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Thor Harris
View on WikipediaKey Information
Thor Harris (born February 7, 1965) is an artist, sculptor, musician, painter, carpenter and handyman.[1] He was the percussionist for Swans (2010–2016). He has performed with Shearwater (2001–2010), Bill Callahan, The Angels of Light, Lisa Germano, Yonatan Gat, Gretchen Phillips, Devendra Banhart, Rebecca Cannon, Xiu Xiu, Flock of Dimes & Amanda Palmer, Whalesong,[2] and the Grand Theft Orchestra. He has recorded at least six instrumental albums with the Austin producer Rob Halverson.[3] He also contributed to Ben Frost's 2014 album, Aurora.[4] He joined the touring lineup of Xiu Xiu as a percussionist in February 2017 and he has enjoyed touring with Thor & Friends since 2015.[5]
In the early 21st century, Harris wrote a short outline on "How To Tour In A Band Or Whatever". This set of '21 rules' spread widely across the internet.[6][7][8] Harris also wrote and illustrated the 'zine/pamphlet Ocean of Despair, about depression, as a companion to his recorded album of the same title.
Personal life
[edit]Harris posted a video to his Twitter account titled "How To Punch A Nazi" as a response to the rise of Richard Spencer, and on February 8, 2017, Twitter briefly suspended Harris's account[9] for the video. On August 10, 2017, Harris announced his candidacy for governor of Texas on Twitter.[10] Thor Harris also builds custom musical instruments.[5]
Discography
[edit]With Swans
[edit]- My Father Will Guide Me Up a Rope to the Sky (2010, Swans)
- The Seer (2012, Swans)
- To Be Kind (2014, Swans)
- The Glowing Man (2016, Swans)
With Thor & Friends
[edit]- Thor & Friends (2016, Thor & Friends)
- The Subversive Nature of Kindness (2017, Thor & Friends)[11]
- 3 (2020, Thor & Friends, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
- 4 (2020, Thor & Friends, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
With Shearwater
[edit]- The Dissolving Room (2001, Shearwater on Grey Flat)
- Everybody Makes Mistakes (2002, Shearwater on Misra)
- Winged Life (2004, Shearwater on Misra)
- Palo Santo (2006, Shearwater on Misra)
- Rook (2008, Shearwater)
- The Golden Archipelago (2010, Shearwater)
With Rob Halverson
[edit]- Fields of Innards (1999, Thor Harris and Rob Halverson)
- Robinson Ear's Little Whirled of Sound (2000, Rob Halverson)
- One Night Only (2002, Rob Halverson)
- Second Whirled (2004, Rob Halverson)
- Fields of Innards II (2010, Thor Harris and Rob Halverson)
- Fields of Innards III (2019, Thor Harris and Rob Halverson, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
With Shahzad Ismaily
[edit]- With Anni Rossi (2019, Shahzad & Thor, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
Joyful Noise Recordings - Artist In Residence 2019
[edit]Harris's six 2019 releases on Joyful Noise Recordings were issued both as six individual digital albums and as one limited-edition (666 copies) set of six colored-vinyl records in a wooden box.[12]
- Fields of Innards III (2019, Thor Harris and Rob Halverson, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
- Is Adam OK? (2019, Thor Harris & Joyful Noise Players, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
- 3 (2019, Thor & Friends, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
- 4 (2019, Thor & Friends, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
- With Anni Rossi (2019, Shahzad & Thor, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
- Doom Dub (2019, Thor Harris, on Joyful Noise Recordings)[12]
Other
[edit]- New Mother (1999, Angels of Light on Young God Records)
- How I Loved You (2001, Angels of Light on Young God Records)
- Everything Is Good Here/Please Come Home (2003, Angels of Light on Young God Records)
- Rejoicing in the Hands (2004, Devendra Banhart on Young God Records)
- Niño Rojo (2004, Devendra Banhart on Young God Records)
- A River Ain't Too Much to Love (May 31, 2005; Smog (Bill Callahan))
- Woke on a Whaleheart (April 17, 2007; Bill Callahan on Drag City)
- Drums and Drunken Circuit (2009, Thor Harris, Rob Halverson, and Bill Callahan)
- You Knew (2012, Mother Falcon)
- Dream River (2013, Bill Callahan, on Drag City)
- A U R O R A (2014, Ben Frost)
- Noplace (2017, Aidan Baker/Simon Goff/Thor Harris)
- Radiance of a Thousand Suns (2019, Whalesong, Self- Released)[2]
- Io (2019, [1] Little Mazarn on Self Sabotage Records)
- Medicine Singers (2022, Stone Tapes & Joyful Noise Recordings)
- I Didn't Mean to Haunt You (2022, Quadeca, on deadAir)
- Mjölnir (2023, Cinema Cinema on Nefarious Industries)
References
[edit]- ^ Ken Lieck (January 21, 2000). "Hammer of the Gods". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
- ^ a b "Radiance of a Thousand Suns, by Whalesong". Whalesong. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
- ^ "Music | Thor Harris and Rob Halverson albums". Thorrob.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 2014-05-18.
- ^ Geslani, Michelle (March 20, 2014). "Listen: Ben Frost's new song "Venter", featuring Swans' Thor Harris". March 20, 2014. Consequence of Sound. Retrieved November 14, 2015.
- ^ a b "About". Thor & Friends. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
- ^ Harris, Thor. "How To Tour In A Band Or Whatever". Constellation. Archived from the original on 2020-06-02. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
- ^ Harris, Thor. "How To Tour In A Band Or Whatever". Looking for the Magic. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
- ^ Harris, Thor. "How To Tour In A Band Or Whatever". The Only Music That Matters. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
- ^ Rettig, James (February 8, 2017). "Thor Harris Suspended From Twitter For How-To-Punch-A-Nazi Tutorial". February 8, 2017. Stereogum. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
- ^ Wicks, Amanda. "Thor Harris Says He's Running for Governor of Texas". Pitchfork.com. Condé Nast. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ^ "Album Review: Thor & Friends' "The Subversive Nature of Kindness"". Austin Monthly. December 2017. Retrieved 2019-12-23.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Thor Harris: 2019 Artist in Residence". Joyful Noise Recordings. 2019. Retrieved 2019-12-23.
External links
[edit]Thor Harris
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Childhood and Upbringing in Texas
Thor Harris was born Michael Harris on February 7, 1965, in La Porte, Texas, a working-class coastal community near Houston and Galveston Bay.[2] [8] Raised in a family of Nordic descent—with roots tracing to a Scottish grandfather of Norwegian heritage who immigrated to the United States over 150 years earlier—Harris experienced an upbringing steeped in manual labor traditions.[9] His father and grandfather's professions involving tools, woodworking, and metalwork surrounded him with workshops from childhood, instilling practical skills and a culture of self-reliance emblematic of rural Texas life. This environment emphasized hands-on craftsmanship over formal academics, shaping Harris's later versatility in trades amid the region's independent, resource-scarce ethos.[9] Harris's initial musical exposure occurred around ages 4 to 5 via his sister's Jackson 5 records, followed by attending their live performance at the Houston Astrodome at age 6, which he later recalled as a pivotal early influence.[9] [10] Though disinterested in Texas's dominant football culture, he took inspiration at age 9 from the percussion in high school marching bands during games, prompting him to start formal drum lessons; he trained classically with instructors, including jazz percussionist Joe Raynor based near Houston, honing foundational techniques over subsequent years.[9]Initial Forays into Music and Arts
Harris's earliest musical inspirations emerged in La Porte, Texas, where, at age five, he first encountered the Jackson 5 on television, an experience deepened the following year by attending their live performance at the Astrodome.[11] By age nine, around 1974, he began formal drum lessons, undergoing classical percussion training under four or five instructors, including the Houston-area jazz drummer Joe Raynor.[9] Though trained in techniques encompassing marimba, xylophone, and vibraphone, Harris chafed against the rigidity of classical education, gravitating instead toward rock, soul, and progressive rock, genres he pursued amid a "feral" teenage phase following his father's death from cancer at age ten.[12][11] Adolescent experimentation honed his technical proficiency, as Harris, lacking funds for equipment, started fabricating instruments at age thirteen through trial-and-error methods, a self-directed practice that extended to modifying drums by age fourteen to produce atypical timbres.[9][12] Early influences included Kraftwerk, encountered via an eight-track tape in seventh grade, alongside prog-rock acts that encouraged his shift from orchestral settings—where he participated in local symphonies—to informal rock-oriented play.[12] These pursuits cultivated a multi-instrumentalist foundation, blending percussive precision with improvisational flair, though without documented involvement in named informal groups during this period. Parallel to music, Harris's visual arts explorations rooted in familial woodworking—stemming from his grandfather and father's trades—evolved into broader self-taught endeavors in sculpture and painting during early adulthood.[9] This hands-on approach, emphasizing practical craftsmanship over institutional paths, later informed his instrument-building but originated in adolescent tinkering with tools and materials amid Texas's DIY ethos.[12] Such foundational skills, developed through personal projects rather than formal ensembles, preceded his relocation to Austin in 1985 and distinguished his pre-professional phase.[9]Musical Career
Early Collaborations and Session Work
Upon relocating to Austin in 1985, Harris immersed himself in the local music scene, initially as a percussionist in emerging acts that blended punk, prog, funk, and soul elements. In 1987, he co-founded Stick People with guitarist Craig Ross, recruiting vocalist Malford Milligan from a chance encounter at a grocery store; the band, active until 1991, gained notice as one of Austin's pioneering New Wave-influenced groups, performing live sets such as a 1989 appearance on KUT radio.[13][14][15] These early endeavors showcased his reliability as a multi-instrumentalist capable of adapting to eclectic ensembles, laying groundwork for his reputation in Texas indie circles.[16] Throughout the 1990s and into the early 2000s, Harris supplemented band work with session percussion duties for Austin-based indie projects, leveraging the city's vibrant ecosystem of studios and venues to hone his craft. He contributed to recordings and gigs with acts like Kidbug and Long Meg & Her Daughters, emphasizing his versatility on drums and auxiliary instruments amid the DIY ethos of the era.[3] This ad-hoc role solidified Austin as his professional base, where he balanced music with trades like carpentry, fostering connections in a scene that valued self-reliant contributors.[14][9] Harris developed distinctive percussion techniques during these years, experimenting with custom builds such as plumbing-derived implements like PEX tubing to create resonant, joint-sparing sounds, alongside proficiency in mallet instruments like marimba and woodwinds.[9] These innovations emerged from resource-constrained collaborations, enabling him to provide textured, atmospheric support in live and recording settings without relying on standard kits, thus distinguishing his session contributions in Austin's experimental undercurrents.[9]Tenure with Swans (2010–2016)
Harris joined Swans in 2010 as a percussionist during the band's reformation under Michael Gira, building on his prior collaborations with Gira in Angels of Light.[17] He contributed to the group's core lineup, providing drums, percussion, vibraphone, hammered dulcimer, and keyboards across albums including My Father Will Guide Me up a Rope to the Sky (2010), The Seer (2012), and To Be Kind (2014).[18] His instrumentation emphasized repetitive, hypnotic rhythms that amplified Swans' signature intensity, with Harris's dynamic percussion—often described as hammering with ferocity—serving as a foundational element in the band's post-rock evolutions.[19][20] During extensive tours supporting these releases, Harris's role extended to live performances, where his eclectic playing supported Gira's conducting style and contributed to the ensemble's overwhelming sonic density.[21] The revival phase under Gira featured Harris alongside staples like Norman Westberg and Phil Puleo, fostering a sound marked by prolonged builds and textural layering, as evidenced in recordings and contemporaneous reviews.[18] Harris's input helped sustain the band's momentum through grueling schedules, though the physical demands of such regimens were later cited as taxing.[22] Harris departed Swans in 2016 prior to major tours, primarily to remain near his elderly mother and due to exhaustion from the band's relentless touring pace, while shifting focus to independent endeavors.[22][12] Gira replaced him with keyboardist Paul Wallfisch to adapt the live arrangement, maintaining continuity amid Harris's absence, which observers noted altered the percussive drive central to prior iterations' energy.[23] His tenure concluded on amicable terms, with Gira affirming their ongoing friendship despite the split.[22]Formation and Evolution of Thor & Friends
Thor Harris established the ensemble Thor & Friends in autumn 2015, shortly after concluding his tenure with Swans, assembling a core group centered on percussionist Peggy Ghorbani and multi-instrumentalist Sarah Gautier to explore minimalist, repetitive compositions.[24] The band's debut self-titled album, released on October 7, 2016, via LM Duplication, emphasized marimba, vibraphone, and xylophone as primary instruments, yielding an improvisational, avant-chamber sound characterized by hypnotic rhythms and sparse arrangements recorded in Albuquerque.[25] This initial recording featured Harris on marimba, clarinet, organ, and percussion, with contributions from guests like violinist Heather Trost and guitarist John Dieterich, establishing a template for the group's emphasis on live, organic interplay over rigid structures. The ensemble's lineup has remained fluid, expanding or contracting for recordings and performances to accommodate Harris's vision of experimental, ethos-driven music that prioritizes repetition and texture over conventional song forms.[24] Subsequent releases, including Noplace in 2017 and the dual albums 3 and 4 in 2020 via Joyful Noise Recordings, marked compositional shifts toward incorporating guest vocalists like Bill Callahan and Jolie Holland, while retaining the marimba-led core for extended, meditative pieces.[26] 3, initially part of Joyful Noise's 2019 Artist in Residence series, exemplified this evolution with its six-track, 38-minute runtime focused on rhythmic minimalism, reflecting Harris's interest in trance-like states achieved through percussion ensembles.[27] By 2025, the band released Heathen Spirituals on May 16, comprising three original pieces totaling 35 minutes of repetitive, ritualistic percussion, underscoring a continued commitment to hypnotic, non-narrative forms.[28] Thor & Friends has sustained activity through live performances, adapting its improvisational approach to touring demands with regional U.S. dates in 2024, such as a Northeast run with Hour, and planned 2025 engagements including a European tour supporting Water Damage and a performance at Sonic Transmissions Fest on September 14.[29] These shows highlight the band's emphasis on communal, site-specific energy, often featuring extended improvisations tailored to venues. In recognition of his percussion work within the ensemble and broader scene, Harris was named Best Drummer & Percussionist in the 2025 Austin Music Awards.[4]Key Collaborations with Shearwater, Rob Halverson, and Others
Harris contributed percussion to Shearwater's 2011 album Animal Joy, enhancing the band's indie-folk and atmospheric textures with his multifaceted approach to rhythm and vibraphone.[30] This collaboration underscored his role in elevating the group's lush soundscapes through layered percussion that complemented their orchestral indie style.[2] In partnership with Rob Halverson, Harris produced the Fields of Innards series of instrumental ambient recordings, starting with the debut volume in summer 1999, featuring hypnotic, slow-moving layers of sound without conventional song structures.[31] Subsequent installments, including Fields of Innards II and III, continued this experimental vein, blending ambient electronics and minimalism in ad-hoc sessions that highlighted their shared affinity for texture over melody.[32] These works exemplify genre-blending creativity rooted in Austin's local scene. Harris teamed with Shahzad Ismaily for the 2020 release With Anni Rossi, a collaborative effort incorporating guest artist Anni Rossi on tracks emphasizing patience and introspective themes, such as "I'm OK to Drive (patience=genius)."[33] They also participated in the experimental ensemble NOUS alongside Christopher Bono and Greg Fox, contributing to the project's 2020 album with improvisational elements fusing percussion and noise.[34] As Joyful Noise Recordings' 2019 Artist in Residence, Harris curated six distinct limited-edition vinyl projects—each capped at 666 copies—featuring one-off collaborations with artists including Sharon Van Etten, Neko Case, and Sigur Rós, fostering spontaneous genre experimentation through rapid-release cycles every six weeks.[35][36]Other Artistic and Professional Pursuits
Visual Arts: Sculpture and Painting
Thor Harris, a self-taught visual artist, works in sculpture and painting as extensions of his multidisciplinary creative practice. He has described himself as a painter, emphasizing hands-on mastery developed through personal obsession rather than formal training, having dropped out of art school early in his career.[37][38][14] Harris's approach to visual arts reflects a pragmatic, empirical process influenced by Texas traditions of self-reliance and craftsmanship, prioritizing tangible creation over theoretical abstraction. In recent years, he has gained recognition as an accomplished self-trained visual artist, with several of his works displayed at the Orange Show Study Center in Houston.[39] No large-scale solo exhibitions of his paintings or sculptures are documented in public records, though his output integrates with broader artistic engagements in Austin's community.[38]Crafts and Trades: Carpentry and Handyman Work
Thor Harris has maintained a professional career in carpentry and handyman services, primarily based in Austin, Texas, where these trades have provided financial stability alongside his musical pursuits. As a skilled woodworker and plumber, Harris has undertaken construction projects, including building furniture and residential structures, which have allowed him to achieve a degree of economic independence uncommon among full-time artists.[9][40][41] A notable example of his craftsmanship is the self-construction of his own home in East Austin, demonstrating practical application of carpentry techniques to create functional living spaces without reliance on external contractors. This project, completed through hands-on labor, underscores Harris's emphasis on self-sufficiency, as he has described plumbing and carpentry as reliable trades that offer steady income and flexibility for creative endeavors.[40][41][11] Harris's manual skills extend to fabricating custom percussion instruments and other wooden apparatuses used in live performances, such as modified vibraphones and stringed devices, which he constructs from raw materials to suit experimental music needs. These handmade tools not only reduce costs but also enable unique sonic contributions in collaborations, fostering artistic innovation grounded in tangible production rather than dependency on commercial equipment.[9][42][43]Personal Life
Residence and Lifestyle in Austin
Thor Harris, a Texas native, has maintained a long-term residence in Austin since 1985. In the early 1990s, he acquired property in East Austin and personally constructed a two-story home there, drawing on his woodworking expertise to create a structure integrated with natural surroundings, shielded by trees and concealed from street view to evoke a private wilderness within the city.[44][45][11] The home functions as a multifunctional hub for Harris's self-reliant lifestyle, featuring a custom-built studio with warm wood paneling and an artful spiral staircase that supports both musical recording and artisanal projects. He balances extended music tours with local trades such as carpentry, plumbing, and handyman services, often performing these from his property while prioritizing simple, sustainable living practices like resource-efficient construction. Harris has owned the residence for over two decades as of 2018, viewing it as a personal paradise incorporating music, animals, and home-grown food elements.[46][14][47] Harris shares the home with his wife, Heather—a fellow Texas native—and approximately a dozen pets, underscoring a domestic routine anchored in familial stability and hands-on domestic maintenance rather than urban conveniences. This setup enables him to contribute to community efforts, such as aiding in home construction for low-income residents to counter gentrification pressures in East Austin.[14][48][47]Health Challenges, Including Depression
Thor Harris has publicly discussed his experiences with clinical depression, which he traces back to childhood and intensified during a severe episode at age 27, lasting approximately eight months and involving suicidal ideation.[9][49] In interviews from 2013 onward, he described symptoms including profound hopelessness, insomnia, low energy, and a "sick filter" of negative thinking that distorted perceptions of life as purposeless and despicable.[49] He attributed causal factors to isolation—contrasting solitary trades like carpentry with collaborative activities—and brain chemistry imbalances, rather than external societal narratives alone.[9] These discussions peaked between 2013 and 2017, coinciding with periods of intense touring that exacerbated fatigue through sedentary travel, though Harris emphasized internal physiological drivers over transient stressors.[41] Recovery involved disciplined routines, including daily exercise such as push-ups, running, and biking initiated as early as age 15, which he credits with altering brain chemistry to reduce symptoms empirically.[41] Therapy and medication, prompted by family intervention, provided initial stabilization, while physical labor and cardio sustained mood improvements by combating lethargy.[49] Harris views repetitive, minimalist music as a therapeutic tool for mindfulness—halting rumination through focus—but not a complete remedy, integrating it with practical self-reliance rather than romanticizing artistic suffering.[49] He has critiqued overemphasis on emotional narratives in mental health, instead highlighting depression's clarifying urgency: "Living through that did give me a kind of clarity and sense of immediacy," framing it as a motivator for disciplined action over passive despair.[9] Relapses have fostered greater compassion, underscoring incremental, evidence-based progress through routine over idealized cures.[49]Political Views and Public Engagement
Involvement in Texas Local Politics
Harris has engaged in grassroots community efforts in Austin's Blacklands neighborhood, a low-income, diverse area east of downtown. He volunteered with Blackland Community Development, an organization focused on neighborhood preservation amid rapid gentrification and urban expansion.[50] Local accounts credit him with single-handedly establishing a community garden there, which provided shared green space for residents until it was displaced by new housing construction.[51] In interviews, Harris has critiqued Austin city policies that prioritize tax incentives for large-scale developments, such as those benefiting high-profile investors, over affordable housing and cultural retention for artists and working-class communities.[50] He advocates for sustaining Austin's indie music ecosystem through support for local nonprofits like the SIMS Foundation and HAAM, which address musicians' health and economic needs amid rising costs and regulatory pressures on small venues.[50] These efforts reflect a pragmatic stance favoring community-driven solutions to preserve the city's artistic vitality against overdevelopment, though no formal elected roles or policy endorsements are documented.Statements on National Politics and Social Issues
Harris has publicly criticized Donald Trump's presidency for allegedly fostering tolerance of white supremacists and neo-Nazis. In February 2017, following his Twitter suspension over a video tutorial on confronting Nazis, he stated that individuals upset by depictions of violence against Nazis but unbothered by Trump's election "have much to learn about the world and how to live in it," positioning Trump's leadership as a catalyst for extremism that warranted direct opposition.[6] This perspective has fueled discussions on the tension between free speech protections and the risks of incitement, where proponents of Harris's stance argue it underscores how inflammatory rhetoric can normalize hate, while detractors, including free speech advocates, caution that such equivalences between electoral outcomes and ideological violence may erode civil discourse and alienate moderate audiences without empirically proving causation.[6] In a July 2020 interview, Harris reiterated his disdain for Trump, calling him a "white supremacist president" and lamenting America's "squandered potential" due to its enduring "wretched disease of racism," a problem he viewed as appallingly persistent despite the nation's cultural diversity.[50] He expressed intention to vote for Joe Biden in the November 2020 election, despite critiquing Biden's past support for the Iraq War as a "terrible mistake" and crediting Bernie Sanders with shaping the Democratic narrative, suggesting Biden's appeal lay in his potential to assemble competent advisors rather than ideological purity.[50] Harris has advocated for artists to voice political opinions amid national turmoil, asserting in 2020 that "no one should be silent about things now" and questioning why engaged individuals would withhold views on pressing issues.[50] However, he distinguished music's intrinsic value from political efficacy, noting, "I know music makes the world a better place. I’m not sure about politics," implying art's apolitical capacity to foster human connection could counterbalance divisive national debates without relying on partisan activism.[50] This stance reflects a pragmatic acknowledgment that overt political engagement in creative fields risks audience alienation—evidenced by backlash to his own statements—yet may heighten awareness of social ills like systemic racism, though measurable impacts on policy or behavior remain anecdotal.[50]Controversies
2017 Nazi-Punching Video and Twitter Suspension
In early February 2017, Thor Harris posted a video to his Twitter account titled "How To Punch A Nazi," demonstrating techniques for physically assaulting individuals identified as Nazis, in response to publicized incidents such as the January 2017 punching of white nationalist Richard Spencer on camera.[5][52] In the video, Harris qualified his instructions by stating, "Peaceful protest is better, but if you have to do it, please get someone to film it," framing the act as a potential necessity amid rising visibility of far-right figures.[5][52] The post prompted Twitter to suspend Harris's account on February 8, 2017, citing a violation of platform rules against promoting violence, though the company later informed him that the suspension stemmed from unrelated content involving drawings of penises rather than the video itself.[5][53] Harris disputed this explanation, maintaining that the Nazi-punching tutorial was the trigger, and his account was reinstated within days.[53][54] Harris defended the video in a February 15, 2017, essay on Talkhouse, arguing that public outrage over it revealed selective outrage, as "anyone who is bothered by [it] but not bothered by a President Trump has much to learn about the world and how to live in it," implying Trump's election enabled neo-Nazi resurgence through perceived tolerance.[6] He positioned the tutorial as a pragmatic response to existential threats posed by authoritarian ideologies, prioritizing self-defense over abstract pacifism.[6] Critics, however, contended that such advocacy undermines the rule of law by endorsing extrajudicial vigilantism, potentially escalating cycles of street violence without due process, as evidenced by subsequent real-world assaults justified under similar "punch a Nazi" rationales that strained legal distinctions between speech and incitement.[5][55] The suspension proved temporary, with Harris regaining access and continued media coverage amplifying the video's reach across outlets like Pitchfork and The Independent, arguably boosting his visibility among anti-fascist circles despite the platform penalty.[53][52] Broader patterns from 2017 platform enforcement data showed inconsistent handling of violence advocacy, with anti-right content like Harris's facing quicker scrutiny than comparable pro-violence rhetoric from other ideologies, though empirical cases of "Nazi-punching" normalization—such as meme proliferation and isolated assaults—did not correlate with reduced far-right organizing, per contemporaneous reports on alt-right growth post-inauguration.[5][55]2025 NYC Venue Payment Dispute
In August 2025, Thor Harris and his band performed at The Sultan Room in Brooklyn, New York, selling 46 tickets out of a 280-person capacity.[56][57] Following the August 9 show, Harris posted on Instagram a photo of the settlement statement indicating a $0 payout, overlaying text stating that the venue "paid us zero dollars tonight for a beautiful show" and questioning the term "House Nut," adding that he had "never had a club say 'you get nothing.'"[57][56] The contract stipulated that artists receive 80% of net revenue after taxes, fees, and agreed expenses, with no minimum guarantee.[57] The settlement breakdown listed $850 in expenses—$400 for sound and lights, $400 room fee, and $50 for marketing—exceeding gross ticket revenue and resulting in zero net for the artists.[57] Harris later updated his post to attribute the outcome to "AmericanCorporateCulture," implying structural issues in venue-artist dealings.[56] Reports indicate Harris had sought to cancel the show due to anticipated low sales, but it proceeded under the existing agreement.[7] The disclosure ignited online debate among indie musicians, with dozens reporting similar $0 or negative payouts at The Sultan Room and other NYC venues, where room fees and production costs often consume revenue from low-turnout shows.[7][57] Defenders, including drummer Greg Fox, emphasized venues' fixed overhead—such as staff, utilities, and post-COVID recovery pressures—and noted that third-party promoters sometimes handle bookings, advising artists to scrutinize contracts for guarantees.[57] Critics like Angel Deradoorian argued against non-waivable room fees when turnout is poor, while others questioned inflated charges, such as $400 for sound/lights without dedicated staff.[57] This incident underscores indie touring economics, where net-revenue deals shift sales risk to artists without assured minimums, a common practice amid high NYC operational costs and declining ticket-buying amid streaming and economic strains.[56][57] Venues maintain these structures to cover baseline expenses regardless of attendance, as low draws still incur full "house nut" outlays; artists opting for such terms effectively gamble on promotion and draw, with data showing frequent $0 settlements in underbooked indie shows rather than systemic exploitation when contracts are honored.[57][56]Discography
With Swans
Harris provided percussion, drums, vibraphone, dulcimer, keyboards, and additional curios on Swans' My Father Will Guide Me up a Rope to the Sky, released on September 21, 2010, contributing to the album's layered, experimental sound through rhythmic elements alongside drummer Phil Puleo.[58][59] On The Seer (2012), his roles expanded to include drums, percussion, orchestral bells, hammer dulcimer, vibraphone, and handmade violin, bolstering the record's extended tracks with propulsive, towering rhythms that underpinned compositions like the opening "Lunacy."[60][61] Harris's percussion and drum work on To Be Kind (2014) emphasized groove and repetition in its double-album format, supporting the band's shift toward hypnotic, extended improvisational structures during live performances tied to the recording sessions.[2] For The Glowing Man (2016), he delivered percussion and drums that maintained the ensemble's intense, cyclical rhythms across marathon-length pieces, marking his final studio contributions to the group before departing.[2][62]With Thor & Friends
Thor & Friends is an avant-garde musical ensemble led by percussionist Thor Harris, formed in Austin, Texas, in 2015 to explore post-minimalist and experimental compositions through collaborative improvisation and repetitive structures.[4] The group's sound has evolved from intricate, percussion-driven minimalism in early works to increasingly ambient and live-captured explorations incorporating tuned instruments, field recordings, and rhythmic hypnosis in recent releases.[63] The self-titled debut album Thor & Friends was released in 2016, featuring eight tracks such as "White Sands" and "Crusades," emphasizing layered percussion and meditative repetition over 40 minutes.[64] This was followed by The Subversive Nature of Kindness in 2017, a double album expanding on subversive themes through extended improvisations and diverse instrumentation.[65] In 2020, the group issued two concise experimental releases on Joyful Noise Recordings: 3, a single-track piece lasting approximately 20 minutes, and 4, similarly focused on immersive, non-narrative soundscapes that marked a shift toward shorter, format-defying outputs.[27] These works highlighted the ensemble's transition to the label, prioritizing raw live energy and abstract forms over traditional song structures.[65] Heathen Spirituals, the fifth full-length album, was released on May 16, 2025, via Joyful Noise Recordings, consisting of three original pieces—"Anne Sexton's Glasses," "Heathen Spiritual," and "Christmas Eve at the Wizard's House"—recorded live over two days for a 35-minute runtime.[28] The album advances the group's experimental ethos with hypnotic rhythmic repetition and thematic nods to outsider spirituality, distinguishing it from prior releases through its concise, trance-like intensity.[66]With Shearwater
Thor Harris joined the indie rock band Shearwater in 2001 as their drummer and vibraphonist, contributing percussion elements that integrated with the group's orchestral and atmospheric sound.[3] His early involvement aligned with the release of albums such as The Animal Language (2003), where his rhythmic foundations supported the band's evolving folk-indie style.[3] Over the next decade, Harris's multifaceted percussion work—encompassing drums, vibraphone, and auxiliary instruments—became a staple, bridging Shearwater's chamber-like arrangements with dynamic propulsion. On the 2008 album Rook, Harris's percussion performances, though subtle, consistently elevated tracks through precise textural layering, enhancing the record's intricate compositions without overpowering the core instrumentation.[67] By the time of Animal Joy (released February 14, 2012), his contributions included drums and reverberant percussion across the album, as part of the core lineup with Jonathan Meiburg and Kimberly Burke, produced by Danny Reisch and the band itself.[68][69] Specific examples include his driving rhythms on tracks like "Animal Life," where percussion underscores the propulsive energy, and atmospheric additions on "Breaking the Yearlings," adding depth to the indie-orchestral framework.[70] Harris also provided verifiable tour support for Shearwater through the late 2000s, performing live as a key multi-instrumentalist. This included appearances such as the band's 2008 NPR Tiny Desk Concert, featuring Harris alongside Meiburg, Burke, and guests on percussion-heavy renditions of Rook material.[71] His tenure with the band concluded around 2010, coinciding with his shift to Swans, but his percussion integrations left a lasting imprint on Shearwater's indie trajectory during that period.[3]With Rob Halverson and Shahzad Ismaily
Thor Harris and guitarist Rob Halverson produced the ambient album Fields of Innards during the summer of 1999, creating slow-moving, hypnotic soundscapes through layered instrumentation without conventional songs or structures.[31] The project emphasized hand-played textures, yielding tracks such as "Poquita's Collar," "Dry Leaves," and "Swans."[72] Subsequent installments followed, including Fields of Innards II and Fields of Innards III, the latter released on October 28, 2020, with 11 tracks totaling 44 minutes of experimental ambient exploration, featuring titles like "Things With Legs" and "Lowest Monkey Rider."[73] These duo efforts highlight Harris's percussion in dialogue with Halverson's guitar, prioritizing atmospheric immersion over melodic resolution.[31] Harris also partnered with multi-instrumentalist Shahzad Ismaily under the moniker Shahzad & Thor for the 2020 release With Anni Rossi, an eight-track album incorporating violinist Anni Rossi and additional contributors like Mathew "Binky" Robinson.[33] Issued via Joyful Noise Recordings as part of Harris's 2019 Artist in Residence series, it features intimate ensemble pieces such as "There is Peace in the Trees" and "A Walk in the Rain," focusing on real-time sonic interplay and lesser-known experimental forms.[47] The work, available in vinyl and digital formats, underscores spontaneous composition within a compact group dynamic.[74]Joyful Noise Recordings Projects
In 2019, Thor Harris was selected as the Artist in Residence for Joyful Noise Recordings, a program designed to provide prolific artists with extended creative space through a year-long series of subscription-style releases.[75] This culminated in a hand-crafted, screen-printed wooden box set limited to 666 numbered copies, containing six 12-inch vinyl LPs from distinct percussion-centric projects.[76] Each release explored experimental fusions, including minimalist repetitions, collaborative improvisations, and electronic manipulations of acoustic percussion sources.[77] The included projects were:- Fields of Innards III by Thor Harris & Rob Halverson, featuring 12 tracks of abstract electronic percussion assemblages.[76]
- Is Adam OK? by Thor Harris & Joyful Noise Players, a three-track suite emphasizing rhythmic waves and grief-themed motifs.[76]
- 3 by Thor & Friends, six minimalist compositions drawing on American experimental traditions with a rotating Austin-based ensemble.[76][78]
- With Anni Rossi by Shahzad & Thor, eight tracks blending percussion with string and vocal elements in pastoral, rain-inspired soundscapes.[76]
- 4 by Thor & Friends, seven pieces incorporating mystery and saintly motifs in extended, meditative forms.[76]
- Doom Dub by Thor Harris, eight dub-infused remixes layering heavy percussion with electronic delays and spatial effects.[76]