Frederick Harris,Jr.
Director,Senior Lecturer
Performance
MUSIC

MIT

Every time we gather to make music we have the opportunity to connect and grow. We expand our humanity by expressing our feelings through sound, silence, and space.” 

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Dr. Frederick Harris, Jr. is the Director of Wind and Jazz Ensembles at MIT, where he serves as Music Director of the MIT Wind Ensemble, MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble, and Jazz Coordinator, overseeing jazz chamber music programs including three combos, MIT Vocal Jazz Ensemble, and the Emerson Jazz Scholars Program. Harris is also the creator and director of It Must Be Now!, a project creating music and visual art on themes of racial justice. He is also leading a project combing Brazilian music and environmental research, focused on the Amazon rainforest.

Harris has been highly active with public school students and music educators throughout his career, leading seminars, guest conducting, and coordinating enrichment events at MIT and beyond. Nominated by his students, Harris is a 2013 and 2019 recipient of the James A. and Ruth Levitan Award for Excellence in Teaching in the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences at MIT.

He is the author of Conducting with Feeling and Seeking the Infinite: The Musical Life of Stanisław Skrowaczewski, and currently he is writing a biography of Herb Pomeroy. He has published articles/book chapters related to conducting, jazz, and wind ensemble performance.

He and the MIT Wind Ensemble have been featured on NPR and PBS in the 2014 Emmy-winning documentary Awakening: Evoking the Arab Spring through Music, with music by Jamshied Sharifi. Harris and his students also are featured in the 2018 Emmy-winning documentary Imagination Off The Charts: Jacob Collier Comes to MIT, and the Emmy-nominated documentary The Great Clarinet Summit.

He is a strong advocate for the creation and performance of new music, having commissioned and/or premiered 105 works for wind, jazz, and mixed ensembles, recently leading pieces by John Harbison,Jamshied Sharifi, Chick Corea, Don Byron, Jacob Collier, and Miguel Zenón. Renowned artists with whom MITWE and MIT FJE have worked include Kenneth Amis, Frank Battisti, Ran Blake, Don Byron, Peter Child, Jacob Collier, Chris Cheek, Anat Cohen, Michael Colgrass, Chick Corea, Braxton Cook, Terri Lyne Carrington, Dominique Eade, George Garzone, John Harbison, Mark Harvey, Sean Jones, Guillermo Klein, Joe Lovano, Stephen Massey, Bill McHenry, Herb Pomeroy, Gunther Schuller, George Schuller, Jamshied Sharifi, Luciana Souza, Judi Silvano, Magali Souriau, Stever Turre, Kenny Werner, Warren Wolf, Miguel Zenón, and Evan Ziporyn.

The joint MIT Wind Ensemble and MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble recording Infinite Windson Sunnyside Records, was awarded the highest rating by Down beat magazine (5 stars), and was chosen as one of Down beat magazine’s “Best Albums of 2015: Masterpieces.” Both of these honors are firsts in MIT’s history. It is extremely rare that student ensembles are mentioned in Down beat’s highly selective “best of the year” list. The Boston Globe called Infinite Winds “one of the most compelling CDs of the year.” Other recordings by the MIT Wind Ensemble include Waking Winds(2004), published by Innova Recordings of the American Composers, and Solo Eclipse(2008), published by Albany Records. Both CDs feature premiere recordings by composers Schuller, Child, Ziporyn, Klein, and Amis. Dr. Harris conducted Kenny Werner’s No Beginning, No End(2010)—originally premiered by MITWE—in New York City for Half Note Records.

Throughout its 22-year history, MITWE has collaborated with elementary, middle and high school students throughout Massachusetts. It has collaborated extensively with many of MIT’s ensembles and faculty members. In March of 2019, MITWE embarked on its first tour, spending a week in the Dominican Republic, presenting four concerts,including a performance with clarinetist Anat Cohen, many STEM presentations for middle, high school and college students, and leading music workshops. In January of 2019 the MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble participated in a cultural exchange, touring Puerto Rico with Miguel Zenón, presenting concerts in various venues and also STEM workshops in middle and high schools.

Harris has served as acting music director of the MIT Symphony Orchestra, assistant conductor of the Boston University Tanglewood Institute Young Artists Wind Ensemble, music director of the Summer Music Festival at the South Shore Conservatory, conductor of the Concerto Grosso Orchestra at the University of Minnesota, and he has guest conducted the New Hampshire Philharmonic and the Chamber Music Society of Minnesota, and for numerous wind and jazz festivals for the Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine Music Educators Association.

He also has appeared on Minnesota Public Radio’s All Things Considered and other MPR programs. In 2015 he produced and premiered a 30-minute documentary film Seeking the Infinite: Stanislaw Skrowaczewski—A Life in Music, at Orchestra Hall, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Over 600 people viewed the film and it was reviewed as “essentially viewing” by Minnesota Public Radio. Dr. Harris organized a commission consortium involving three composers and 40 universities/schools honoring the 85th birthday of legendary wind conductor Frank Battisti. The project is sponsored by the American Composers Forum. He has lectured on music in Canada and at many New England universities, as well as for the Minnesota Orchestra and the Deutsche Radio Philharmonie Saarbrücken.

Harris has performed as a drummer with the Aardvark Jazz Orchestra, John Harbison, the Boston Pops, Kenny Werner,and Grammy-winning jazz saxophonist Joe Lovano. He studied jazz drums with Alan Dawson and classical percussion with Arthur Press, former principal percussionist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. As a classical percussionist he has performed with wind ensembles, orchestras, and chamber ensembles throughout New England.

His conducting teachers included Stephen Massey, Frank Battisti, Gunther Schuller, Stanisław Skrowaczewski, and Craig Kirchhoff. His degrees are from New England Conservatory, Boston Conservatory, and the University of Minnesota.

Harris was awarded the 2010 Paul Smith Hall of Fame Award from the Massachusetts Instrumental and Choral Conductors Association. The award is presented annually “to a Massachusetts music conductor who is a musical and personal inspiration to students, the community, and other professional conductors.

Education

B.M. in Music Education/Percussion, Boston Conservatory; M.M. in Conducting, New England Conservatory; Ph.D. in Music Education/Conducting, University of Minnesota. Principal teachers: Frank Battisti, Gunther Schuller, Stanisław Skrowaczewski, Alan Dawson, and Arthur Press.

Bio

Dr. Frederick Harris Jr. has been highly active with public school students and music educators throughout his career, leading seminars, guest conducting, and coordinating enrichment events. He is the author of Conducting with Feeling, and Seeking the Infinite: The Musical Life of Stanisław Skrowaczewski. He currently serves as Music Director of the MIT Wind Ensemble and MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble, and as MIT’s Jazz Performance Studies Coordinator. He and the MIT Wind Ensemble have been featured on NPR, PBS, and in two New England Emmy-winning documentaries. Dr. Harris has commissioned and premiered over 120 works by composers such as Don Byron, Chick Corea, John Harbison, Jamshied Sharifi, and Miguel Zenón. His ensembles have collaborated with leading artists such as Terri Lyne Carrington, Anat Cohen, Jacob Collier, Sean Jones, Guillermo Klein, and Luciana Souza. He has also performed as a jazz drummer with Joe Lovano, Kenny Werner, and the Boston Pops. 

Dr. Harris is the creator and director of It Must Be Now!, an initiative at MIT focused on advancing social justice actions through music and media, and Hearing Amazônia–The Responsibility of Existence, an MIT project combining Brazilian music influenced by the natural world and sustainability solutions, drawing attention to the urgency of the climate crisis.

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