Always a thought-provoking singer and pianist,
Patricia Barber has created her own musical
world. Born in Lisle, Illinois, she is the daughter
of altoist Floyd Barber, who played on the
Chicago jazz scene and with Glenn Miller. Patricia
Barber started out as a pianist and saxophonist,
becoming a singer when she wanted the lead in a
high school musical.

She was a piano major at the University of Iowa
during 1973-77, then worked constantly in
Chicago, performing regularly at the Gold Star
Sardine Bar during 1984-95. Barber wrote her
own music, adapted some offbeat rock and pop
standards to jazz, and developed her introverted
and understated style. She first recorded in 1989
(Split on her Floyd label) but started to become
noticed outside of Chicago when she recorded
Café Blue in 1994 for the Premonition label.

In addition to her originals, that CD includes her
highly personal versions of “A Taste of Honey,”
“The Thrill Is Gone” and “Ode to Billy Joe.” In
1998 Blue Note purchased Premonition and she
has been associated with the label ever since.
Barber plays at the Green Mill in Chicago when
she is home. She received the Guggenheim
Fellowship for composition/songwriting in 2003,
using the grant to create a song cycle based on
Ovid’s Metamorphoses which she recorded on her
recent CD Mythologies. As Duke Ellington might
have said, Patricia Barber is “beyond category.”
About Patricia Barber
| Fall 2008 Special
Silke Endress |