Joshua
Bell has captured the public’s imagination like
no other classical violinist of his time. His 2007-2008 season
follows a seminal year highlighted by receiving the coveted Avery
Fisher Prize, being the only U.S. musician named by the World
Economic Forum as one of the 250 Young Global Leaders, and his
appointment to the Indiana University’s Jacobs School of
Music faculty as a senior lecturer. In concerts and on recordings,
his bold, charismatic artistry has brought a fresh voice to the
most venerable masterpieces while also uncovering lesser known
gems and new works, as with the Fall ’07 CD release of
The
Red Violin Concerto by John Corigliano. An exclusive Sony
Classical artist who has created a richly varied catalogue of
recordings, recently released is
The Essential Joshua Bell,
while Voice of the Violin continues to soar on the heels of
Romance
of the Violin which Billboard named the 2004 Classical CD
of the Year, and Bell the Classical Artist of the Year. His live
recording of the
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto continues
to win critical acclaim.
After summer performances at Tanglewood, the Verbier Festival
in Switzerland and Mostly Mozart at Lincoln Center,
Joshua
Bell’s 2007-2008 performance season includes concerts
with the BBC Proms at London’s Royal Albert Hall, a European
tour with Kurt Masur conducting the Orchestre National de France
as well as appearances with the Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Chicago
Symphony, the Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra and the Tonhalle-Orchester.
In October, he will premiere a new work written for him by Jay
Greenberg with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s at Carnegie Hall.
He concludes 2007 – and welcomes 2008 – as the guest
soloist with Lorin Maazel and the New York Philharmonic at the
annual New Year’s Eve Gala at Lincoln Center. A recital
tour with Jeremy Denk takes the pair to Europe and the U.S. including
The Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall. Bell will also tour Europe
as a guest soloist with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields.
For over two decades,
Joshua Bell has been captivating
audiences worldwide with his poetic musicality. He came to national
attention at the age of 14 in a highly acclaimed orchestral debut
with Riccardo Muti and the Philadelphia Orchestra. A Carnegie
Hall debut, the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant and a recording
contract further confirmed his presence in the music world. Today
he is equally at home as a soloist, chamber musician, and orchestra
leader and hisrestless curiosity and multifaceted musical interests
have taken him in exciting new directions, that has earned him
the rare title of "classical music superstar." In addition
to his concert career, Bell enjoys chamber music collaborations
with artists such as Pamela Frank, Steven Isserlis and Edgar Meyer
as well as occasional collaborations with artists outside the
classical arena, having shared the stage with Josh Groban, James
Taylor and Sting.
"Bell", Gramophone stated simply,
"is
dazzling".
Joshua Bell made his first recording at the age
of 18, and he has an extensive catalogue of classical recordings
resulting in a distinctive and wide-ranging body of work.

For three years,
Bell was deeply involved in
the creation of John Corigliano’s Academy Award-winning
score for the 1999 film
The Red Violin, released on Sony
Classical. Bell performed the virtuosic solos on the soundtrack
and served as an advisor and stand-in in for the film. In his
Oscar acceptance speech, a jubilant Corigliano proclaimed, "Joshua
plays like a God." Bell collaborated with Marin Alsop and
the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra on the world premiere in 2003
of Corigliano’s
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra(
"The
Red Violin"), a concert work drawn from the film score.
In June 2006, Bell, Alsop and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
recorded this concerto for Sony Classical. Corigliano wrote this
work with "the sublime young virtuoso", Joshua Bell
in mind, but also honoring Corigliano’s father, the late
violinist John Corigliano, who for many years was concertmaster
of the New York Philharmonic and the concerto’s dedicatee.
"Joshua’s playing resembles that of my father,"
the composer said in a program note, adding that Bell "is
an artist in the grand tradition. No cold, clinical dissection
of a work would flow from his bow." The new Sony Classical
disc will couple the concerto with Bell’s recording of Corigliano’s
Sonata for Violin and Piano and be released in September, 2007.
From the classical repertoire, Bell has made critically acclaimed
recordings for Sony Classical of the concertos of Beethoven and
Mendelssohn (both featuring his own cadenzas), and Sibelius and
Goldmark, as well as the Grammy Award winning Nicholas Maw concerto.
His Grammy-nominated recording
Gershwin Fantasy premiered
a new work for violin and orchestra based on themes from Gershwin’s
Porgy and Bess. Its success led to an all-Bernstein recording
(also a Grammy nominee) that included the premiere of the
West
Side Story Suite as well as a new recording of the composer’s
Serenade. With the composer and double bass virtuoso Edgar Meyer,
Bell appears on the Grammy-nominated crossover
recording
Short Trip Home and a disc of concert works
by Meyer and the 19th-century composer Giovanni Bottesini.
Bell
also collaborated with Wynton Marsalis on the Grammy-winning spoken
word children’s album,
Listen to the Storyteller
and Bela Fleck’s Grammy Award winning
Perpetual Motiom.
He has twice performed on the Grammy Awards telecast in recent
years, performing music from
Short Trip Home and
West
Side Story Suite.
Bell has also won the Mercury Music Prize for
the Maw concerto recording with Sir Roger Norrington and the London
Philharmonic Orchestra, and Germany’s Echo Klassik for Sibelius/Goldmark
concerto recording with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles
Philharmonic Orchestra. He received the Gramophone Award for his
recording of the Barber and Walton violin concertos and Bloch’s
Baal Shem.
With more than 30 CDs recorded,
Bell’s
performances for Sony Classical film soundtracks include the Classical
Brit-nominated
Ladies in Lavender and Academy Award-winning
film
Iris, in an original score by James Horner. Bell
has also appeared as himself in the film
Music of the Heart
starring Meryl Streep, and millions of people are just as likely
to see him on
Late Night with Conan O’Brien,
The
Tonight Show, CBS’ "Sunday Morning" and the
PBS programs
Great Performances—Joshua Bell: West Side
Story Suite from Central Park, Joshua Bell at the Penthouse—Live
From Lincoln Center, Memorial Day Concert, Sesame Street
and A&E’s
Biography. He was one of the first
classical artists to have a music video air on VH1, and he has
been the subject of a BBC
Omnibus documentary. Bell has
been profiled in publications ranging from
Newsweek
to
People Magazine’s 50 Most Beautiful
People issue,
Gramophone and
The New
York Times, which stated,
"Mr. Bell
doesn’t stand in anyone’s shadow."
Bell and his two sisters grew up on a farm in
Bloomington, Indiana. As a child, he indulged in many passions
outside of music, becoming an avid computer game player and a
competitive athlete. He placed fourth in a national tennis tournament
at age 10 and still keeps his racquet close by. Bell received
his first violin at age four after his parents, both psychologists
by profession, noticed him plucking tunes with rubber bands he
had stretched around the handles of his dresser drawers. By 12
he was serious about the instrument, thanks in large part to the
inspiration of renowned violinist and pedagogue Josef Gingold,
who had become his beloved teacher and mentor.
In 1989,
Bell received an Artist Diploma in Violin
Performance from Indiana University. His alma mater also honored
him with a Distinguished Alumni Service Award only two years after
his graduation. He has been named an "Indiana Living Legend"
and received the Indiana Governor’s Arts Award. In ’05
he was inducted into the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame. Bell currently
serves on the Artist Committee of the Kennedy Center Honors.
Joshua Bell plays the 1713 Gibson ex Huberman
Stradivarius.