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American Music Teacher, Feb-March, 2002
(Information subject to change)
Rising Stars Concert
Saturday, March 16 8:00 P.M.
Hsing-ay Hsu, pianist
Since making her stage debut at age 4, Hsing-ay Hsu has performed at notable venues such as Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center, Weill Hall at Carnegie (a sold-out recital), and has performed abroad in Beijing, Prague, Kromeriz, Shanghai, and Taipei. Her Brahms D-Minor Concerto performance with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra was reviewed by the Washington Post to be full of "power, authority and self-assurance."
Hsu is the 2000 Juilliard William Petschek Debut Pianist. She is also the 2001 recipient of a McCrane Foundation Artist Grant. Other honors include the prestigious Gilmore Young Artist Award in 1997 and second prize in the 1996 William Kapell International Piano Competition. As a 1995 United States Presidential Scholar of the Arts, she was awarded a USA Gold Medallion by President Clinton at the White House. She also has garnered prizes in the 1995 NFAA Artistic Recognition Talent Search (highest honor), the 1993 Stravinsky Awards International Piano Competition, the 1989 Young Keyboard Artists Association International Piano Competition and the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra Young Artist Auditions.
Born in Beijing, she bagan piano studies with her parents at age 3, continuing with Fei-Ping Hsu, Herbert Stessin at Juilliard and Claude Frank at Yale University, which she attended on a 1999 Paul and Daisy Soros Graduate Fellowship Prize. She has participated in Ravinia's Steans Institute, the Aspen Music Festival, the Juilliard-Columbia University Exchange and the Boston University Tanglewood Institute.
Julie Albers, cellist
Julie Albers's international career was launched during 1998-1999, a season that brought her to New Zealand's Dunedin Sinfonia and Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra--in addition to prestigious American debuts with The Newport Music Festival, Hawaii's Prince Albert Music Festival and the Sarasota Music Festival. That season, she made her debut with Germany's Philharmonisches Orchester Augsburg.
Julie began her 2001-2002 season by winning the second prize from Munich's Internationalen Musikwettbewerbes der ARD. She was also awarded the Wilhelm-Weichsler-Musikpreis der Stadt Osnabruck 2001, carrying with it a pair of debut performances with the Osnabrucker Symphonieorchester, conducted by Lothar Konigs.
Raised in Longmont, Colorado, Ms. Albers began violin studies at the age of 2 with her mother, switching to the cello at age 4. She moved to Cleveland during her junior year in high school to pursue studies through the Young Artist Program at The Cleveland Institute of Music, where she studied with Richard Aaron. Julie also studied at Ohio's Encore School for Strings and the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara, California. In 1999, Ms. Albers was the recipient of The Cleveland Cello Society Scholarship (Senior Division Prize); later that year, she was awarded the Grand Prize at the XIII International Competition for Young Musicians, sponsored by France's Orchestre Symphonique de Douai. Other honors include a finalist placing in the Stulberg International String Competition and being named a prize winner in the Johansen International String Competition in Washington, D.C.
Julie Albers plays a cello crafted in 1790 in Naples by Vincenzo Ventapane.
The Eroica Trio Sunday, March 17 8:00 P.M.
The GRAMMY-nominated Eroica Trio is one of the first all-female chamber ensembles to reach the top echelons of their field. Pianist Erika Nickrenz, violinist Adela Pena and cellist Sara Sant'Ambrogia have been electrifying the concert stage with their combination of technical virtuosity, vivid artistic interpretation and contagious exuberance in performance for more than a decade. The Trio won the prestigious 1991 Naumburg Award, resulting in an acclaimed Lincoln Center Debut and has since toured the United States, Europe and Asia. While maintaining this demanding concert schedule, the Trio has released three celebrated recordings.
During the 2001-2002 season, the Eroica Trio will be performing more than eighty concerts throughout the United States in Chicago (Ravinia), Los Angeles, Portland, Honolulu, Cincinnati, Houston and Seattle, and abroad. Extensive international tours will take the group to a Far East tour of Hong Kong, Singapore, India, Korea and Taiwan. The Eroica Trio also is the featured guest artist on Carnegie Hall's prestigious Neighborhood Concerts series.
The Trio took its name from Beethoven's passionate Third Symphony. Italian for "heroic," it is a word that aptly reflects the ensemble's approach to their art. The Trio has established a unique identity by creating innovative programs that span 300 years of music.
The Trio's members are prolific commissioners with at least one world premiere every season. This season, they will premiere a work commissioned for them by the Raleigh Chamber Music Guild by composer Scott Warner, entitled "Blessings to the Goddess."
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