Story
RICHMOND RAISED, DMV ROOTED
The name isn't branding — it's biography. Dante Harris started drumming in Richmond, Virginia three decades ago: Henrico High's Warrior Marching Band, the jazz band, the gospel choir, then the Gospel Music Workshop of America in Hampton. His first church chair came in 1998 at Moore Street Missionary Baptist, and Baptist churches have been home ever since — six chairs across twenty-eight years, currently East Washington Heights Baptist in Washington DC, where he plays a livestreamed service every Sunday.
The philosophy stayed the same the whole way. Pocket first. Harris is a drummer music directors don't worry about — solid on clicks and backing tracks, fluent with charts, running a hybrid SJC/SPD-SX rig when the room calls for it, and disciplined enough to play the service instead of playing over it. The vocabulary runs wide — gospel and worship at the center, R&B, funk, and jazz around it, on any percussion instrument.
And the next generation is part of the job. Since 2015 he's taught privately; since 2021 he's led a weekly percussion classroom of fifteen students, ages six to twelve, in Washington DC — first grip to advanced technique, real lesson plans, real patience. Thirty years in, the mission is simple: serve the music, hold the room, and hand the sticks forward.