* En anglais uniquement
Among the best-known piano trios, the
Eroica Trio is also one of the most successful all-women chamber ensembles in the world. Winners of the 1991 Walter W. Naumburg Chamber Music Competition, the ensemble went on to a successful debut at Lincoln Center and several tours of the United States, Europe, and Asia. The trio quickly gained a reputation for passion and excitement in its performances and for innovative programs.
Pianist Erika Nickrenz, who began playing piano at age six and performed her first concerto at 11, has received the Rockefeller Award and has been featured in the PBS series Live from Lincoln Center.
Australian violinist Susie Park, who replaced founding member Adela Peña in 2006, has won top honors in the Indianapolis, Menuhin, and Wieniawski International Violin Competitions, and has appeared as soloist with the Indianapolis Symphony, as well as with the Korean KBS Orchestra and orchestras in Sydney and Melbourne. Cellist
Sara Sant'Ambrogio has won many international competitions and received a medal at the International Tchaikovsky Violoncello Competition. She has toured extensively as a soloist and played with orchestras in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, St. Louis, Moscow, and Izmir. She has released several solo CDs and joined in crossover performances with
Rufus Wainwright, VAST, Angela McCluskey, and hip-hop artist Beatrice.
The group took its name from
Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 in E flat major, "Eroica." It is one of the most active piano trios in the field of orchestral performance, and plays more concerts of
Beethoven's Triple Concerto than any other trio. It commissioned a triple concerto from composer
Kevin Kaska, which was premiered in 2001 with the
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra. The
Eroica Trio also premiered Tango for Seven by
Raimundo Penaforte, composed for an innovative combination of string trio plus string quartet, and which was premiered with the
St. Lawrence String Quartet.
Recording for Angel/EMI Classics, the
Eroica Trio's repertoire has included the music of
Maurice Ravel,
Sergey Rachmaninov,
Dmitry Shostakovich, and
Antonin Dvorák, as well as lighter fare by
George Gershwin,
Leonard Bernstein,
Astor Piazzolla, and
Mark O'Connor.