Joshua Bell (born December 9, 1967, Bloomington, Indiana, U.S.) is an American musician whose technical accomplishments and versatility in classical and popular music made him one of the most successful and critically lauded violinists in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Bell received his first violin at age four from his parents after they found he was making music by stretching rubber bands to different lengths on dresser drawers. His violin studies became serious when at age 12 he attended the Meadowmount music camp in Westport, New York. There he met the renowned teacher Josef Gingold of Indiana University, who later became his mentor. Bell made his orchestral debut at age 14 with Riccardo Muti and the Philadelphia Orchestra—becoming the orchestra’s youngest-ever soloist—and he made his first recording at age 18. In appearances as a soloist, with small groups and orchestras, and as a conductor, Bell began to earn a number of honours. He received a Grammy Award for his performance in the first recording of Nicholas Maw’s Violin Concerto (2000)—which was written for him—and his album Romance of the Violin won Billboard’s 2004 Classical Album of the Year.
In 2007 Bell received the prestigious Avery Fisher Prize and subsequently accepted a post as senior lecturer at Indiana University’s Jacobs School of Music. His recordings that year included the two-CD album The Essential Joshua Bell and (with pianist Jeremy Denk and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Marin Alsop) The Red Violin Concerto, a concert version of the Academy Award-winning music composed by John Corigliano for the film The Red Violin (1998), for which Bell had performed the violin solos. In 2011 Bell was named music director of the acclaimed Academy of St. Martin in the Fields chamber ensemble, established by British violinist and conductor Neville Marriner. Bell recorded numerous albums with the ensemble, including For the Love of Brahms (2016) and Scottish Fantasy (2018). Their 2013 album, with Bell directing Ludwig van Beethoven’s fourth and seventh symphonies, debuted at number one on the Billboard charts.
During the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 Bell offered a number of online performances, including the PBS special Joshua Bell: At Home with Music. He continued to appear as a solo violinist on several motion picture soundtracks, and he occasionally played himself in such streaming series as Amazon’s Mozart in the Jungle. His 2007 incognito performances in a Washington, D.C., subway station led to a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post feature and the film Find Your Way: A Busker’s Documentary (2014). They also inspired a children’s book (The Man with the Violin by Canadian author Kathy Stinson [2013]).