The story of jazz drummer extraordinaire Eric Du'sean Harland, a
first-call player of the decade from 2000 onward, is one filled with courage, persistence, and
fortitude. Born in Houston, TX, in 1978, he is the nephew of Houston vocalist Leo Polk. An
extremely overweight teenager, he was a target of cruel children, mean-spirited teachers, and at
times, family members.
His religious mother, believing she had seen a vision when he was born, was convinced that Eric
was the messiah-in-waiting. She took him to voodoo priests and witch doctors to confirm her
expectations. Harland found acceptance in music, learning orchestra percussion, and at age 14
idolizing Elvin Jones.
At home, he would lock himself in his room, playing along with John Coltrane's A Love Supreme
and recordings by Jeff Watts, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Weckl, and Steve Gadd.
He began his professional career in 1993 playing locally, and finished high school at Houston's
High School for the Performing and Visual Arts. Harland won first chair in 1992-1993 with the
regional and state jazz band. He met Wynton Marsalis at a school workshop, and the trumpeter
encouraged the young drummer to continue his jazz studies in New York City.
Harland went on to the Manhattan School of Music with a full scholarship -- but upon collapsing
from exhaustion and self-starvation in 1996, Harland returned to his home in Texas to recharge
his physical and spiritual batteries, and studied theology at Houston Baptist University to
become an ordained minister.
Upon his return to N.Y.C., and losing a considerable amount of weight, Harland found himself in
demand, working with Marsalis, Terence Blanchard, Stefon Harris, Joe Henderson, and especially
Betty Carter, who he accompanied until her death in 1998. Other collaborations represent a
virtual and exhaustive who's who of modern jazz, including Greg Osby, Joshua Redman, Geri Allen,
Kenny Garrett, Michael Brecker, Jason Moran, John Patitucci, Ravi Coltrane, Jimmy Greene, Mark
Shim, Gregory Tardy, Rodney Jones, Mark Sherman, Aaron Goldberg, Joel Weiskopf, Stefano di
Battista, Brett Sroka, Jacky Terrasson, John Swana, Edward Simon, Liberty Ellman, Kathy Kosins,
and Zakir Hussein.
Harland has also participated in high-profile tours and recordings with McCoy Tyner; the Dave
Holland ensemble and big band; the SF Jazz Collective with Redman, Miguel Zenón, Nicholas
Payton, and Bobby Hutcherson; and, most prominently, the Charles Lloyd Quartet.
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