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Short Biography
Peter Erskine has played
drums since the age of four and is known
for his versatility and love of working
in different musical contexts. He
appears on more than 500 albums and film
scores, and has won two Grammy Awards,
plus an Honorary Doctorate.
He's played with Stand
Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Weather
Report, Steps Ahead, Jaco Pastorius,
Joni Mitchel, Steely Dan, Diana Krall,
Michael Brecker, The Yellowjackets, Pat
Metheny & Gary Burton, et al, and has
appeared as a soloist with the London
Symphony, Los Angeles, BBC and Berlin
Philharmonic orchestras. Peter graduated
from the Interlochen Art Academy and
studied percussion with George
Gaber at Indiana University.
Comprehensive
Biography
Peter Erskine began playing the drums at
the age of four and has been at the
forefront of world-class jazz ensembles
for more than 35 years.
His first major
professional work was with the Stan
Kenton Orchestra, which he joined in
1972. After a three year stint with
Kenton and a two year stay with Maynard
Ferguson, Erskine joined Weather Report
in 1978. The excellence of the
partnership between Erskine and bassist
Jaco Pastorius was an integral part of
that group's success.
Following his four
years in Weather Report (having recorded
five albums with them - including the
Grammy Award winning "8:30"), he began
to play with Mike Brecker, Mike Mainieri,
Don Grolnick and Eddie Gomez in the
group Steps Ahead. Erskine's other
touring and recording credits (500
albums & film scores) include Steely
Dan, Diana Krall, Chick Corea, Joe
Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Gary Burton
& Pat Metheny, Joni Mitchell, Kurt
Elling, Sadao Watanabe, Eliane Elias,
Mike Stern, Kate Bush, Miroslav Vitous
and Jan Garbarek; the BBC Symphony
Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, London
Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles
Philharmonic, Ensemble Modern, the ASKO,
Avanti, Remix & Absolute Ensembles, Bass
Desires (with John Scofield, Bill
Frisell, and Marc Johnson), the John
Abercrombie Trio, the Kenny Wheeler
Quintet & Big Band, the Yellowjackets
and the Bob Mintzer Big Band. He has
also recorded with his own groups,
including trios with John Taylor, Palle
Danielsson, Rita Marcotulli, and his
current bands with guitarist Nguyen Le
and bassist Michel Benita ("Trio E_L_B"),
as well as a trio he shares with pianist
Alan Pasqua.
Erskine's solo albums
include: "Peter Erskine", "Transition",
"Motion Poet", "Sweet Soul", "Big
Theatre", and his ECM recordings "You
Never Know," "Time Being", "As It Is"
and "Juni" as well as "History of the
DRUM", "Behind Closed Doors" and "Side
Man Blue" on his own label FUZZY MUSIC.
Peter is the co-leader of several
albums, including "Prism" with Bill
Dobbins and the WDR Big Band, "Cologne"
with Bill Dobbins and John Goldsby, and
"Dream Flight" with Nguyen Le and Michel
Benita. The latest release on Fuzzy
Music is “The Trio” featuring Peter,
bassist Chuck Berghofer and pianist
Terry Trotter.
Erskine's other
playing ventures include The Lounge Art
Ensemble with Bob Sheppard on saxophone.
That group's most recent CD is titled
"Music for Moderns," and a piano trio
with Alan Pasqua and Dave Carpenter.
Their double CD "Peter
Erskine & Alan Pasqua with David
Carpenter - Live at Rocco" received rave
reviews from the press and fans. Their
last two CDs are called "Badlands" and
the Grammy-nominated "Standards."
Erskine won his second Grammy Award for
his work on the Randy & Michael Brecker
album "Some Skunk Funk" (with Vince
Mendoza and the WDR Big Band). His CD
titled "Worth The Wait," recorded with
trumpeter Tim Hagans and the Norrbotten
Big Band (Sweden) won tremendous praise,
and the follow-up CD “The Avatar
Sessions” will feature Erskine, Hagans
and the big band along with guest
soloists Randy Brecker, Dave Liebman,
George Garzone and Rufus Reid.
Besides touring and
recording, Erskine is composing for
theater, dance, film and television. He
has completed musical scores for
Shakespeare's King Richard II and A
Midsummer Night's Dream; the latter
being honored by the Los Angeles Drama
Critics Circle with the award for the
"Best Original Musical Score." His music
for The American Conservatory Theatre's
production of Twelfth Night was awarded
by the Bay Area Drama Critics' Circle as
the "Best Dramatic Score."
Other works for this medium are Hamlet,
Romeo & Juliet, the dance piece "History
of the Drum" (written for the Kokuma
Dance Company of Birmingham, England),
"The Yield of the Long Bond" and "Honor"
for LA's "Matrix Theatre," and scores
for the Pasadena Playhouse productions
of "Side Man" and “Defiance.” He has
written for animation including “Gun
Smith Cats,” and composed the music for
the Simon & Schuster books-on-audio
series "Alien Voices" starring Leonard
Nimoy and John deLancie of Star Trek
fame.
Peter was
Composer-in-Residence at the famed
Hilliard Ensemble's choral workshop in
Germany in 2000, and received a BBC
commission to compose the suite "Music
for Brass and Percussion." Additional
commissions include a piece for the Los
Angeles Guitar Quartet and marimba
soloist Colin Currie, plus a percussion
ensemble piece written in memory of
Nexus co-founder John Wyre ("A Bird
Sings").
Erskine is a graduate
of the Interlochen Arts Academy in
Michigan, and studied percussion with
George Gaber at Indiana University. His
own pedagogical efforts include four
instructional videos as well as eight
books, including: "Drumset Essentials,
Vols. 1, 2 & 3 " (a trilogy of
instructional methods), plus the
"Erskine Method" book and DVD,
"Essential Drum Fills" and "Time
Awareness for All Musicians" (published
by Alfred Music Publishing). Erskine's
other books include "Drum Concepts &
Techniques" and "The Drum Perspective",
both published by the Hal Leonard Corp.
Erskine conducts clinics, classes and
seminars worldwide. He is the Director
of Drumset Studies at the USC Thornton
School of Music, and is the Jazz
Drumming Consultant to the Royal Academy
of Music in London.
Erskine has won the
Modern Drummer magazine Readers' Poll in
the "Jazz Drummer" category 10 times,
and was awarded an honorary Doctorate
degree from the Berklee College of
Music. He was the soloist along with
Evelyn Glennie at the world premiere of
a new Double Concerto for Percussion
titled "Fractured Lines," composed by
Mark-Anthony Turnage, in London at the
Proms in July 2000 with Sir Andrew Davis
conducting the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
That work was recorded for the Chandos
label.
Erskine is
55-years-old, and makes his home in
Southern California.
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