Since winning the prestigious Naumburg Chamber Music Award in 1989, The
Peabody Trio has established itself as an important presence in the
chamber music world as vivid interpreters of the classics of the
repertoire, advocates for new music, and dedicated teachers and mentors
to a generation of young musicians. They bring to their music making
what The Washington Post
calls “the romantic fervor of the 20th century greats.”
The Peabody Trio gave its New York debut in 1990 at Alice Tully Hall
and has since performed in the most important chamber music series in
North America, including New York, Washington, Chicago, Denver,
Vancouver, Montreal, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego.
Internationally, they tour frequently in England, making repeat
appearances at London’s Wigmore Hall, and in Japan and Israel. Their
reputation as champions of new music garnered them an invitation to the
first Biennale for contemporary music, Tempus Fugit, in Tel Aviv.
Festivals including Tanglewood, Skaneateles, Cape and Islands, and
Rockport have played home to their summer performances. Their radio
broadcasts include performances on Saint Paul Sunday Morning,
Performance Today, Morning Pro Musica, CBC, Radio-Canada, WGBH in
Boston, and WQXR in New York. The Peabody Trio collaborates frequently
with such eminent artists as clarinetist Charles Neidich, violists
Roger Tapping and Maria Lambros, soprano Phyllis Bryn-Julson, baritone
William Sharp, and actor Andre De Shields. Working with Walter van Dyk
and Elizabeth Mansfield, The Peabody Trio is at the forefront of
chamber music theater with a series of innovative, collaborative
projects involving piano trio and actor.
The Peabody Trio currently serves as the resident faculty ensemble of
the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, a position they have held since
1989. They are frequently asked to perform educational residencies for
chamber music organizations and have served as visiting professors at
universities and conservatories both in the United States and abroad.
They spend summers as ensemble-in-residence at the Yellow Barn Music
School and Festival in Putney, Vermont.
The Peabody Trio celebrated its twentieth season in 2007-08 with the
release of the Beethoven Trios Opus 1, Nos. 1 and 3 on Artek Records,
the second in their series of the complete piano trios of Beethoven.
The recording was hailed by Gramophone
as “bold, flexible and vibrant,” while The Baltimore Sun praised its
“vibrancy and expressive flair.” In 2004 the trio released the
Beethoven Opus 70 Trios, which won acclaim from Strad Magazine as “some of the most
accomplished Beethoven Trio playing …heard in many a year.” Previously
they have recorded for New World Records and CRI.
[June 2009]