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Joe LaBarbera

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Origin
  
Mt. Morris, New York

Name
  
Joe LaBarbera

Siblings
  
Pat LaBarbera

Years active
  
1970–present

Movies
  
West Coast All Stars

Instruments
  
drums

Genres
  
jazz

Role
  
Drummer


Joe LaBarbera Drummerworld Joe La Barbera

Born
  
February 22, 1948 (age 76) (
1948-02-22
)

Occupation(s)
  
Drummer, composer, arranger

Albums
  
The Brilliant, I Will Say Goodbye, Conte-Nuity

Similar People
  
Bill Cunliffe, Marc Johnson, Larry Koonse, Pat LaBarbera, Darek Oles

Education
  
Berklee College of Music

Drummer Nation Show #64 "Do Your Homework" Guest: Joe LaBarbera


Joe LaBarbera (born February 22, 1948) is an American jazz drummer and composer. He is best known for his recordings and live performances with the trio of pianist Bill Evans in the final years of Evans's career. Prior to joining Evans he worked in the quartet of Chuck Mangione and Joe Farrell.

Contents

Joe LaBarbera Joe LaBarbera Enjoy the Process of Jazz Centrum

Drummer joe labarbera with gretsch drums at namm 2010


Early life

Joe LaBarbera wwwdrummerworldcompicsdrumdpa56JoeLabarbera

He was born in Mount Morris, New York, younger brother to saxophonist Pat LaBarbera, and trumpeter and arranger/composer John LaBarbera. He was formally educated at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts.

Music career

Joe LaBarbera Live Jazz Joe LaBarbera at Vitello39s The International

After Berklee he spent two years with the US Army band at Fort Dix, New Jersey. He began his professional career playing with Woody Herman and the Thundering Herd, followed by the Chuck Mangione Quartet.

He then moved to New York and spent two years freelancing with a number of notable musicians, including Jim Hall, Phil Woods, Art Farmer, Gary Burton, Art Pepper, John Scofield, Bob Brookmeyer and Toots Thielmans.

In 1978, Joe joined the Bill Evans trio with bassist Marc Johnson. After Evans' death in 1980, Joe joined singer Tony Bennett. LaBarbera has played with jazz pianist Bill Cunliffe who described in an interview with All About Jazz reporter Fred Jung what it was like working with him:

Joe was able to give me a traditional rhythmic approach, which I sometimes really love and then other times, he is able to be very avant-garde rhythmically, not play rhythms, maybe play colors, lose the time, get it back, and be very innovative. In the sextet, that is really important because there are times in the band that we will actually play free for a little while. We won't have any tempo or any format. We're playing songs, but sometimes we stop playing the songs altogether and just play whatever we want. Joe has the maturity to do both of those things and know to splice them together. There are many great musicians that when they play free, they don't know how to get out of it and back to the music.––Bill Cunliffe

Other work

LaBarbera currently resides in Los Angeles, California, where he has been teaching at the California Institute of the Arts since 1993. LaBarbera is also on the faculty of the Bud Shank Jazz Workshop in Port Townsend, Washington, has also served on the National Endowment for the Arts council in Washington, D.C., and has been a guest at many other colleges as both performer and lecturer.

References

Joe LaBarbera Wikipedia