English musician, producer and sound engineer.
Born in Ilkley, Yorkshire, England, UK, 13 November 1938, died 8 August 2020 in Otley, Yorkshire.
At the age of 16 he worked as a sailor for four years. During that time he learned to play the guitar. At twenty Adrian moved to Liverpool, where, initially as a member of 'Cass and the Casanovas' (that subsequently became
The Big Three), he stood out in clubs as a technician, alongside such bands as
Gerry & The Pacemakers and
The Beatles, building amplifiers for the Liverpool groups.
Thanks to his talent with equipment, he became
The Beatles’ sound technician, first in Hamburg and then on
The Beatles' first US tour. In 1964 Adrian went to live in the US, where, after working with
Joey Dee & The Starliters, joined [l264584] as an engineer and producer as well. Adrian was also involved in management as a partner in ABBT Music Company, which he formed with
Bruce Tergesen. Whilst a student in Liverpool in the early 1960s, Barber smashed up a sculpture at an exhibition by the then well-known working-class artist Arthur Dooley. It later transpired that the artist himself (Dooley), had coaxed Barber into doing it as a press stunt.
Barber identified his stereo cuttings at Atlantic by adding three dots above and one dot below a W in the runouts (see images).
The 3 dots were sometimes triangular (∴) and other times horizontal (···)
The mono cuttings show a single dot (.) under the W
(The W indicates that the blank lacquer disc was an Audiodisc made by [l648022] and is not related to Barber per se).