About

Briony is a musician, researcher, and educator whose expertise sits at an intersection of creative, technical, and theoretical approaches. Briony specializes in creative collaboration and has hundreds of creative works that encompass art music traditions, popular music, and experimental practices. Briony’s PhD contributes a new model for understanding and writing string arrangements for recorded popular music. Recent publications include a book retheorising songwriting with Andy Ward, and a journal article with Hannah Banks theorising queer reading as audience labour in Our Flag Means Death.

Briony's main research areas include: cultural semantics, multimodal analysis, listening, creative practice, creative collaboration, performance, creative wellbeing and healthy ageing. Currently, Briony is part of a number of research teams looking at capacity building in regional Australia, creative practice and health, and sustainable and equitable careers in the music industry.  

Currently a Senior Lecturer at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Briony has been a tertiary music educator since 2007 and is passionate about crafting educational experiences that use transdisciplinary perspectives and locate music making practices in their historical, sociocultural, and technological contexts.

HDR supervision

Available for supervision of HDR projects in music, creative practice, interdisciplinary creative industries, multimodal analysis, cultural semantics, social semiotics and more.

Current supervisions include:

- (Principal) PhD - Experiencing Equity: A feminist analysis of women and gender diverse songwriters' careers in regional and remote Queensland

- (Principal) Master of Creative Arts - Cultivating Resonant Relationships Through Vocality in a Time of Ecological Crisis: Lamentation as a Practice of Sympoiesis

- (Principal) Master of Creative Arts - Instruments of change: shifting the scene-agency ratio in songwriting practice

- (Co) Master of Creative Arts - The Dynamic Range of Songwriter Activism: Musical Approaches to the Cultural Aspects of Climate Change

- (Co) Master of Creative Arts - The cultural and economic significance of ‘covers’ music performance practice for musicians living in Brisbane: a case study.

Media Commentary 

Available for media commentary for strings in popular music, strings in popular culture, string arranging, popular music cello, cultural meaning-making practices, listening analysis, creative collaboration, and creative practitioner wellbeing.

Link

Awards and Honours

Australian Post-graduate Award scholarship (for PhD)
Queensland University of Technology (Australia, Brisbane) - QUT

Organisational Affiliations

Senior Lecturer in Contemporary Music, School of Business and Creative Industries

Past Affiliations

Associate Lecturer, Queensland University of Technology (Australia, Brisbane) - QUT

Sessional Academic, Queensland University of Technology (Australia, Brisbane) - QUT

Highlights - Outputs

Journal article

by Briony Luttrell and Hannah Joyce Banks

Accepted for publication 2024

Media International Australia, Advanced access

Book

by Andy Ward and Briony Luttrell

Published 2024

Journal article

by Philip Graham and Briony Luttrell

Published 2019

Social Semiotics, 29, 2, 222 - 239

Education

BMus
20042007, Bachelor of Music(BM or BMus), Queensland University of Technology (Australia, Brisbane) - QUT
Bachelor of Music (Honours) – First Class
20132013, Bachelor of Music(BM or BMus), Queensland University of Technology (Australia, Brisbane) - QUT

A Semiotic Approach to the Analysis and Creation of String Arrangements for Recorded Popular Music. SUPERVISOR: Prof. Phil Graham.

PhD
20142017, Doctor of Philosophy, Queensland University of Technology (Australia, Brisbane) - QUT

A cultural semantics of string arrangement for recorded Popular music: A model for analysis and practice. PRINCIPAL SUPERVISOR: Prof. Phil Graham. ASSOCIATE SUPERVISOR: Dr Kiley Gaffney.