Rakowski, and others. She has appeared as a soloist and chamber musician throughout the United States, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

Since 2000, Briggs has worked extensively with Boston-based composer David Rakowski. She has recorded four volumes of his Piano Etudes for Bridge Records to much critical acclaim. In January 2014, she premiered and recorded Rakowski’s 45-minute Piano Concerto No. 2 (written for her) with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project in Jordan Hall. The disc will soon be released on the BMOP/sound label. She also recorded a highly celebrated disc of contemporary solo piano tangos for piano for Ravello Records. The Chicago Tribune has called Briggs “extraordinary” in her “mastery of what lay on the dense, printed page and beyond,” and The Chicago Sun-Times called her a “ferociously talented pianist.” Of Volume One of the Rakowski Etudes, Classics Today says Briggs "does a splendid job projecting the music's wit, and her unflappable virtuosity makes even the densest writing sound effortless...a marvelous disc that piano fanciers should snap up without hesitation.” In addition, The New York Times praised her performance of Berio's Sequenza IV on the New York Philharmonic’s Day of Berio at Lincoln Center for its “live-wire intensity.”

Among numerous awards and honors are a coveted Artist Award from the 3Arts Foundation in Chicago (2008), a stipend prize at the Darmstadt Internationale Fereinkurse für Neue Musik (2000), and prizes in the Joanna Hodges and Frinna Awerbuch International Piano Competitions. In 1993, she was selected by the United States Information Agency to tour Africa and South Asia as a United States Artistic Ambassador. Her solo recitals combined traditional repertoire with 20th century American music; today, her programs continue to connect composers from all eras and nationalities.

Amy Briggs has collaborated with many leading musicians and ensembles, including members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, eighth blackbird, pianists Daniel Schlosberg and Amy Williams, Third Coast Percussion Quartet, Callisto Ensemble, the Chicago Contemporary Players, Chicago Pro Musica, the Chicago Chamber Musicians, Ensemble Dal Niente, and the Empyrean Ensemble. She has also performed as extra keyboardist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

Briggs’s live and recorded performances have been featured on radio stations around the United States and Europe. Recent performances include an all-John Cage program on the MITO Festival in Milan, Italy, New York Philharmonic’s Day of Berio in Lincoln Center, solo performances with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Hubbard Street Dance Company at Symphony Center in Chicago, and performances with Ursula Oppens and the Mark Morris Dance Company in Chicago, Toronto, Washington D.C. and Auckland, New Zealand. In addition to her solo recordings, Amy appears on a disc of multi-piano works of Edgar Varèse and Morton Feldman as well a disc of multi-piano studies of Conlon Nancarrow, for Wergo Records. Briggs earned her Doctor of Music degree at Northwestern University, where she studied with Ursula Oppens. She was appointed Director of Chamber Music and Artist-in-Residence at the University of Chicago in 2009. Ms. Briggs is a Steinway Artist.

Performances

Jordan Hall at New England Conservatory | January 17, 2014

News and Press

[Concert Review] New England's Prospect: Three World Premieres in Wildly Disparate Styles

It has become commonplace to bash the symphony orchestra. All together now: it’s impractical, old-fashioned, a relic, a museum, a bastion of canonic conservatism, a hangover from long-gone eras and aesthetics. We know the drill.

NewMusicBox Full review
[Concert Review] BMOP at its cutting-edge best

The “modern” in Boston Modern Orchestra Project varies in its meaning. Sometimes it refers broadly to music of the past several decades, such as its recent revivals of operas by Virgil Thomson and Michael Tippett. On Friday at Jordan Hall, though, its focus was on the other sense of the word: what’s happening right now. On the bill were three world premieres, all commissions from composers with local connections and associations with BMOP. This was, to my mind, the group at its vital, cutting-edge best.

The Boston Globe Full review