Home » Jazz Musicians » Roland Barber
Roland Barber
Twins Rahsaan and Roland Barber, saxophonist and trombonist, respectively, are committed to continuing the legacy of jazz through their efforts as composers, performers, bandleaders and educators. Though still in their early twenties, the Barber Brothers have learned their craft both in the classroom and in the informal sessions, shoulder to shoulder with the veterans of the music such as Al Grey and Stanley Turrentine. The Barber Brothers’ training includes virtually every significant resource in modern jazz education. Their experiences include the Jamey Aebersold Summer Jazz Camps, the Essentially Ellington Festival (where both were named Outstanding Soloists), the All-American Grammy High School Jazz Bands, the Ravinia Steans Young Artists Program, the Betty Carter Jazz Ahead Program, and the Jazz Aspen Program. In addition, the Barber Brothers each obtained a B.M. in Jazz Studies and an Artist Diploma from Indiana University, studying with the world's pre-eminent jazz educator, Dr. David Baker.
Individually, the Barber Brothers are also revered as accomplished performers. Jazz legend and trombonist Curtis Fuller labeled Roland "what jazz trombone is all about" on the heels of Roland’s winning of the 2000 International Trombone Association’s Frank Rosolino Competition. Comparably, Rahsaan was one of four Americans selected by audition to participate in the 2003 World Saxophone Competition, held at the Montreux Jazz Festival. Currently, the Barber Brothers are completing graduate study at Manhattan School of Music while in the midst of their fourth year as leaders of the Barber Brothers Jazz Quintet (BBJQ).
After being born over three months premature with the medical predictions of brain damage and possible death, the twins quickly eased away their family's worries, becoming academic scholars and prominent faces in Nashville's growing jazz scene. As one might expect, the Barber Brothers come from a musical family. Sharing the name of one of jazz history's most unique and exciting practitioners, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, is, of course, no coincidence. Reaping the benefits of a multi-generational household, the Barber Brothers were exposed at an early age to a myriad of African-American musics. These include the gospel of a CME church founded five generations ago by their family, Beale Street blues, jazz old and new, and popular musicians ranging from Bill Withers to Prince. The Barber Brothers also inherited an appreciation of classical music, due to their grandmother’s piano-practicing in the home during their youth.
The independent release of the Barber Brothers Jazz Quintet's first CD, Twinnovation, marks the twins' first major step onto the national radar of the contemporary jazz scene.
Read moreTags
Rahsaan Barber: Six Words

by Jack Bowers
The Six Words that epitomize woodwind artist Rahsaan Barber's fifth recording as a leader came to him via trumpeter Wynton Marsalis: There is power in this music." And as Barber affirms on this tasteful studio date, aside from power there is depth and refinement as well. Barber commands a tight-knit sextet, so much so that it is hard to believe that most of them had never played together before gathering in Nashville, Tennessee in December 2020 to record ...
Continue ReadingRahsaan Barber: Six Words

by Chris May
Six Words is saxophonist Rahsaan Barber's fourth album on his Nashville-based label Jazz Music City, and the first to be conceived as a suite. The titular six words are something Wynton Marsalis said in a conversation with Barber: There is power in this music." With that thought in mind, Barber composed a series of pieces focused on protest, personal liberation and love, and on the penultimate track, grief, in a tender elegy for Roy Hargrove, Remembering Roy." ...
Continue ReadingJohn Alvey: Loft Glow

by Chris May
Such is the proliferation of albums which in the 2020s are taking jazz in new and exciting directions--see AAJ's Best Jazz Albums of 2024: All-Star Break Edition round-up here--that it is easy to pass over albums which have their feet firmly planted in the tradition, and which show no ambition to redefine it, but which are by any standards fresh and first-class jazz. Such an album is Nashville-based drummer John Alvey's debut, Loft Glow. On this love ...
Continue Reading