Rahsaan Barber The Music in the Night
Saxophonist, composer, and bandleader Rahsaan Barber's years of activity as a
performer, producer, presenter, educator, and most recently DJ in his native
Nashville have established him as an integral part of the city's vibrant jazz
scene. In fact, Barber named his record label and concert production company
Jazz Music City to make the point that there's more to America's "Music
City" than the Grand Ole Opry.
With the
release on November 3 of The Music in the Night, he also reveals there's more
to Rahsaan Barber than his reputation as composer of the cutting-edge modern
jazz works that were the primary focus of his two previous albums, 2005's Trio
Soul and 2011's Everyday Magic. Only glimpsed there were his gentle side and
his skills as a gifted interpreter of standards that, in his hands, are transformed
in fresh and highly original ways.
Barber
writes in his liner notes that recording an album of standards was his mother
Stella's idea. She told him "how much she missed hearing my approach to
standards, and how much she felt my ability to interpret familiar songs sets me
apart from my peers." He also followed the advice of his grandmother, the
late Zepher Selby, who told him to "play pretty" and "make sure
you put a blues in every set."
Every track
on The Music in the Night is notable, ranging from the swinging opener
"Isn't She Lovely" to the gorgeous treatment of the Michael Jackson
hit "She's Out of My Life"; from a reggae-tinged rendition of Rodgers
and Hart's "My Funny Valentine" to the Ray Charles classic "Georgia
on My Mind" treated as a slow blues with a backbeat. Then there are
versions of Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer's "Skylark," the
lyrics of which inspired the album title, and Antonio Carlos Jobim's "The
Girl from Ipanema."
While it
never achieved the popularity to qualify as a standard, "The
Backbone" (composed by bassist Butch Warren for a 1964 Dexter Gordon
album) is a tour de force showcasing the chops of Barber's rhythm section:
pianist Matt Endahl, drummer Derrek Phillips, and 20-year-old bassist Jack
Aylor.
Family
played a huge role in Rahsaan Barber's musical development. Stella and Robert
Barber Sr. named their twin sons, Rahsaan and Roland, born in Nashville on
April 2, 1980, after the late multi-reed master Rahsaan Roland Kirk.
The twins
grew up listening to hymns at Nashville's St. Luke CME Church, which their
great-great uncles and aunts had helped to found in 1915 and where their
grandmother later served as pianist and choir director. At home, they heard
records by Luther Vandross, Stephanie Mills, and other soul singers favored by
their mother, a singer herself. Their father, a blues fan originally from
Memphis, began taking saxophonist Rahsaan and trombonist Roland to sit in at
blues clubs when they were as young as 14. And his grandmother introduced
Rahsaan to the music of such early tenor saxophone giants as Coleman Hawkins,
Ben Webster, and Don Byas.
After
graduating high school, the brothers enrolled at Indiana University (IU) and
studied with onetime George Russell trombonist David Baker, who, Rahsaan says,
"redefined what jazz education could look like and sound like. He was a
trailblazer culturally." Barber also credits Tom Walsh, his saxophone
teacher at IU, "with the grand majority of what I can do with the
saxophone. He was a godsend-the right person at the right time at the right
place."
The twins
spent five years at IU, both receiving bachelor's degrees and Artist Diplomas
in jazz and instrumental studies. After recording Twinnovation, their only
album together, in 2001, they spent two years at the Manhattan School of Music,
earning master's degrees in jazz performance in 2005. Roland today teaches at
Vanderbilt University, where his parents had met years earlier. Rahsaan taught
at Belmont College for six years and at Tennessee State University for two and
a half years before recently retiring from academia.
Barber
presently performs with several of his own groups: his quartet and quintet, as
well as the septet El Movimiento, which blends jazz, Latin, and world music
with hip-hop and rock; The Megaphones, which combines New Orleans brass band
music and hip-hop; and the 12-piece Nashville Salsa Machine. He has produced
CDs by trumpeter Imer Santiago, vocalist Stephanie Ablington, and El
Movimiento. His extensive recording and/or performing credits include work with
such diverse artists as Big Smo, Kelly Clarkson, Gladys Knight, Delfeayo
Marsalis, Kirk Franklin, Hunter Hayes, Kid Rock, Martina McBride, Idina Menzel,
Lionel Richie, and Darius Rucker. He serves as vice president of the Tennessee
Blues and Jazz Society, where he designs live re-creations of classic jazz and
blues albums and hosts the weekly one-hour radio show "Generations of
Jazz" Mondays at 7 p.m. on KFSK-FM at Fisk University.
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