MarketBill Barber (musician)
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Bill Barber (musician)

John William Barber was an American jazz tubist. He is considered by many to be the first person to play tuba in modern jazz. He recorded with Miles Davis on the albums Birth of the Cool, Sketches of Spain, and Miles Ahead.

Early life and career
Barber was born John William Barber in Hornell, New York in 1920. He started playing tuba in high school and studied at the Juilliard School of Music. After graduating, he travelled west to Kansas City, Missouri, where he played with the Kansas City Philharmonic and various ballet and theatre orchestras. ==Jazz musician==
Jazz musician
He joined the United States Army in 1942 and played in Patton's 7th army band for three years. Bill is quoted as often telling his family "I never killed anybody with my tuba". After the war, he started playing jazz, joining Claude Thornhill's big band where he became friends with trombonist Al Langstaff, pianist Gil Evans and saxophone player Gerry Mulligan in 1947. He then worked in the theatre pit orchestras of The King and I, Paradiso, and the City Center Ballet. He joined up with Davis and Gil Evans in the late 1950s to record the albums Sketches of Spain, Miles Ahead and Porgy and Bess. Barber also played tuba on John Coltrane's album Africa/Brass released in 1961. ==Later career==
Later career
Barber completed a master's degree from the Manhattan School of Music and became an elementary school music teacher at Copiague, New York. He continued to play where possible including with the Goldman Band. In 1992, he recorded and toured with a nonet led by Gerry Mulligan, reworking material from Birth of the Cool. From 1998 to 2004 he was part of The Seatbelts, New York musicians who played the music of the Japanese anime Cowboy Bebop. He died of heart failure in June 2007 in Bronxville, New York. His granddaughter is filmmaker Stephanie Barber. ==Discography==
Discography
With Art BlakeyGolden Boy (Colpix, 1964) With Bob BrookmeyerPortrait of the Artist (Atlantic, 1960) With Kenny BurrellGuitar Forms (Verve, 1964) With John ColtraneAfrica/Brass (Impulse!, 1961) • The Africa/Brass Sessions, Volume 2 (Impulse!, 1961 [1974]) With Miles DavisBirth of the Cool (Capitol, 1950 [1957]) • Miles Ahead (Columbia, 1957) • Porgy and Bess (Columbia, 1959) • Sketches of Spain (Columbia, 1960) • Quiet Nights (Columbia, 1962) With Gil EvansNew Bottle Old Wine (Pacific Jazz, 1958) • Great Jazz Standards (Pacific Jazz, 1959) • Out of the Cool (Impulse!, 1960) • The Individualism of Gil Evans (Verve, 1964) With Urbie GreenAll About Urbie Green and His Big Band (ABC-Paramount, 1956) With Gigi Gryce • ''Nica's Tempo'' (Savoy, 1955 [1958]) With Slide HamptonSister Salvation (Atlantic, 1960) With Gerry MulliganRe-birth of the Cool (GRP, 1992) With Pete RugoloRugolomania (Columbia, 1955) • New Sounds by Pete Rugolo (Harmony, 1954–55, [1957]) With Hal McKusickThe Jazz Workshop (RCA Victor, 1957) ==References==
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