The BBC hails Marcel Rominger's playing as "equally polished, considered and characterful," and New York Concert Review described him as playing with “poise and elegance” when he made his Carnegie Hall debut January, 2009.

Mr. Rominger won the Crane Concerto Competition and North Arkansas Symphony Orchestra Concerto / Aria Competition and is the recipient of the Rose L. Greenblatt Award in Piano. He was also named the MTNA Arkansas State Winner of the Young Artist Category. Mr. Rominger was awarded an Honorable Mention at the William Garrison Competition in Baltimore Maryland.  He was selected as the recipient for the Council on the Arts & Humanities for Staten Island Excellence in the Performing Arts Award and was awarded a grant in to perform a recital on Staten Island.  Mr. Rominger is a supporter of new music and has participated in the New York City Electroacoustic Festival.

In addition to being a soloist, Mr. Rominger has appeared with the Potsdam Symphony Orchestra and the North Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. His music has been featured on the radio station WDAV in Charlotte, NC and BBC’s World Update on World Service Radio.  He continues to give performances throughout the U.S., Europe and South America.

Mr. Rominger obtained a Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education and Piano Performance from the Crane School of Music at the State University of New York in Potsdam. His teachers included Olga Gross and Paul Wyse. He received his Masters of Music from the University of Arkansas studying under acclaimed concert pianist Jura Margulis where Mr. Rominger held an assistantship in accompanying. He has studied with Hugo Goldenzweig at Mannes College of Music in New York, and he has also been coached by Seymour Bernstein and Leslie Howard.  In 2019, Mr. Rominger completed his a Doctorate of Musical Arts in Piano Performance at The City University of New York, Graduate Center.

In addition to performing, Mr. Rominger is highly sought after as a scholar, teacher and masterclass presenter throughout the world.  He has taught classes at Baruch College, College of Staten Island, LaGuardia Community College and is a recipient of the CUNY Chancellor's Fellowship Award.  He has also served as the Director of Performing Arts at the Staten Island Conservatory of Music and is the founder of the Sunnyside Piano Studio in Queens, New York.