Jazz Guitarist Bill Barnes


Bill Barnes

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Bill’s unique style is a product of his multifaceted background. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he grew up in North Carolina, where he began his professional career in the late sixties as a backup musician in pickup bands. During this period he played with R&B recording artists such as Eddy Floyd, Spider Turner, Dobie Gray, Rufus Thomas as well as pop artists Gary US
Bonds, Dion
and others. On the concert stage he has opened for a diverse lineup Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show, Tommy James, Blue Oyster Cult, Michael Henderson, Betty Wright, Tommy Roe, The Marvelettes, Sam the
Sham, Len Barry, The Turtles
and KC and the Sunshine Band. At the age of 19 he toured with Atco Records star Arthur Conley (Sweet Soul Music,) on a
series of concert dates to promote the release of Conley’s single, "Funky Street".

His love of jazz led Bill to lead experimental groups in the late sixties and seventies, while continuing to play in road bands backing up artists such as The Drifters, Platters, Coasters and perennial Carolina favorites like singer Scotty Todd and The Showmen of Norfolk Virginia.

Working out of Atlanta in the mid seventies, he toured the country with the
progressive rock band Sweetfire and worked the Underground as a house musician at Scarlett O’Hara’s. Soon he was back on the road as the lead guitarist for Salsoul recording artists Ripple and the jazz-funk horn band ATL.

He moved to New York City in ’79, where for the next 13 years he was an
active studio musician, doing sessions with Don Casale for Easy Street
Records
and Malaco Records, later working with Sax player and writer John Bastianelli on projects for Columbia.

However, heading his own jazz guitar trio had been his long-term goal and, while paying dues with other ensembles, he was forming his concept for a different approach to the traditional trio, one which would meld the edginess
of fusion and hard bop with the passion and sensitivity of blues and Latin, seasoned with elements of traditional Japanese and Indian music.

Bill is mostly self-taught, drawing on his influences which include jazz giants Pat Martino, Kenny Burrell, Joe Pass, John McLaughlin, George Barnes,
Bucky Pizzarelli, George Benson and Lenny Breau although he acknowledges
a tremendous debt of gratitude to New York bebop guitar master Mark
Marino, LA guitarist Cliff Kuplen, legendary pianist Lynne Arriale and
Bellarmine University’s Jazz Guitar Professor Jeff Sherman, all with whom
he had studied privately.

Thematically, much of his music is influenced by Eastern philosophy. He has long been a devotee of Zen and Taoism, as well as a student of martial arts.
In 1996 he earned a first degree black belt and is registered with the
American Chung Do Kwan Taekwondo Association.

He formed his first trio in 2000, with drummer Larry Abrams and bassist Ed LaBarbara, recording his first album, "Zensibility", featured on Public Radio WFPK’s Album Spotlight. Later he recorded his "Live! At the Jazz Factory"
CD with drummer Bob Falk and bassist Rob Collier.

But it is with "Winds of Bodhgaya" that the theme of ascension and spiritual evolution is finally realized, woven into a musical tapestry which incorporates the simplicity, power and acoustic integrity of the traditional jazz guitar trio
with a unique amalgam of over three decades of musical experience,
recorded in real-time without the usual multi-track overdubbing or heavy artificial sweetening.

Bill currently resides in New Hampshire, writes music reviews and articles
for Jazz.com and is managed by Powers Management Group.



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