Since her graduation in 2019, where she earned a master's degree in early music, Marie Nadeau-Tremblay has established herself on the Canadian scene as a promising young baroque violinist. In 2019, she appeared four times on the honor roll of the Mathieu-Duguay International Early Music Competition, winning, among other prizes, first place. Named "Révélation Radio-Canada 2021-2022" in classical music and "Discovery of the Year" at the 2022 Opus Awards, Marie is also the recipient of the Choquette-Symcox Prize from the Jeunesses Musicales Canada Foundation. Her album La Peste (2020) earned her nominations for the Juno and Opus Awards. Her album Préludes et solitudes (2021) was warmly received by critics, both by CBC and Early Music America, and won an Opus Award in 2023 in the "Album of the Year" category. In 2022, Marie also received a career development grant from the Père Lindsay Foundation. She plays on a Thomas Perry violin (1750) as well as on an Amati violin made by Timothy Johnson, which is generously loaned to her by Mr. Jacques Marchand. Besides music, Marie enjoys drawing and studies Mandarin and Japanese.