Figuring out which of the many pieces of music that this artist helped create has been heard the most times and by the largest audience is quite simple: that would have to be the original theme from the television soap opera All My Children. Fusion jazz fans who don't watch daytime television -- if there are any such creatures -- might be shocked to find out this theme was plucked from an album entitled This Is a Recording by the band
Flim & the BB's.
Barber contributes mightily to most of the recordings by this outfit, both as a composer and player.
The band's name is based on the presence of several players whose initials are the same as the notorious "toy" rifle ammunition; drummer Bill Berg is another. The keyboardist is himself the son of pianist, composer, and saxophonist William C. Barber, also sometimes credited as Bill Barber Sr.. Both father and son jam on a delightful
Flim & the BB's track entitled "Fathers and Sons," naturally, also featuring the other musically talented parents of bandmembers Jimmy "Flim" Johnson and Dick Oatts. The
Barber family musical tradition also has continued on into a third generation;
Billy Barber has created a series of recordings with a family band known as the Barbers, featuring two of his children.
Barber's mother was also a pianist and singer; the son may have begun studying orchestration and songwriting just to have a niche of his own. As a writer,
Barber's often-sentimental tunes such as "Little Things" have been covered by
Ray Charles and
the Oak Ridge Boys. Soap operas are not the only vehicle for his background music, which has also been heard on Jane Fonda's children's videos, the "American Chronicles" series, "Face the Nation," and "The Splendid Table" on National Public Radio.
Flim & the BB's have been twice nominated for Grammy awards.
Barber has also released several solo piano recordings that dabble in both
mainstream jazz and
new age styles and has written children's songs and sang and played them on releases by the Music Workshop for Children. Beginning in the '70s, a variety of
folk artists also utilized
Barber's piano stylings on their recording sessions, including
Leo Kottke, Jim Post, and Bill Camplin.
Barber also produced several of the latter artist's efforts. Pianist and composer Dan Friedman created a piece entitled "Lizbarber" in honor of
Barber and pianist
Liz Story. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide