Concert pianist HsinYi Tsai has established herself as a desired soloist, chamber musician and collaborator. After her international debut at the age of 11 as soloist for Beethoven Piano Concerto Op. 15 in San Francisco, HsinYi has performed as both soloist and chamber musician in many major cities in Europe, North America and East Asia, including Vienna, Salzburg, Budapest, Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt an Main, London, Beijing, Shanghai, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington D. C., Saint Louis, etc. She has collaborated with numbers of renowned musicians, including members of Amphion String Quartet, Brooklyn Rider, A Far Cry Chamber Orchestra, Grammy-Nominated clarinetists, Mingzhe Wang and David Shifrin, cellist Jonathan Spitz, and Manuel Laufer, director of program in piano study in NYU. In 2012 and 2014, she recorded albums of chamber music composed by American composer, John Sichel, as well as his piano solo repertoire later in 2016.

As an educator, Dr. Tsai has been teaching both privately and in school settings since 1997. In 2012, she co-founded a community music school that offers innovative and creative music instruction to students of all ages and levels. From 2013 to 2017, together with Catalan percussionist, Roger Noguerol, they merged elements of Latin and pop music with classical repertoire as part of the educational project. HsinYi became the director of the after school private music program at Avenues, the world school in 2019 until 2022. She collaborated with occupational therapists and established a system to help students with learning differences.

Dr. Tsai received her Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Piano Performance at Rutgers University, where she studied with Susan Starr, prize winner of Tchaikovsky Piano Competition. HsinYi also studied with Alexander Song and Michael Dellinger in Taipei National University of the Arts, where she received both Bachelor and Master degrees. From 2002 to 2005, She pursued research and performance practice of Beethoven and Schubert Sonatas, as well as Chopin Ballades under the guidance of Jacob Lateiner.