Richard Barbieri
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Richard Barbieri | ||
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Background information | ||
Born | November 30, 1957 (age 49)![]() |
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Genre(s) | Progressive Rock Neo-Psychedelia Art Rock |
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Occupation(s) | Musician | |
Instrument(s) | Keyboards Synthesizer Programming |
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Years active | 1976 - present | |
Associated acts |
Porcupine Tree Japan |
Richard Barbieri (born 30 November 1957, in London, England) is the current keyboardist for British progressive rock band, Porcupine Tree.
[edit] Biography
Barbieri started his musical career with the group Japan in 1976. Within a year the band was signed to the Hansa/Ariola label and began work on a debut album, which received severe criticism from the UK music press on its release. Although initially perceived as a "hyped" band, Japan went on to record five studio albums culminating in the groundbreaking Tin Drum which stayed in the UK Albums Chart for a year. The painstaking approach to synthesiser programming by Richard Barbieri and David Sylvian and the original rhythmic patterns of Steve Jansen and Mick Karn produced a sound that remains original to this day. They were the one of the most successful chart bands in Europe and Asia in 1982 despite the increasingly experimental nature of their music. The band split up at the height of their popularity after a world tour that year.
Beginning in 1983-84 Barbieri has regularly contributed his unique soundscapes and synth textures to David Sylvian's solo albums, working alongside such innovators as Holger Czukay, Ryuichi Sakamoto and Robert Fripp. Soon after, he started a long musical association with Steve Jansen, which has produced six collaborative albums to date, initially under the name The Dolphin Brothers (Catch the Fall, 1987) and later as Jansen & Barbieri (including Stories Without Borders, 1993,Other Worlds in a Small Room, 1996, and Stone to Flesh, 1997).
The band members reunited in 1989 under the name Rain Tree Crow, without guitarist Rob Dean, to release just one album for Virgin. Considered their finest work, the album charted and brought critical acclaim. Again the group parted company shortly afterwards.
Barbieri formed the Medium Productions label in 1993 with Jansen and Karn, with the objective being to enable the artists to create music and collaborate with fellow musicians on projects, without record company interference and restriction. They kicked off the label with the Jansen/Barbieri/Karn (sometimes abbreviated to JBK) release entitled Beginning to Melt. Thirteen diverse albums were released during a ten-year period; Jansen and Barbieri's collaboration with DJ Takemura on the album Changing Hands being one of the highlights.
During this period Barbieri also made two other collaborative albums, one with his wife Suzanne J Barbieri under the name Indigo Falls, and one with Tim Bowness from the band No-Man titled Flame.
Also in 1993 Barbieri joined the progressive rock band Porcupine Tree. Six studio albums and many tours later, they are enjoying chart success around Europe with sales of over 120,000 for their album In Absentia. This album has recently been nominated for a Grammy Award in the U.S. for the Non-Orchestral 5.1 Surround Sound category. The latest studio album Deadwing entered the American Billboard chart on its first week of release.
Aside from recording and touring, Barbieri has written articles on analogue synthesis for various publications; composed music for film; programs for music software and synthesiser manufacturers. He regularly guests with The Bays, an electronic improvisational group. Recent highlights include two Radio One sessions for the late John Peel and concerts at the Queen Elizabeth Hall and Brighton Dome.
In 2005 he released his debut solo album Things Buried. Although he has made many albums as part of a group, trio or duo, surprisingly this is his first solo work. The instrumental album also features the distinctive performances of Andy Gangadeen on acoustic and electronic drums, and Percy Jones on fretless bass.