Jacqueline Sorensen is a Charlottetown-based pianist who currently holds positions as Sessional Lecturer at the UPEI Music Department, Director of Music at St. Mark's Presbyterian Church in Charlottetown, Piano Examiner for the Royal Conservatory of Music, and is in demand as a music festival adjudicator across Atlantic Canada and Ontario. Jacqueline was also a Mentor for the 2009 Canada Games' National Artist Programme, and also maintains an independent piano studio in Charlottetown.

Jacqueline's interest in Canadian music led her to found the Charlottetown Centre of Contemporary Showcase under the umbrella of the Alliance for Canadian New Music Projects, which she managed from 1997-2006. During this time, she spearheaded a publication project of a collection of student-level piano works entitled "Kick Up Your Heels and other Piano Pieces by Atlantic Canadian Composers" which is published by Pine Grove Music in PEI.  She was also a member of the Canadian Music Centre's Atlantic Regional Council from 1998-2004. Since 2002, she has been a member of eklektikos, a PEI-based new music group which has performed and commissioned the works of several Canadian composers and has participated in the CMC's New Music In New Places projects.

As a versatile pianist she performs regularly with such Island groups as the UPEI Chorus and Chamber Singers, Le Regazze Girls' Choir, Stratford Community Choir, and many solo artists representing a wide variety of musical genres from Classical to popular. She was Music Director for the Canadian hit musical "Anne and Gilbert" at the Jubilee Theatre in Summerside during the summers of 2006, 2007 and 2008, and for several years has filled roles as Rehearsal Pianist for the Charlottetown Festival's mainstage production of "Anne of Green Gables", and co-producer and collaborative performer (under the pseudonym of "Suzy Q and Jac") in "Five Days, Five Plays", a summer-long children's entertainment theatre at the Beaconsfield Children's Festival.

Jacqueline is a member of the Canadian Music Festival Adjudicators' Association. She was the President of the PEI Registered Music Teachers' Association for six years (1996-2002) and PEI delegate to the Canadian Federation of Music Teachers' Associations (CFMTA) for 10 years (1996-2005, 2007), President of the PEI Kiwanis Music Festival Association (2002-2004), Coordinator of The National Music Festival 2004 which was held in August 2004 in Charlottetown, and Co-Chair of the East Coast Music Awards'  inaugural Jazz/Classical Concert Series held in Charlottetown in 2001.