photo: Sarah Kane Photography

Raised amidst the diverse musical traditions of southern Appalachia, cellist Juliana Soltis inspires audiences the world over with “exquisite, heart-rending” (Early Music America) performances that are redefining classical music. A “true virtuoso” (Classical Music), Soltis delights in connecting listeners with the forgotten stories of classical music. 

Hailed as one of the most fearlessly innovative and creative cellists of her generation for her “serious musicianship and inquiring mind” (Gramophone), Soltis has headlined the BRQ Vantaa (Finland) Fringe Series for Emerging Artists, appeared at the Boston Early Music Festival, and has been featured on the Millennium Stage Series at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington DC. 

A passionate recording artist, Soltis’ 2017 debut, Entrez, le Diable! (Acis), garnered both international attention and critical acclaim — “[a] fierce display of impassioned rhetoric” (Gramophone) — with Classical Music’s Colin Clarke proclaiming it “beyond criticism” and “a stunning release.” Her eagerly-anticipated sophomore offering, Going Of Script (King Street Records, 2019) was met with similarly enthusiastic praise for her unprecedented and highly-taboo exploration of the long-lost art of improvisation in Bach’s beloved Cello Suites: “You’ve never heard Bach played this way before,” declared Steve Staruch (Classical Minnesota Public Radio), while Japan’s Yomiuri Shimbun marveled that “never did one think the heart could be so moved by a cello alone.” 

Ever drawn to the fringes of her art form, Soltis released her third studio album, AMERICAN WOMAN, on PARMA Recordings’ GRAMMY®-winning Navona Records label. Featuring works for cello and piano by Mary Howe, Amy Beach, Margaret Bonds, Helen C. Crane, Dorothy Rudd-Moore, and Florence Price, the album celebrates the lost legacy of America’s women composers — all of whom were highly-acclaimed during their individual lifetimes, but nevertheless saw their music fall into obscurity following their deaths. 

“I feel that I have been preparing all my life to play this music,” Soltis said of her upcoming release, noting that some of these works have been waiting over a century to be heard. “These women deserve their place in the narrative of our shared musical history, and I feel both honored and humbled to tell their stories.” 

A devoted performer-scholar, Soltis holds degrees from the New England Conservatory, Ball State University, The Longy School of Music, and Oberlin Conservatory; her primary studies having been conducted under the tutelage of Yeesun Kim, Richard Aaron, Phoebe Carrai, and Catharina Meints Caldwell. When not touring, recording, or climbing the library stacks researching her next project, Soltis can be found at home in historic Church Hill in Richmond VA, where she enjoys gardening (with some success), hunting for vintage vinyl, and binge-watching reruns of The French Chef with her two rescue greyhounds, Rain and Ceci.

Albums

American Woman

Release Date: October 4, 2024
Catalog Number: NV6659
20th Century
Romantic
Chamber
Cello
Piano
The cello-piano duo is justly hailed for its tremendous expressiveness. Cellist Juliana Soltis and pianist Ruoting Li remarkably demonstrate this setup's emotive power on AMERICAN WOMAN while championing a noble cause — highlighting underrepresented women composers. Featuring works by Mary Howe, Amy Beach, Margaret Bonds, Helen Crane, Dorothy Rudd Moore, and Florence Price, AMERICAN WOMAN sheds light on a treasure trove of rarely heard gems of cello-piano literature. The general tone is sweeping, romantic, expressive, at times fierce and energetic, then again tender and delicate. Soltis and Li show extraordinary ability not only in bringing out the unique style of each composer, but also in uniting them all in a great artistic effort.