Apollo's Fire Sorrell's focus with Apollo's Fire has been the 18th-century ideal of
Affekt, in which the performers use rhetoric and dramatic inflection to move the emotional moods of the listeners. She has been credited with "forging a vibrant and life-affirming approach to the re-making of early music" (BBC Magazine). Twelve of her CD recordings have become bestsellers on the
Billboard classical chart. In addition, she has led Apollo's Fire on tour at
Carnegie Hall, the BBC Proms, London's
Wigmore Hall, the Royal Theatre (
Teatro Real) of Madrid, the Heidelberg Spring Festival,
St Martin-in-the-Fields, the Grand Opera House of Bordeaux, the Aspen, Tanglewood, and Ravinia Festivals, the
Boston Early Music Festival and extensive North American tours of the
Brandenburg Concertos and the
Monteverdi Vespers. In Cleveland, Sorrell's concerts with Apollo's Fire are admired for consistently drawing one of the largest audiences in the country for period-instrument music. In 1999 Sorrell launched the multicultural folk wing of Apollo's Fire, consisting of hand-picked artists who are steeped in world music traditions as well as historical performance.
Discography In 2010, Sorrell received international attention when the British record label AVIE released her CD recording of Bach's
Brandenburg Concertos and two harpsichord concertos into the European market for the first time.
The Sunday Times (London) called it "a swaggering version… The most is made of the instrumental colours Bach so exhilaratingly put on show. The keyboard part in the 5th Brandenburg is brilliantly played by Sorrell."
Early Music America called it "stunning... A fabulous harpsichord cadenza played with gusto by Sorrell... perfectly polished."
Audiophile Audition wrote, "Nothing short of spectacular... Jeannette Sorrell is something of a wunderkind." The
American Record Guide wrote, "Sorrell leads from the harpsichord and delivers a brilliant take-no-captives rendition of the big solo in No. 5. In all, these performances are lively and unfailingly attractive — the best in what historical performance can be." Shortly thereafter, AVIE released Sorrell's recording of the Monteverdi
Vespers. This too received international attention, and become a Top 10 best-seller on the
Billboard classical chart in October 2010.
The Sunday Times called it "Exultant... instrumental colours blaze brilliantly."
Fanfare hailed the disc as "a stunning achievement.... Wins out handily over William Christie's versions and other recent issues." The
International Record Review wrote that "Sorrell and her fine young choir lavish attention on every phrase and inflexion. The exhilaration and sense of discovery is utterly infectious... an unanticipated delight." Sorrell won a GRAMMY in 2019 for the concept-album “Songs of Orpheus,” with Apollo’s Fire and tenor Karim Sulayman. Sorrell has over 30 CD recordings, including the Bach
St John Passion and Vivaldi’s
Four Seasons which have been chosen as best in the field by the SUNDAY TIMES of London (2020 and 2021) Her Monteverdi
Vespers recording was chosen by BBC Music Magazine as one of “30 Must-Have Recordings for Our Lifetime” (September 2022). Her discography also includes the complete Brandenburg Concerti and harpsichord concerti of Bach (Billboard Classical Top 10 in 2012), four discs of Mozart, Handel’s
Messiah, and five creative crossover projects, including
Sephardic Journey (Billboard World Music #2, Classical #7) and
Christmas on Sugarloaf Mountain (Billboard Classical #3, and named “Festive Disc of the Year” by GRAMOPHONE).
Guest conducting Sorrell made her
New York Philharmonic debut in 2021 to rave reviews (New York Times critic Anthony Tomasini). The following year she made her
Philadelphia Orchestra debut, with Philadelphia Inquirer chief critic David Patrick Stearns writing, "The Philadelphia Orchestra performed its freshest Messiah in years. Jeannette Sorrell was on the podium, bringing revelations.” She returned to the New York Philharmonic in 2023, leading her own adaptation of Handel's
Israel in Egypt. Sorrell has repeatedly conducted the
Pittsburgh Symphony,
St Paul Chamber Orchestra,
Seattle Symphony,
Utah Symphony, Florida Orchestra,
Philharmonia Baroque in San Francisco, and
New World Symphony; and has also led the
Philadelphia Orchestra,
Royal Scottish National Orchestra,
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, Festival Orchestra of Lincoln Center (NYC),
Baltimore Symphony, the
National Symphony at the
Kennedy Center, Houston Symphony, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony, Opera St Louis with the St Louis Symphony, the National Arts Centre Orchestra (Ottawa), Calgary Philharmonic (Canada), Royal Northern Sinfonia (UK), Orquesta Sinfónica de Castilla y León (Spain), Grand Rapids Symphony, North Carolina Symphony, and the Orchestra of St Luke’s at
Carnegie Hall, among others.
Awards Sorrell is the recipient of the Noah Greenberg Award from the American Musicological Society; and the Cleveland Arts Prize (2017). She is a 2-time winner of the "American Masterpieces" grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for her work on early American music. She holds an honorary doctorate from Case Western Reserve University. In 2024, she received the Herrick Award from the Early Settlers Association of the Western Reserve for her contributions to Cleveland.
Civic activist Sorrell is a frequent speaker to civic and student groups on topics such as entrepreneurial leadership, women as leaders, and building new audiences for the arts. She has also been active as a political volunteer. ==References==