Hubbry Logo
search
logo
1923359

Jack Endino

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Key Information

Jack Endino (born Michael M. Giacondino; 1964) is an American producer and musician based in Seattle, Washington. Long associated with Seattle label Sub Pop and the grunge movement, Endino worked on seminal albums from bands including Mudhoney, Soundgarden and Nirvana.[1] He was also the guitarist for Seattle band Skin Yard, which was active between 1985 and 1992. He played guitar in Sky Cries Mary on three albums, from 2018-2024.

Early career

[edit]

In 1985, Endino and Daniel House started the grunge band Skin Yard. Though originally a drummer, Endino played guitar and Matt Cameron played drums until he left for Soundgarden. In 1986, Skin Yard contributed two songs to C/Z Records' grunge compilation Deep Six. In July 1986, Endino left his basement recording studio to found Reciprocal Recording with Chris Hanzsek, the Deep Six sound engineer, where he used his self-taught recording skills to produce, engineer, and mix Skin Yard's 1987 debut album Skin Yard.[2]

His skill and low fees meant that he was soon an engineer of choice for up-and-coming Seattle grunge bands, and in 1988, he recorded Nirvana's debut album Bleach in 30 hours for $606.17, using a reel-to-reel 8-track machine.[3] The album did well in the underground, and after the success of 1991's Nevermind it went platinum.

He recorded Bruce Dickinson's Skunkworks.[4] He appeared in the 1996 grunge documentary Hype!, where he's referred to as "the godfather of grunge."[3] Endino was also interviewed at length for the 2009 book, Grunge is Dead: The Oral History of Seattle Rock Music.[5]

He recorded Death Is This Communion by High On Fire, released in 2007.

In 2009, Jack recorded the Flipper studio album Love, and the live album Fight (both with Krist Novoselic on bass).

Endino continues to work as a freelance producer and engineer, having worked on hundreds of records as of late 2025.

Recording and production work

[edit]

Because of the success of albums like Soundgarden's Screaming Life and Nirvana's Bleach in the mainstream, as well as recording Mudhoney, Screaming Trees, The Sonics, and L7, his raw, unpolished sound is still seen as a defining characteristic of grunge.[6]

Jack won a Latin Grammy with Barrett Martin for in 2017 for co-producing and mixing Nando Reis's album Jardim-Pomar.[7]

The album was released in late 2016. The 18th Latin Grammy Awards ceremony recognized it in the Best Portuguese Language Album category.[8]

As an artist

[edit]

Endino released his first solo album, Angle of Attack, in 1989. Skin Yard disbanded in 1992, and he released a second solo album, Endino's Earthworm, in 1993. In October 2005, he released his third solo album, Permanent Fatal Error, and his fourth, "Set Myself On Fire" (Capacitor Records) in 2021.[9]

He was second guitarist in the band Kandi Coded, which also features Volcom snowboarding pro Jamie Lynn. He played bass in Seattle band Slippage.[10] In March 2013, Fin Records[11] released Endino's EP Rumble, featuring a cover of the April 1958 single "Rumble" by Link Wray & His Ray Men. Since 2015, Endino has played lead guitar in Seattle rock band MKB ULTRA, and also with the improv-psych trio Beyond Captain Orca.[12]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jack Endino (born 1964) is an American record producer, recording and mastering engineer, mixer, and musician based in Seattle, Washington, best known for his foundational contributions to the grunge music scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s.[1] Born in Southbury, Connecticut, Endino moved to Seattle in the early 1970s; he graduated from the University of Washington in 1980 with a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering and initially worked at the Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, Washington, before returning to Seattle in 1984 to pursue music full-time.[1][2] Self-taught in recording techniques starting with cassette decks and a 4-track machine, Endino co-founded Reciprocal Recording studio in 1986 with Chris Hanzsek, where he engineered early Sub Pop label releases that helped define the raw, heavy sound of Seattle rock.[3][4] Endino's production and engineering credits include over 700 albums for artists from 14 countries across four continents, with landmark works such as Nirvana's debut album Bleach (1989), which he produced, engineered, and mixed for $600 in just 30 hours; Soundgarden's Screaming Life EP (1987); and Mudhoney's self-titled debut (1989).[1][5][3] He also contributed to compilations like Deep Six (1986), featuring multiple Seattle bands, and later worked on reissues and bonus tracks for albums by Green River, TAD, and others, solidifying his influence on the grunge aesthetic.[3] Beyond production, Endino performed as a guitarist in the band Skin Yard from 1985 to 1992, contributing to five albums on SST Records' Cruz label, and has released solo works including Permanent Fatal Error (2006) and Set Myself On Fire (2021).[1][5] Continuing his career into the present, Endino operates out of Soundhouse Recording studio, where he mixes and masters projects, and remains active in bands like Down With People (as of 2025).[1] His international scope includes two gold records from Warner Brazil and a 2018 Latin Grammy Award for producing Nando Reis's album Por Onde Andamos, highlighting his versatility across rock, punk, metal, pop, and Latin genres.[4][5]

Early life

Childhood and family background

Jack Endino was born Michael M. Giacondino in 1964 in Southbury, Connecticut, and moved to the Seattle area with his family as a teenager in the early 1970s, where he spent his formative years immersed in the Pacific Northwest's cultural landscape.[6] Details about Endino's family background remain limited in public accounts, with sparse information available on his parents or any siblings.[2] During grade school, Endino drew influences from indie rock, Kiss, and Black Sabbath, which sparked his passion for the guitar and recording.[2] As an unhappy teenager, he turned to popular music as a source of sanity, becoming a fanatical listener who devoted all his spare cash to buying records and analyzing their production on headphones.[7] Music offered an essential escape and shaped his budding interest in sound engineering.[7] Endino's mother provided a personal glimpse into his early artistic leanings, commenting after hearing his 1989 solo debut Angle of Attack that he had "such a nice voice" and questioning why he was "always yelling."[7] This familial context and proximity to Seattle's burgeoning music scene positioned him for further musical exploration in his youth.

Initial musical education and influences

Endino began learning guitar during his adolescence, developing his skills through self-directed practice rather than structured instruction. This hands-on approach extended to his overall musical development, where he explored instruments like drums and bass alongside recording them immediately upon first use.[8] In the early 1980s, following his graduation with a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Washington in 1980, Endino supplemented his technical foundation with self-taught audio engineering knowledge, applying principles from his electronics background to rudimentary recording setups. Without formal music training, he immersed himself in the vibrant Seattle scene, drawing key influences from punk and hardcore acts such as Black Flag and The Stooges, whose raw energy and DIY ethos resonated deeply. Local Seattle bands and post-punk groups like Joy Division, Gang of Four, and Wire further shaped his aesthetic, emphasizing volume, enthusiasm, and innovation over polished technique.[9][10][1][11] Endino's fascination with production emerged through early experiments with home recording equipment, including cassette decks for track bouncing and a Tascam 3340S four-track reel-to-reel machine acquired around 1983–1984. These setups, often in isolated spaces like a mobile home or cabin, allowed him to layer sounds and capture multi-instrument performances solo, generating significant tape hiss but igniting his preference for engineering over live performance. This period marked a shift toward viewing recording as an integral creative process, influenced by the lo-fi techniques of punk tapes circulating in Seattle's underground community.[3][4][8]

Career beginnings

Formation of Skin Yard

Skin Yard was formed in January 1985 in Seattle by bassist Daniel House and guitarist Jack Endino, marking Endino's entry into the local music scene as a performer.[12] The band quickly expanded with the addition of drummer Matt Cameron and vocalist Ben McMillan in April 1985, solidifying its core lineup for the initial phase.[12] This formation occurred amid Seattle's burgeoning underground punk and hardcore environment, where Endino contributed to the band's raw, aggressive sound through his guitar work and emerging production instincts honed from earlier self-taught recording experiments. The band's lineup saw early evolution as Cameron departed in June 1986 to join Soundgarden, leading to temporary drummers like Steve Wied and Greg Gilmore for brief stints before Jason Finn joined in the fall of 1986.[12] Skin Yard's debut self-titled album, recorded between 1985 and 1986 on an Akai 12-track machine, was released in January 1987 by C/Z Records, a label co-founded by House; the LP captured the band's heavy, sludge-influenced punk style and served as Endino's first major engineering project alongside his guitar duties.[13] Approximately 1,400 copies were pressed on translucent "skin-tone" vinyl, reflecting the DIY ethos of the era.[13] Skin Yard made its live debut in June 1985, opening for the Portland punk band U-Men, and quickly became a fixture in Seattle's underground venues, fostering connections within the pre-grunge punk community that included acts like Green River and the Melvins.[12] The band's appearance on the seminal 1986 Deep Six compilation further embedded it in this network, helping to define the region's emerging sound.[14] Endino played a key role in songwriting, often co-authoring tracks with House and McMillan, and delivered intense live performances that showcased his technical guitar skills and commitment to the scene's unpolished energy.[12]

Founding Reciprocal Recording

In 1986, Jack Endino co-founded Reciprocal Recording with engineer Chris Hanzsek, reopening the studio in Seattle's Ballard neighborhood at the former site of Triangle Studios, a small industrial building at 4230 Leary Way NW.[3][15] This partnership marked Endino's transition from his earlier basement recording setup to a dedicated professional space, building on connections formed while Hanzsek engineered Skin Yard's contributions to the Deep Six compilation.[3] The initial setup relied on basic analog equipment, including Endino's Tascam 3340-S 4-track reel-to-reel tape machine, a six-channel Tapco mixer, a limited selection of microphones, and amplifiers, supplemented by Hanzsek's additional gear to enable multitrack recording.[3][15] Among the studio's first clients were local Seattle bands, notably Green River, whose Dry as a Bone EP was recorded there in July 1986 under Endino's production and engineering.[16] The operation faced significant financial challenges from the outset, having inherited struggles from the original Reciprocal's 1985 closure due to landlord disputes, and Endino often funded sessions out-of-pocket using savings from his prior job at a naval shipyard to keep the doors open amid irregular income from underground acts.[17][15] This DIY ethos defined the studio's early days, with Endino and Hanzsek embracing a hands-on, resourceful approach that prioritized accessibility over commercial polish, reflecting the bootstrapped spirit of Seattle's burgeoning independent music community.[3][17] Reciprocal Recording played a pivotal role in democratizing access to professional recording for underground bands, offering rates as low as $20 to $30 per hour—far below industry standards—which allowed resource-strapped groups to capture their raw, unrefined sound without prohibitive costs.[18][19] This affordability fostered the gritty aesthetic of early Seattle rock, enabling acts to produce demos and EPs that captured the scene's energetic, lo-fi intensity and helped propel its transition from local gigs to wider recognition.[17][3]

Production work

Grunge era recordings

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Jack Endino emerged as a central figure in shaping the raw, distorted sound of Seattle's grunge scene through his production work at Reciprocal Recording. Operating on a modest 8-track setup, Endino captured the visceral energy of emerging bands associated with Sub Pop Records, emphasizing live-room tracking and heavy guitar distortion to preserve the immediacy of performances. His approach prioritized minimal overdubs and limited effects, allowing the natural aggression and imperfections of the music to dominate, which became synonymous with the genre's unpolished aesthetic.[8] One of Endino's most influential projects was Nirvana's debut album Bleach (1989), recorded over three sessions in December 1988 and January 1989 for a total of 30 hours at a cost of $606.17. The album, featuring tracks like "Blew" and "About a Girl," was tracked quickly to maintain the band's punk-infused intensity, with Endino using basic microphones such as Shure SM57s on guitars and SM58s on vocals to achieve a gritty, lo-fi tone. Lacking upfront funds, the band relied on contributions from guitarist Jason Everman to cover the bill, and Endino's session enabled Sub Pop to release Bleach in June 1989, marking a cornerstone of the label's roster and helping propel Nirvana into the spotlight.[20] Endino's productions extended to other foundational grunge acts, including Mudhoney's debut EP Superfuzz Bigmuff (1988), Soundgarden's "Fopp" on the Sub Pop 200 compilation (1988), Tad's God's Balls (1989), and Green River's EP Dry as a Bone (1987) and album Rehab Doll (1988). For Mudhoney, he employed live tracking with amplified distortion to amplify the band's sloppy, fuzz-laden riffs, recording the EP in just a few days to retain its chaotic energy. Similarly, Tad's debut captured punishing noise-rock with thick bass tones and minimal post-production, while Green River's sessions laid early groundwork for the sludgy guitar walls that defined proto-grunge. Soundgarden's "Fopp," a cover recorded for the compilation, showcased Endino's ability to blend heavy riffs with room ambience for a cavernous feel. These efforts, conducted over numerous sessions in the period, solidified Endino's role as Sub Pop's de facto house producer, helping curate and develop the label's roster of raw, high-impact releases that fueled the grunge explosion.[5][21][22][4]

Post-grunge and international projects

Following the peak of the grunge era, Jack Endino expanded his production scope to encompass heavy metal and punk acts, applying refined techniques that echoed his earlier raw, energetic approach while incorporating digital workflows. He produced High on Fire's fourth studio album, Death Is This Communion, released in 2007, delivering a cleaner yet powerful sound that highlighted the band's stoner metal intensity. Similarly, Endino handled production and engineering for Bruce Dickinson's 1996 solo album Skunkworks, blending hard rock elements with alternative influences to create a dynamic, guitar-driven record. In 2009, he co-produced Flipper's Love, capturing the punk band's chaotic energy in a studio setting that marked one of their most structured releases. These projects demonstrated Endino's adaptation to digital recording tools, such as Pro Tools for editing and mixing, while preserving the organic warmth associated with his analog roots through careful gear selection and performance-focused sessions. Endino's work increasingly took an international dimension, reflecting his growing collaborations beyond the Seattle scene. He co-produced Brazilian artist Nando Reis's album Jardim-Pomar in 2017 alongside Barrett Martin, earning a Latin Grammy Award for Best Portuguese Language Rock or Alternative Album. By 2025, Endino had contributed to over 700 records for artists from more than 14 countries across four continents, including sessions in locations like Brazil and Chile that broadened his stylistic range into Latin rock and global alternative genres. In his later career, Endino shifted emphasis toward mastering services, particularly for punk revival and metal projects, where he refined sonic clarity and punch without over-polishing the raw edge. For instance, he remastered early Tad albums, enhancing their punk-metal hybrid vigor for reissues. Amid the challenges of the 2020s, Endino adapted to remote mixing practices, allowing bands to record locally and send files for his final stereo mixdowns, a method that maintained efficiency and his signature intensity across diverse acts. In 2025, Endino remastered reissues of The Gits' albums for Sub Pop, including Enter: The Conquering Chicken and Frenching the Bully, and mastered projects like Blue Elephant and the Seven Snakes' Heavy Shredding Zoo.[23][24]

Artistic career

Contributions to bands

Jack Endino's most prominent band contribution was as the lead guitarist for Skin Yard, a pioneering Seattle grunge band he co-founded in 1985 with bassist Daniel House and vocalist Ben McMillan, remaining active until the group's disbandment in 1992.[25] During this period, Endino contributed guitar work and songwriting to five full-length albums and several EPs, including the 1988 release Hallowed Ground on Cruz Records, which featured tracks like "Stranger" and "Needle Tree" showcasing the band's raw punk-metal fusion.[26] Skin Yard performed extensively in the Pacific Northwest, opening for acts like Nirvana and supporting the early grunge scene through live shows at venues such as the Capitol Theater.[27] In 2024, Endino participated in promotional activities for the band's retrospective box set and 7-inch singles collection on C/Z Records, including signings and interviews alongside House, though no full band reunion occurred.[28] Beyond Skin Yard, Endino served as a guitarist for Sky Cries Mary starting in 2018, sharing duties with Kevin Whitworth in the reformed lineup alongside vocalist Rodrick Wolgamott and bassist Curt Eckman.[25] He contributed guitar to three albums in this psych-rock outfit, including Secrets of a Red Planet (2020),[29] Wandering in the Vastness (2021),[30] and Everything Goes Somewhere (2023),[31] all released via Trail Records, where his playing added layered, atmospheric textures to the band's progressive sound. Endino also joined the band for live performances, such as their 2019 set at Seattle Hempfest, emphasizing improvisational elements in their alt-rock style.[32] In the mid-2000s, Endino explored punk and alternative rock as lead guitarist and backing vocalist for Kandi Coded from 2006 to 2010, contributing to the albums Time Wasted Is Not Wasted Time (2007, Volcom Entertainment) with guitar on four tracks and Fell for the Gift (2010, Volcom), where he co-wrote several songs and provided lead vocals on two.[25] The band toured the West Coast, including a stint with Turbonegro, blending punk energy with melodic hooks. Similarly, during 2006–2009, Endino played drums initially and later bass in the power trio Slippage, contributing to their sole album Tectonica (2008), which featured his rhythmic drive in the group's noisy alt-rock explorations.[25] Endino continued performing in the 2010s and beyond with MKB Ultra, a Seattle-based five-piece formed in 2016, where he serves as lead guitarist alongside vocalist Mia Katherine Boyle and drummer Lisa Mansfield.[25] The band's self-titled debut album (2017, Bandcamp) highlights Endino's guitar riffs in their punk-infused alternative sound, with ongoing live shows in the region. From the early 2010s, Endino was a core member of the improvisational psych trio Beyond Captain Orca! with 5-Track and Patrick Lenon, recording multitrack live performances for release on Bandcamp, emphasizing free-form alt-rock jamming without traditional song structures.[25] By September 2025, the group had effectively retired due to members' geographic separation, though Endino planned to complete mixes for several archived shows.[33]

Solo recordings and releases

Jack Endino's solo recordings represent his multifaceted role as a singer-songwriter, guitarist, and multi-instrumentalist, distinct from his extensive production and band contributions. Drawing briefly from his experiences in Seattle's grunge scene, Endino's independent work channels raw energy into personal expression, often self-produced at his Reciprocal Recording studio. By 2025, he has released four full-length solo albums, emphasizing experimental rock infused with grunge and punk influences, characterized by guitar-driven compositions and introspective lyrics exploring themes of self-realization, societal pressures, and existential struggle.[34][35] His debut album, Angle of Attack, was self-released in 1989 on vinyl through Bobok Ltd (distributed by Toxic Shock), with a CD version following in 1990. Recorded between 1982 and 1987 on four- and eight-track machines at home and Reciprocal Recording, the album showcases Endino handling drums, bass, guitar, vocals, and percussion, blending grunge, prog-punk, and ambient elements with "guitar heroism" central to the Seattle Sound. Tracks like "Salvation" and "Big Seth" delve into personal salvation and self-realization amid societal expectations, marking an experimental foundation for his solo output with limited initial physical distribution but later remastered digital reissues in 2004 and online availability via Bandcamp.[35][34] Following the disbandment of Skin Yard, Endino issued his second solo effort, Endino's Earthworm, in 1993 (initially dated to 1992 on some pressings). Engineered by Endino at Reciprocal and Studio D, the album mixes hard rock, progressive, psychedelic, and alternative styles, transitioning from cohesive group-like tracks to more experimental segments reminiscent of his debut. It highlights his punk and noise-infused songwriting, with guitar riffs driving explorations of personal and abstract themes, though it received limited promotion and distribution at the time, gaining wider digital access in later remixes and restorations.[36][37][38] Endino's third album, Permanent Fatal Error, emerged in 2005 on Wondertaker Records, marking his return after a 12-year hiatus and featuring 16 tracks recorded from 1993 to 2005. Self-produced and mastered at Hanzsek Audio, it revives "crusty, hard-edged" loud rock 'n' roll with screeching guitars, gritty vocals, and no filler, fusing psychedelic grunge, garage punk, and modern hard rock. Introspective lyrics address disillusionment, freedom, and subtle political sentiments in songs like "Strangelove," supported by collaborators on drums and bass but led by Endino's songwriting; initially available on CD with limited runs, it transitioned to digital platforms like Bandcamp for broader reach.[39][40][41] The most recent entry, Set Myself on Fire, was released on December 10, 2021, via Capacitor Records as Endino's fourth solo album, comprising 15 tracks that reflect on mortality, betrayal, resilience, and hope. Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Endino across Soundhouse, Basement Sessions, Hanzsek Audio, and Brainstorm, the work embodies an "edgy, wry, quicksilver" alternative rock style with unconventional rhythms nodding to his drumming roots, emphasizing guitar layers and personal narratives in pieces like "Shadow World" and the title track. Physical vinyl editions were produced alongside digital downloads, expanding from earlier limited distributions to full online accessibility, with no further solo releases announced as of 2025.[42][43][44]

Legacy and recent activities

Influence on Seattle music scene

Jack Endino earned the nickname "godfather of grunge" in the 1996 documentary Hype!, reflecting his pivotal role in engineering and producing the raw, unpolished aesthetic that defined the genre's early years.[45][10] Through his studio, Reciprocal Recording, founded in 1986, Endino provided an affordable space for emerging Seattle bands, charging low rates that aligned with the scene's DIY principles and enabled labels like Sub Pop to release debut albums without major financial barriers.[3][17] This accessibility directly supported acts such as Nirvana, whose 1989 album Bleach was recorded there for just $600, and early demos for what would become Pearl Jam, helping propel these bands from local underground venues to global prominence during the grunge explosion of the early 1990s.[3][17] Endino's technical approach, often called the "Endino sound," emphasized capturing the live energy of performances with minimal overdubs, heavy distortion on guitars, and an organic feel that rejected polished production techniques like click tracks in favor of the band's natural rhythm.[10] This style not only shaped the sonic identity of grunge—characterized by its gritty, authentic intensity—but also influenced subsequent engineers and producers in Seattle by demonstrating how to achieve high-impact recordings on limited budgets and equipment.[3][10] As a core member of the band Skin Yard from 1985, Endino mentored a generation of musicians and technicians in the 1980s and 1990s by hosting informal sessions at Reciprocal and sharing knowledge on songwriting, riff development, and studio workflows, fostering a collaborative environment that reinforced Seattle's punk-infused DIY ethos.[10] His contributions extended the local scene's self-sufficient community model, where bands shared resources and stages, ultimately facilitating the export of grunge's raw vitality to international audiences through Sub Pop's catalog.[46][17]

Awards, recent work, and ongoing contributions

In 2017, Endino co-produced and mixed the album Jardim-Pomar by Brazilian artist Nando Reis alongside drummer Barrett Martin, which won the Latin Grammy Award for Best Portuguese Language Rock or Alternative Album.[47][48] The album's success highlighted Endino's engineering prowess in rock contexts, with additional recognition in categories related to Brazilian rock production.[49] Endino's recent production efforts include engineering, recording, mixing, and mastering Goya's doom metal album In the Dawn of November, completed in Seattle during fall 2024 and released in June 2025.[50][51] In 2024, he contributed new mixes to Skin Yard's limited-edition box set Skin Yard Select, a collection of 14 tracks curated with co-founder Daniel House, and participated in a signing event for the release at Easy Street Records in Seattle.[52][53] As of late 2025, Endino operates as a freelance producer and engineer, having worked on over 700 records across genres like metal and punk, often focusing on remote mastering services from his Soundhouse studio.[1][54] He maintains an active online presence by updating his website discography with new projects, such as additions noted in September 2025.[33] Endino continues to engage with his grunge-era legacy through interviews, including a December 2024 discussion with Guitar.com reflecting on early Nirvana sessions and the Seattle scene's enduring influence, showing no plans for retirement amid ongoing collaborations.[55]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.