Garrit (Gary) Young, the original drummer for Pavement, has died at the age of 70.
Gary played on the first Pavement album ‘Slanted and Enchanted’, released in 1992. It was his only album with the band. Gary was fired from Pavement in 1993 because of personal issues he had with the other members of the band. He rejoined for two shows in 2010.
After Pavement, Young formed Gary Young’s Hospital. They released three albums and had a song called ‘Plant Man’ in an episode of Beavis and Butthead. He also released a solo album ‘Malfunction’ in 2016.
The Gary Young documentary ‘Louder Than You Think’ screened at SXSW 2023.
Pavement paid tribute to Gary saying:
Garrit Allan Robertson Young put Pavement on the map. He recorded all of our records from the Slay Tracks 7” through to the Watery, Domestic EP. He did it all in his garage, a studio called Louder Than You Think. Stephen and Spiral knew him from the Stockton punk rock scene and got his phone number from the yellow pages. He made all of their early songs happen as tried to grasp their youthful mayhem and, make sense of it all. That, he did.
He was made to play drums in rock and roll bands. He came from the “Keith Moon school of drummers.” It’s an unofficial school. But, Gary graduated from it with honors. We’ve had the great pleasure of seeing insanely talented drummers. He drummed very hard from a different planet despite being born and raised in Mamaroneck, New York on the easiest birthdate ever to remember (5/3/53).
To us and all who knew him, he was a fearless fireball. His enthusiasm for playing live music was relentless and unrepentant.
He was the best storyteller we’ve known and a unique judge of character. The things he experienced before we knew him blew our minds.Gary loved tension. He wanted to make people excited and anxious. He accomplished both.
We embraced him and he taught us myriads of things that we never thought about. He was an educator. In ways, we were his apprentices.
Pavement has been an extremely fortunate endeavor from the start and, somehow, continues to be.
Without Gary, many people would not have noticed us. In all of the best ways, he was a freak show. He was magnetic. He was magical. He was dangerous. We could think of him as an uncle, an older brother that none of us had. But, he was a rare breed called Gary aka The Rotting Man. We loved his parents, Bob Young and Betty Quick. On many occasions, they looked after us.
We all loved him and it was life changing to have a staggering weapon to play music with.
Collectively, our hearts go out to Geri Bernstein, Gary’s wife, who was with him for nearly 50 years, and kept him going and staying as vibrant as possible past the age of 70.
Love you Gary. We’re sure you’re doing handstands off of roofs, biting high hat cymbals, fake drowning at the bottom of your pool and dodging rocks glasses and police-fired bullets aimed at your head.
Never fear.
The Plant Man lives on every time Pavement steps on a stage and will continue to do so.
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