There is a portal inside of a garage in Van Nuys, California, that leads to another world. A world of crushing heaviness, monstrous sounds, and violently compelling breakdowns. Despite its modest size, The Pit Studio has drawn decibel disciples from across Southern California and beyond in search of the ultimate in slam-ready sonics. Inside the blood red live room, a dizzying selection of modded out Marshall amps and punishing Mesa Boogie heads stand at attention in custom wooden carpentry. In the corner sits a well-loved, carefully mic’d SJC drum kit, outfitted with sinister splash cymbals. Lording over The Pit from his control room throne, Taylor Young has spent over a decade creating a space where heavy hardcore, death metal, and ‘90s “hard alternative” melt into a mutant stew of impossibly hard music. Perhaps best known as the former drummer for grindcore darlings NAILS, Taylor and his brother, Colin, have also led their own band, Twitching Tongues, through four albums of aggressively melodic and romantic metalcore. In a sure sign of global moshification, the recent Pit-produced God’s Hate album (self-titled) snuck up to #13 on the Billboard Hard Music chart, with steady airplay on SiriusXM Radio’s Liquid Metal show. Plus, he’s been producing records for iconic labels like Southern Lord, Metal Blade, and Revelation Records. Step now with me into The Pit, and if you see
anyone going down… help them up!
Feature Image: Taylor and Duke (818) Style Kyla Barsell
What sparked your interest in recording when you were growing up?
My dad, Dan Young, is a tech manager for television here in L.A. He gets hired by live events, like the Academy Awards, and has a bunch of Emmys for his tech work. He shows up at the live event and makes sure everything is working properly, from an audio standpoint. When I first started it was because of his gear laying around. He didn’t use it to make much music, but he liked being surrounded by it and making doodles here and there. He later built out Tower Station Studio in Lexington, Kentucky, with his best friend, Jeff Myers, who’s worked with Melissa Etheridge. When our family moved to California we first stayed at Jeff’s house and dad built a studio there, and then we built this studio here. Wherever he goes, tech and studios follow. It was bound to happen.
Your early recordings were done on what I’ve heard you describe as a “shitty 8-track.”
Yes, it was a Roland digital 8-track, but it did the job. When I moved here from Connecticut, I didn’t have friends, so I was making music alone and getting into that. I would mix down on a little Mackie board and then submix as I was tracking. Learning by doing everything wrong first. This was around 2004.
No computer or [Digidesign] Mbox?
I didn’t even have that. My first interface was a MOTU 828 that I got around 2006. I used that for a few years at people’s practice spaces and ended up getting an RME Fireface around 2009.
That was also the year you recorded with Kurt Ballou [Tape Op #76] at God City when you were drumming for NAILS. Did that make an impact on you as a budding heavy music producer?
Before going to God City, I had already been recording a...