Biography
Beaver Harris ranked among the most versatile figures in avant-garde circles, a drummer whose abilities matched those of far better-known peers yet received far less recognition. Proficient across the full spectrum of jazz idioms, he nevertheless emphasized experimental directions whenever he led his own groups. He first took up drums at twenty. Upon leaving the Army in 1957 he returned to Pittsburgh and sat in with visiting artists such as Horace Silver and Benny Golson. His 1962 arrival in New York brought him into contact with leading voices of the developing free-jazz movement. From 1966 onward his discography grew through associations with Marion Brown, Albert Ayler, Gato Barbieri, Roswell Rudd, and Archie Shepp. In 1968 he joined trombonist Grachan Moncur III and pianist Dave Burrell to launch the cooperative 360 Degree Music Experience, an ensemble that remained his principal creative outlet in shifting configurations for the rest of his career. He later assumed leadership; its seventies and eighties personnel included saxophonists Ken McIntyre, Hamiet Bluiett, and Ricky Ford, steel drummer Francis Brown, bassist Cameron Brown, and pianists Rahn Burton and Don Pullen. The same decade found him working with Cecil Taylor. Straight-ahead sessions also marked his résumé, among them dates with Sonny Rollins, Chet Baker, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Rouse, and Al Cohn. The group’s name signaled his explicit wish to move past stylistic borders. Though most widely identified with avant-garde work, his expansive approach remained grounded in jazz fundamentals, a quality confirmed by his many partnerships with first-rank mainstream musicians.
Albums



