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Erika Nickrenz, piano
Susie Park, violin
Sara Sant'Ambrogio, cello
The most sought-after trio in the world, the Grammy®-nominated Eroica
Trio thrills audiences with flawless technical virtuosity, irresistible
enthusiasm and sensual elegance. Whether playing the great standards of
the piano trio repertoire or daring contemporary works, the three young
women who make up this celebrated ensemble electrify the concert stage
with their performances of depth and precision. The Trio won the
prestigious 1991 Naumburg Award, resulting in a highly successful
Lincoln Center debut and has since toured the United States, Europe,
and Asia. While maintaining their demanding concert schedule, the
Eroica Trio has released seven critically lauded recordings for
Angel/EMI Classics Records, garnering multiple Grammy®nominations.
The Eroica Trio performs the Beethoven Triple Concerto more
frequently than any other trio in the world, having appeared with
renowned symphonies such as Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Mostly
Mozart Orchestra, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Atlanta, Pittsburgh,
Houston and Seattle. In addition, The Trio has performed the work
abroad with Orquesta Sinfonica de Euskadi in Spain, Haydn Orchestra in
Italy, Budapest Symphony in Germany, and on tour in the United States
with the Prague Chamber Orchestra, culminating in a Lincoln Center
performance. The Trio appeared on the German television program
"Klassich!" performing the Beethoven Triple Concerto with the Munich
Symphony, which was aired throughout Europe.
The Eroica Trio is on the vanguard of a new generation of artists
who are changing the face of classical music. One of the first
all-female chamber ensembles to reach the top echelon of its field, the
Eroica Trio is helping to break an age-old gender barrier. As the
Chicago Sun Times remarked, "Our image of the piano trio is largely
formed by groups like the celebrated [original] Beaux Arts, three
middle-aged gentlemen who apply their wisdom and artistry to their
chosen repertory. That image is about to change." The Trio took its
name from Beethoven's passionate Third Symphony. Italian for "heroic,"
eroica is a word that aptly reflects the ensemble's approach to music.
As critics have noted, "It's been decades since this country has
produced a chamber music organization with this much passion." (The San
Francisco Examiner)
The Trio has established a unique identity by creating innovative
programs that span 300 years of music. A typical Eroica Trio concert
might include the Baroque symmetries of Vivaldi, the passion of Brahms,
and Paul Schoenfield's contemporary Café Music with its echoes of jazz,
spiritual and theatre music. The Eroica Trio is a strong champion of
new composers; each season includes an American or world premiere of a
new work. Most recently, the Trio presented the world premiere of Poets
and Prophets, a piece composed for the Trio by Mark O'Connor and
commissioned by Katherine Gould for the Montalvo Center for the
Performing Arts in Saratoga, CA. This season, the Trio will give the
world premiere of a work by acclaimed American composer, Kevin Puts,
commissioned by Music Accord.
As the 1997 official representative for New York's Carnegie Hall,
the Eroica Trio opened the sold-out "Distinctive Debuts" series at
Weill Recital Hall. This touring series, created to showcase rising
stars of classical music, was internationally sponsored by a consortium
of European halls and included performances at Konzerthaus in Vienna,
Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Philharmonie in Cologne, Alte Oper in
Frankfurt, Symphony Hall at ICC in Birmingham, and Konserthus in
Stockholm. The Eroica's performances were received with rave reviews.
"The Trio plays with technical flair, raw, driven energy and high
spirits. The ensemble also has plenty of charm and stage presence. It
was obvious that all three musicians were having as much fun as the
[Carnegie Hall] audience." (The Wall Street Journal)
Immediately following its acclaimed Carnegie Hall debut in 1997, the
Eroica Trio was offered an exclusive five-record contract by Angel/EMI
Classics Records, which was extended in 2002 to include three
additional recordings. The Trio's self-titled debut CD, which features
works by Ravel, Benjamin Godard, a commissioned arrangement of the
Gershwin Preludes, and Paul Schoenfield's Café Music, was awarded NPR
Performance Today's "Debut Recording of the Year" and featured in Time
Out New York's "Top Ten Recordings" of 1997. The ensemble's second
disc, "Dvorak/Shostakovich/Rachmaninoff" released in the fall of 1998,
concentrates on the works of those composers, as well as the Trio's own
arrangement of Rachmaninoff's Vocalise, and was nominated for two
Grammy®Awards. The New York Times noted: "Eroica's musicians have the
muscle to be purely dramatic and emotional, but here they stand out for
subtler reasons: all three players are soloists who have a lot to say,
and every note, no matter how light, has some significance." The Eroica
Trio's critically acclaimed third recording, "Baroque" was released in
November 1999 and spent the next nine months in the top 20 on
Billboard's charts. "Baroque" includes works by Bach, Vivaldi and the
Eroica Trio's own arrangement of Albinoni's Adagio. The ensemble's next
album, "Pasión" was released in October 2000 and features Argentinean,
Brazilian and Spanish composers, including Piazzolla, Villa-Lobos and
Turina. The Trio's fifth album for Angel/EMI Classics Records, "Brahms
Trios Nos. 1 & 2" was released in January 2002 to great critical
acclaim. This disc features the composer's lullaby arranged for piano
trio by Sara Sant'Ambrogio. The Trio's sixth recording for Angel/EMI,
"Beethoven's Triple Concerto Op. 56 and Piano Trio Op. 11" was recorded
with the Prague Chamber Orchestra and released in October 2003. The
release came just prior to a four-week coast-to-coast tour of the
United States with that celebrated ensemble, catapulting this
particular piece into Billboard's Top 20 for the first time in
recording history.
In addition to its demanding concert and recording schedule, the
Eroica Trio is committed to music education, giving concerts, master
classes and special children's shows at schools and colleges throughout
the country. Each summer, the Trio performs at music festivals
throughout the world, including the Hollywood Bowl, Aspen, Mostly
Mozart, Ravinia, and Spoleto, Italy.
The Eroica Trio has appeared on numerous television programs,
including ABC's The View, CNN's Showbiz Today, CBS and ABC News, the
CBS Morning Show and Saturday Morning, A&E's Breakfast with the
Arts, The Isaac Mizrahi Show, Pure Oxygen, Bloomberg TV and Fox's The
Crier Report. In addition, the ladies will be featured in the
international broadcast of The Artists' Way At Work, an in-depth
exploration of artistic creativity. Eroica!, a special documentary
about the Trio and its commissioning of a new triple concerto by Kevin
Kaska, premiered on the PBS series Independent Lens in December 2003.
The group has been featured in such magazines as Elle, Glamour,
Vanity Fair, Detour, Marie Claire, Gotham, Entrée, Bon Appétit, Time
Out New York, Gramophone, Piano, Vivace, Auditorium, and Chamber Music.
In addition, the ladies have graced the covers of magazines as diverse
as Fanfare, Cigar, Strings, Tall, and Strad. Grand Marnier®created a
new cocktail dubbed "The Eroica" which was unveiled for the release of
the "Pasión" recording. Chateau Sainte Michelle, a vineyard in Seattle,
also named one of their vintage Rieslings in honor of the Trio.
The women who make up the Eroica Trio are all top-ranked,
award-winning soloists and have performed on many of the world's great
stages. Pianist Erika Nickrenz, who made her concerto debut at New
York's Town Hall at the age of 11, was a featured soloist on the PBS
series Live from Lincoln Center. A recipient of the Rockefeller
Tanglewood Fellowship, she began her studies with German Diez and
received her Bachelor and Master of Music degrees from the Juilliard
School as a pupil of Abbey Simon. Nickrenz was a soloist with the
Jupiter Symphony in Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall and in the spring
of 2003 gave a performance and rang the opening bell for New York Stock
Exchange as part of Steinway's 150th anniversary celebration. She has
recorded several CDs on the MusicMaster and ASV London labels and now
records exclusively for Angel/EMI Classics. A native of Sydney,
Australia, Susie Park's international lauds include top prizes in the
Indianapolis, Menuhin and Wieniawski International Violin Competitions.
Concertizing around the world, her major solo appearances include
collaborations with the Indianapolis Symphony, Orchestra of St. Lukes
in New York, Memphis Symphony, Australian orchestras including those of
Sydney and Melbourne, Korea's KBS orchestra, the Lille Orchestre
National and in venues including Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall in
Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the 92nd Street Y and
Boston's Gardner Museum. She made her solo debut at the age of five and
holds her Bachelor of Music degree from the Curtis Institute of Music
where she studied under Jaime Laredo and her Artist Diploma from the
New England Conservatory where she studied with Donald Weilerstein.
Cellist Sara Sant'Ambrogio's international successes include winning a
medal at the prestigious International Tchaikovsky Violoncello
Competition in Moscow, resulting in tours across North America, Europe,
and the Middle East, culminating in a recital at Carnegie Hall which
was broadcast on national television. She has performed with the
Boston, Atlanta, St. Louis and Dallas Symphonies among others.
Sant'Ambrogio has won a Grammy®Award for her recording of Leonard
Bernstein's "Arias and Barcaroles." In addition, she has enjoyed
collaborating on rock, pop and jazz CDs and movie soundtracks. Her solo
CD, "Dreaming" was released on Sebastian Records in September 2004, and
her latest CD of the Bach Solo Cello Suites will be released in 2007.
The ladies of the Eroica Trio share many personal and musical
connections; indeed, Nickrenz, Park and Sant'Ambrogio's paths have
crossed at many artistic junctions. When they were just 12 years old,
Erika and Sara studied both piano and chamber music with Isabelle
Sant'Ambrogio, Sara's grandmother. As teenagers, Erika and Sara coached
chamber music with Sara's father and first teacher, John Sant'Ambrogio,
principal cellist of the St. Louis Symphony. In the early years of the
Eroica Trio, coaches included Mr. Sant'Ambrogio as well as Erika's
father, the noted violist Scott Nickrenz. Since the Trio signed with
Angel/EMI Classics Records, five of its CDs were produced by Erika's
mother, three-time Grammy®Award winner Joanna Nickrenz. Park and
Sant'Ambrogio both attended the Curtis Institute of Music, and all
three women performed at the Marlboro Music Festival and toured
nationally with Music from Marlboro. Jaime Laredo, a teacher and mentor
of Park's, was instrumental in bringing Sara to Curtis and presented
the Eroica Trio's New York debut. Many years ago, Park's teacher,
Donald Weilerstein, formed a piano quintet with Nickrenz's mother
(pianist Joanna Nickrenz) and father (violist Scott Nickrenz) and two
others, the New Chamber Quintet.
During the 2008-2009 season, in addition to performing in
traditional venues internationally, the Eroica Trio will be playing in
nightclubs on a cross country tour, introducing their music to new
audiences. The first tour will coincide with the release of the Trio's
eighth CD for EMI featuring all-American music, "An American Journey",
with new arrangements of music from Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess" and
Bernstein's "West Side Story" commissioned by the Eroica. Also on the
CD will be Mark O'Connor's "Poets and Prophets", written for Eroica and
inspired by the music of Johnny Cash. Their International tours include
Germany with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and 11 concerts in New
Zealand. A highlight of the trio's repertoire for the season will be a
new trio commissioned for them by Kevin Puts, entitled "Trio Sinfonia".
Visit the Eroica Trio website: www.eroicatrio.com
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