Gavin Richard Harrison[1] (born 28 May 1963)[2] is an English musician. He is best known for playing with the progressive rock bands Porcupine Tree (2002–2010; 2021–present), King Crimson (2008, and 2014–2021) and The Pineapple Thief (2016–present). Harrison's drumming has received many awards from music publications and earned praise from other musicians.
Gavin started to work professionally in 1979. He worked as a freelance session drummer on records and tours for the following artists: Incognito, Lisa Stansfield, Lewis Taylor, Artful Dodger, Paul Young, Iggy Pop, Level 42, Porcupine Tree, OSI, King Crimson, Shooter, Dizrhythmia, The Pineapple Thief, The Kings Of Oblivion, Sam Brown, Tom Robinson, Go West, Black, Gail Ann Dorsey, B J Cole, Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin, Nathan East, Yasuaki Shimizu, Camouflage, Kevin Ayers, Claudio Baglioni, Franco Battiato, Chizuko Yoshihiro, Renaissance, Mick Karn, Eros Ramazzotti, Nick Johnston, Randy Goodrum, and Fates Warning.
In 2002, he joined Porcupine Tree and has played on the band's albums released since that time: In Absentia, Deadwing, Fear of a Blank Planet, The Incident, and Closure/Continuation, with each receiving critical acclaim and raising the band's status to one of the most influential modern progressive rock bands. He remained a permanent member of the band until an indefinite hiatus was announced in 2010, and then again in 2021 when the band announced a return to playing together with the release of the album Closure/Continuation.
In 2007, Harrison began a long term collaboration with singer/extended range bass player 05Ric, which led to the release of three CDs, Drop (2007), Circles (2009) and The Man Who Sold Himself (2012).
In 2008, Harrison joined King Crimson as part of a dual-drummer line-up with Pat Mastelotto. He played a number of shows in the United States in August with the band. He also recorded drums on Steven Wilson's debut solo album, Insurgentes.
On 23 August 2011, he was a featured performer on the 'Late Show with David Letterman' as part of their second "Drum Solo Week", along with such players as Sheila E, Stewart Copeland, Neil Peart, and Dennis Chambers.
From September 2014 to December 2021, Harrison played live in King Crimson, as one of the three drummers.
In 2016, he joined The Pineapple Thief as a session drummer for the band's 11th studio album Your Wilderness, which received widespread critical acclaim and an overwhelmingly positive fan reception. He joined the band on the tour following the album in January 2017. In August 2018, just prior to the release of Dissolution, the band announced that Harrison had officially joined the band as a full member. He has since been actively involved and credited in the band's songwriting and album production together with the founder Bruce Soord.
Harrison was influenced by his father's jazz collection and by drummers such as Steve Gadd[3] and Jeff Porcaro.[4]
Harrison won the Modern Drummer readers' poll for "best progressive drummer of the year" consecutively from 2007–2010 and again in 2016 and 2019. He won "Best Prog Drummer" in DRUM USA magazine 2011. Prog voted him best drummer in 2011, 2012, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023. He is the featured cover story on Modern Drummer January 2009, February 2015 and July 2022. Rolling Stone polls rate him as the third best drummer in the past 25 years. In 2014, Modern Drummer magazine placed Harrison in the "Top 50 Greatest Drummers of All Time".
Many artists have cited Harrison as an influence, including Chad Szeliga, Chris Pennie,[5] Ryan Van Poederooyen,[6] Dirk Verbeuren,[7] Andrew Spence,[8] Raymond Hearne of Haken,[9] John Merryman of Cephalic Carnage,[10] Jamie Saint Merat of Ulcerate,[11] Aaron Stechauner of Rings of Saturn,[12] Baard Kolstad of Leprous,[13] Francesco Paoli of Fleshgod Apocalypse,[14] Matija Dagović of Consecration,[15] Vishnu Reddy of Crypted and Abhay Rathore (former Mocaine).[16]
In addition, other artists have been quoted expressing admiration for his work including Neil Peart,[17] Bill Bruford,[18] Mike Portnoy,[19] Devin Townsend,[20] Steve Smith,[21] Martín López,[22] Matt Garstka,[23] Dave Bainbridge,[24] Hannes Grossmann,[25] Blake Richardson,[26] Kai Hahto,[27] Jimmy Keegan,[9] Ian Mosley,[28] Dan Presland of Ne Obliviscaris,[29] Evan Sammons of Last Chance to Reason,[30] Bodo Stricker of Callejon,[31] Joshua Theriot of Abigail's Ghost,[32] and Blake Anderson of Vektor.[33]
Harrison authored two instructional drum books entitled Rhythmic Illusions and Rhythmic Perspectives. He also wrote and produced his own instructional DVDs, Rhythmic Visions and Rhythmic Horizons, at his home studio. 2010 saw the release of Rhythmic Designs, a book of transcriptions by Terry Branam, and a 3-hour DVD of Gavin's explanations and demonstrations. It won 'Best in Show' at the summer NAMM Show in the USA. 2014 sees the release of Rhythmic Compositions a book of 20 detailed drum transcriptions (by Terry Branam) of recorded Porcupine Tree performances – plus photos and stories of the recording and creative process.
[...] Gavin Harrison is a great player and his books have been a great source of inspiration to me. [...]
[...] I'd have to say my biggest inspiration on the drums at the moment is Gavin Harrison from Porcupine Tree. The guy is absolutely amazing on the drums. Great feel, great chops, amazing groove and he always plays unique beats and fills that really stand out to me. [...]
[...] So lately drummers who are really have a serious effect on my drumming are Gavin Harrison [...] I would just love to have a brain transplant with that guy. Anything he does is just mind boggling. What I love most about him is he's not so flashy, just very down to earth and passionate about his drumming. Everything is well thought out and out together and he makes the impossible seem possible.
[...] Gavin Harrison je verovatno najkompletniji i najkompleksniji muzičar među bubnjarima današnjice. Prava je poslastica slušati i gledati ga u bilo kojoj muzičkoj situaciji. ([...] Gavin Harrison is probably the most complete and complex musician among drummers of today. Is a real delight to listen to and watch him in any musical situation.)
Along with all the drummers I have always enjoyed, and still listen to and appreciate (many mentioned in the DVD and related material), I like what Gavin Harrison is doing with Porcupine Tree, and on his instructional DVDs. His playing and his thinking are interesting, musical, and inspiring.
Fellow countryman Gavin is leading the field in improvising with meters. He has managed to distil the essence of, and codify the laws of what I think is generally considered to be the next big step in drumming, namely the ability to move at will through several parallel meters, whose relationship to the basic pulse can then be said to be 'displaced' or 'modulated'. He has the cleanest and tidiest execution of any drummer I've ever heard. Try his group 'Porcupine Tree', or some of his excellent instructional books and DVDs.
Love Porcupine Tree. I was jamming the Incident the other day. That record has really grown on me. Gavin Harrison is the man. Dude has some of the most tasteful fills ever.
They're a great band. Gavin Harrison is probably my favorite drummer ever. [...] Perhaps that's why In Absentia worked for me --it was a compromise between the old Porcupine Tree sound and having Gavin Harrison in the mix.