Bill Barron (musician)

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Bill Barron
Birth name William Barron, Jr.
Born (1927-03-27)March 27, 1927
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
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Middletown, Connecticut, US
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician, educator
Instruments Saxophone, clarinet
Associated acts Ted Curson, Cecil Taylor, Kenny Barron

William Barron, Jr. (March 27, 1927 – September 21, 1989)[1] was an American jazz tenor and soprano tenor saxophonist.[1]

Barron was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] He first appeared on a Cecil Taylor recording in 1959, and he later recorded extensively with Philly Joe Jones and co-led a post-bop quartet with Ted Curson. His younger brother, pianist Kenny Barron, appeared on all of the sessions that the elder Barron led.[1][2] Other musicians he recorded with included Charles Mingus and Ollie Shearer.

Barron also directed a jazz workshop at the Children's Museum in Brooklyn, taught at City College of New York, and became the chairman of the music department at Wesleyan University.[1] He recorded for Savoy, recording that label's last jazz record in 1972,[1] and Muse. The Bill Barron Collection is housed at the Institute of Jazz Studies of the Rutgers University libraries.[3]

Barron died in Middletown, Connecticut.[1]

Discography

As leader

  • 1961: The Tenor Stylings of Bill Barron
  • 1962: The Leopard (Chiaroscuro Records)
  • 1962: Modern Windows - A Jazz Suite from the New 'Soul'
  • 1962: Hot Line - The Tenor of Bill Barron
  • 1963: West Side Story Bossa Nova
  • 1972: Motivation
  • 1978: Jazz Caper
  • 1987: The Next Plateau

As sideman

With Cecil Taylor

With Philly Joe Jones

With Ted Curson

With Charles Mingus

With Sam Rivers

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Yanow, Scott. Bill Barron at AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-07-06.
  2. Jazz discography.com
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