[JPL] Bill Barber, 87; jazz tuba player
Dr. Jazz
drjazz at drjazz.com
Wed Jul 4 21:42:46 EDT 2007
OBITUARIES
Bill Barber, 87; jazz tuba player
By Adam Bernstein
The Washington Post
July 2, 2007
Bill Barber, a musician who helped refashion the jazz tuba from its
predictable oompah passages to suit the complex melodies and rhythms of
Miles Davis and other postwar jazz modernists, died of congestive heart
failure June 18 at his home in Bronxville, N.Y. He was 87.
A fixture of many early jazz bands, the tuba was largely reduced to a jazz
relic by the early 1930s as sound technology improved. The upright bass
took the place of the booming brass instrument.
Yet a core of post-World War II arrangers, notably Gil Evans, admired the
tuba's tone color possibilities. They advocated its use in small jazz
groups more as a melodic instrument than for any rhythmic pace-keeping.
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz credited Barber, who took a central role
in Evans' experiments in sound with trumpeter Davis, as probably the first
tuba player "to take solos in a modern jazz style and to participate in
intricate ensemble passages."
Harvey Phillips, an emeritus music professor at Indiana University and a
leading tuba player since the 1950s, wrote this year in the journal of the
International Tuba Euphonium Assn. that Barber "is a legend to me and many
others for
pioneering the interpretive styles and phrasing of the tuba in
modern American jazz and for helping define the variety of roles the tuba
can play in other music disciplines."
John William Barber was born May 21, 1920, in Hornell, N.Y. His music
career began when his grade-school band needed a tuba player. After
attending the prestigious Interlochen music camp in Michigan, he entered
New York's Juilliard School but left in 1942 with a dozen musician friends
to join the Army during World War II, playing in the band of Gen. George
Patton's 7th Army in Europe.
After the war, he performed with the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra and
other symphonic groups. But in 1947 he returned to jazz, winning a coveted
spot playing with the cliche-busting big band of Claude Thornhill.
The Thornhill group was a novelty a traditional swing band with two
French horns and a tuba that gave it an ethereal and romantic sound.
Although not a huge commercial success, the orchestra had a terrific
reputation among musicians and critics.
Evans was an arranger for the band and worked with Miles Davis to reproduce
the Thornhill sound with a minimum of instrumentation. Out of this
collaboration came the dozen recordings with Davis' nonet, or nine-piece
band, that made up the 1949 "Birth of the Cool" release and is often
regarded as a high mark in the era's musical creativity.
Barber was featured on "Birth of the Cool" and later Davis albums such as
"Blue Miles," "Miles Ahead," "Porgy and Bess" and "Sketches of Spain." He
stood out on the 1957 Leonard Feather and Dick Hyman release "The Hi-Fi
Suite" for his solo on "Woofer" and also played on recordings led by
saxophonists Gigi Gryce, John Coltrane and Gerry Mulligan.
By the early 1960s, Barber settled into a full-time career as a high school
music teacher on Long Island.
In 1992, he participated in Mulligan's Carnegie Hall concert called
"Rebirth of the Cool" that paid homage to the original "Birth of the Cool"
release. The group toured internationally and issued an album.
Survivors include his wife of 60 years, Dora Aloi Barber; three children;
nine grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
<http://www.latimes.com/archives>latimes.com/archives.
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