Gary Young

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Gary Young
Birth name Gary Young
Also known as Plantman
Born May 3, 1953 (1953-05-03) (age 55)
Mamaroneck, New York
Origin Stockton, California
Genre(s) Indie rock, Folk rock
Instrument(s) Guitar, Vocals, Drums
Label(s) Matador Records, Domino Records, Big Cat Records
Associated acts Pavement, Gary Young's Hospital

Gary Young (May 3, 1953) was the first drummer of the 90s seminal alternative band Pavement.

Contents

[edit] Early Life

Gary Young was born in Mamaroneck, New York. His father worked in the "plastics business".

[edit] Work with Pavement

Stephen Malkmus (vocal, guitar) and childhood friend Scott Kannberg (guitar, vocals) formed Pavement in Stockton, CA in 1989. Their first EP was recorded at a local studio Louder Than You Think-which was owned by Gary Young, then a thirty-something drummer who appeared on the EP. Young was also on the recording of Demolition Plot J-7 in 1990.

After the release of their first album, Slanted & Enchanted, Pavement toured nationally in support of it. They added a bassist and another drummer to bolster Young’s shaky timekeeping. The tour became notorious for the band’s sloppy sound and Young’s grandstanding.

Young gained the band notoriety with his on- and offstage antics. He was noted for greeting the audience at the door, giving out cabbage and mashed potatoes to fans, doing headstands, running around the venue and stage while the rest of the band was playing, and drunkenly falling off his drum stool.

His bizarre drug and alcohol fueled personality had grated on the rest of his band and they could no longer take it. In "Perfect Sound Forever", he stated:

"My mother thinks the Vietnam War had a major effect on [my drug and alcohol abuse]. We sat in a high school parking lot for the draft and they actually picked numbers out of a hat--'May 3rd, you go.' This was pretty scary, and if you're gonna die anyway, you might as well die from drugs. I'm sure this had something to do with it. We were out shooting heroin in a fucking high school parking lot."

The final straw came when Young allegedly pulled a gun on Malkmus. When Young ranted about how he’d survive a nuclear war by finding a way to cook dead animals that would eliminate the radioactivity from their bodies, Malkmus joked exasperatedly, “You’ve got to shoot them right between the eyes with a silver bullet.”

His last release with the group was the EP Watery, Domestic.

[edit] Solo Work

He would later release three albums under the name Gary Young’s Hospital.[1]

Last heard of him was that he was selling self-constructed dog kennels on his front lawn in a neighborhood called "Woodgate."

Although Gary may have a kennel district on his front lawn, this hasn't stopped him from an enterprising business, marketing recording studio products. In particular, the Universal Microphone Shockmount. [2]

Stylus magazine named Gary one of the fifty greatest drummers of all time. [3]

[edit] References

  • Jovanovic, Rob. "Perfect Sound Forever: The Story of Pavement." Justin Charles & Co., 2004.