Nashville Jazz Crusader Rahsaan Barber's
Third CD as a Leader,
"The Music in the Night,"
Set for November 3 Release
On His Jazz Music City Records
 
New CD Focuses on Standards
After Two Recordings of Mostly Original Material
October 17, 2017
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. 
Photography: Rusty Russell 
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