Camilla Urso (born June 13, 1842, Nantes, France—died Jan. 20, 1902, New York, N.Y., U.S.) was an American musician who was recognized as one of the finest violinists of the latter half of the 19th century.
Urso was the daughter of an Italian flutist and a Portuguese singer. When she was six years old, despite general skepticism about her ability to master a “masculine” instrument, she began taking violin lessons. The success of her first public recital a year later convinced her parents of her talent, and the family moved to Paris, where Urso studied at the Paris Conservatory.
She arrived in New York City in September 1852 to begin an American concert tour. The tour arrangements collapsed, but she gave concerts in New York City, Boston, and Philadelphia. She continued to tour in the United States until 1855, when she settled with her parents in Nashville, Tennessee.
In 1863 Urso played with the Philharmonic Society in Boston, and later in the year she appeared with the New York Philharmonic. She toured New England with Patrick S. Gilmore’s band in 1863–64. In 1864–65 she had her own concert company, with which she made a Canadian tour. She returned to Paris in June 1865 and scored a great success. For the next 30 years Urso toured regularly in the United States and abroad and was acknowledged as one of the preeminent violinists of the day. Her repertoire included both classic and contemporary works. She retired from performing in 1895 and settled in New York City, where for some years she taught privately and at the National Conservatory of Music.