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Pat (Pascel Emmanuel) LaBarbera. Saxophonist, teacher, composer, b Mt Morris, NY, 7 Apr 1944. His first teacher was his father, Joseph, a clarinetist. His brothers are also noted jazz musicians: Joe, a drummer, and John, an arranger and composer. LaBarbera's other teachers included Joe Viola, Don Menza, and Joe Allard (saxophone), Joe Henderson, Lee Konitz, and Warne Marsh (improvisation), and Bernie Piltch (flute). LaBarbera also studied arranging and composition 1964-7 at the Berklee College of Music, Boston. After travelling 1967-74 as a featured soloist (tenor saxophone) with the Buddy Rich Big Band, he made his home in 1974 in Toronto, where he has worked in local jazz clubs, big bands, and studio orchestras. In 1975 he joined the Elvin Jones Jazz Machine, maintaining the association (with intermittent breaks) through the 1980s. He has toured Europe and Japan with both Rich and Jones, and South America with Jones.
LaBarbera began teaching at Humber College in 1976, at York University in 1985, and at the University of Toronto in 1986. He has also taught privately, at the Banff SFA Jazz Workshop 1977-80 and 1987-8, and at McMaster University 1986-8. In 1977 he became an instructor at the Jamey Abersold summer jazz camps held on US university campuses and in the late 1980s taught at similar camps in Canada. He has also served widely as a clinician and adjudicator - eg, for MusicFest Canada. LaBarbera has played a major role in the development of a generation of Canadian saxophonists. His pupils have included Ron Allen, Rob Bonisolo, Ralph Bowen, Alex Dean, Vern Dorge, Ken Fornetran, Jeff Johnson, Kirk MacDonald, Mike Murley, Mike Sim, Roy Styffe, and Perry White. He wrote a monthly woodwind instruction column 1980-4 for Canadian Musician. His own playing is in the style of John Coltrane, extended by an encyclopaedic knowledge of improvisational theory and personalized by a certain lyrical sensibility. LaBarbera's quartet (with the pianist George McFetridge and others) has appeared frequently in Toronto clubs, where he has also been heard with the trumpeter Sam Noto and alongside such visiting US musicians as Red Rodney and Chet Baker. In 1989 he toured in Ireland at the head of the Irish quartet Four in One. Several of his compositions (eg, Necessary Evil, October's Child, Minor Blues, Familiar Ground) have been recorded by Elvin Jones.
Discography
As LeaderPass It On. Thompson or Beirach piano, Perla double-bass, J LaBarbera drums. 1976. PM PMR-009 The Wizard. Prince guitar, McLeod double-bass, Biriaco drums. 1978. Dire Silverline FO-352 The Meeting. Fasoli tenor saxophone, Bonafede piano, Terzano double-bass, Pellegatti drums. 1979. Dire Silverline FO-358 Necessary Evil. McFetridge piano, Thompson double-bass, Pilo drums. (1981). CBC LM-478 Virgo Dance. McFetridge piano, Swainson double-bass, Pilo drums. 1987. Justin Time JUST-24
As Sideman
LaBarbera appears on LPs recorded 1967-73 by Buddy Rich for Pacific Jazz (The New One, Mercy, Mercy, and Buddy and Soul), Liberty (Keep the Customer Satisfied), RCA (A Different Drummer, Rich in London, and Stick It), and Groove Merchant (The Roar of '74), and on albums recorded 1976-85 by Elvin Jones for Vanguard (The Main Force), MPS (Remembrance), Trio (Dear John C, two vols), Palo Alto (Brother John), and Polydor (Live at the Pit Inn). Also, jazz albums with Sam Noto (2-4-5, 1986, Unisson DDA-1007), Bill King, and Chuck Mangione, and pop recordings by Ronney Abramson, Bruce Cockburn, Dan Hill, and others
Bibliography
Quill, Greg. 'Pat LaBarbera,' CanMus, vol 4, Apr 1982 Miller, Mark. 'LaBarbera's hot in best jazz set,' Toronto Globe and Mail, 2 Sep 1982 Sutherland, Greg. 'Pat LaBarbera: man on the move,' The Jazz Report, vol 2, Apr-May 1989
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