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Tim Yeung
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Key Information
Tim Yeung (born November 27, 1978) is an American extreme metal drummer. He has played with bands such as Hate Eternal, All That Remains, As I Lay Dying and Vital Remains.
Biography
[edit]Yeung attended Hochstein School of Music & Dance in Rochester, New York and graduated in 1995. He was first introduced to the death metal genre in the 1980s. His breakout performance was in 1999 on Hate Eternal's debut album Conquering the Throne, after which he became a big name in the death metal scene. Although Yeung left Hate Eternal after the release of Conquering the Throne, he started lending his talents as a live session drummer, such as with American metalcore band All That Remains, death metal bands Vital Remains and Nile, and as a studio drummer on ...And Time Begins by Decrepit Birth.
Yeung was the drummer and co-founder of the death metal/metalcore band Divine Heresy and can be heard on their debut album, Bleed the Fifth and their second studio album, Bringer of Plagues. He was also the drummer of World Under Blood, CKY frontman Deron Miller's death metal side project. He replaced Pete Sandoval in Morbid Angel for their 2011 album Illud Divinum Insanus due to Sandoval's back surgery[1] and was their official drummer until June 2015.
In a Metal Addicts interview Yeung commented on his reasons for leaving Morbid Angel: “I’ve been waiting to break the news for a while about this. Now seems like the proper time to do so. As some of you know, there have been some lineup changes with Morbid Angel. Unfortunately, due to financial differences, I will not be continuing with them. It has been a great five years being involved with Morbid Angel. I’ve met a ton of great people all over the world, played some amazing shows, and have a ton of great memories as well as stories. I wish Trey (Azagthoth) and Morbid Angel all the best. As for myself, I’m always up for the next opportunity life throws my way.”[2]
In 2006, Yeung hit 872 bass drum hits in one minute at a World's Fastest Drummer competition, which earned him the Fastest Feet Title for that event, though not the world record, which clocked in at 1034 hits in one minute, held by Canadian drummer Mike Mallais.[3] By Yeung's standards, 872 hits in a minute is comparatively low, translating to one minute of 16th notes at 218 BPM, which is considerably slower than the speeds he has displayed in his group work, which he has been said to get to speeds of around just over 247 BPM. Yeung has stated in interviews that he could have played much faster if he had been using his own setup.
On October 8, 2025, As I Lay Dying announced that Yeung had joined the band.[4][5]
Equipment
[edit]Yeung uses and endorses ddrum drums,[6] Sabian cymbals,[7] Axis pedals[8] and Vater drumsticks
- Drums – ddrum Dominion Maple, Black Gloss finish
- 22×20 Bass Drum (×2)
- 10×7 Tom
- 12×8 Tom
- 13×9 Tom
- 14×13 Tom
- 16×14 Floor Tom
- 14×6.5 Tim Yeung Signature Detonator Snare Drum
- Cymbals – Sabian
- 14" AAX Metal Hi-Hats
- 14" AA Mini Chinese
- 18" B8 Pro Chinese
- 18" AAX Stage Crash
- 8" AAX Splash
- 18" AAX Studio Crash
- 19" AAX X-Treme Chinese
- 22" HH Power Bell Ride
- 12" AA Mini Hat stacked on a 14" AAX Mini Chinese
- 20" APX Crash
- Hardware
- Axis Longboards A Classic Black Pedals (×2)
- Other
- [Vater] XD-5B Nylon Tip Drumsticks
References
[edit]- ^ "Drummer TIM YEUNG Talks About New MORBID ANGEL Album". Archived from the original on September 13, 2012.
- ^ D-Rock (June 16, 2015). "Breaking: Morbid Angel Drummer Tim Yeung Quits". metaladdicts.com/. Retrieved August 8, 2024.
- ^ "WFD Worlds Fastest Drummer Rankings". Extremesportdrumming.com. April 23, 2006. Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ^ "AS I LAY DYING Announces New Lineup, Shares Powerful Single 'Echoes'". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. October 8, 2025. Archived from the original on October 8, 2025. Retrieved October 9, 2025.
- ^ Schaffner, Lauryn (October 8, 2025). "As I Lay Dying's 2025 Lineup Revealed - See the 4 New Members". Loudwire. Archived from the original on October 9, 2025. Retrieved October 9, 2025.
- ^ "ddrum artist roster". ddrum. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
- ^ "Sabian profile". Sabian. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
- ^ "Axis Percussion profile". Axis Percussion. Archived from the original on August 31, 2016. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
- ^ "Gear". timyeung.com. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
- ^ "Tim Yeung: Blast Off!". Drum!. October 24, 2011. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Tim Yeung at Wikimedia Commons
Tim Yeung
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Upbringing and family influences
Tim Yeung was born on November 27, 1978, in Buffalo, New York. He grew up in nearby Rochester, New York, reflecting the regional proximity in western New York State.[1] His family played a pivotal role in nurturing his creative inclinations from a young age. Yeung's mother was a songwriter, and his father was an artist, both providing inspiration for his early artistic explorations and fostering an environment rich in musical and visual creativity.[1] At the age of 11 in 1990, Yeung began playing drums, drawn initially by a broad spectrum of musical influences spanning genres such as fusion, metal, rock, and jazz—including drummers like Dave Weckl, Gene Hoglan, Tommy Lee, and Vinnie Colaiuta—which encouraged him to develop the basics through self-taught practice following introductory lessons.[1]Formal musical training
Tim Yeung commenced his formal musical training at the Hochstein School of Music & Dance in Rochester, New York, in 1995, where he concentrated on jazz and Latin drumming styles under the guidance of instructor Steve Curry.[8][9] This structured program during his high school years emphasized technical fundamentals, including stick control, finger dexterity, and wrist mechanics, which Curry systematically refined to build a solid rhythmic foundation.[9] Yeung graduated from the Hochstein School in 1995, having acquired skills in dynamics, phrasing, and ensemble playing that provided a versatile base contrasting the relentless velocity and intensity of his subsequent extreme metal pursuits.[1] These lessons equipped him with principles of musicality and control that informed his later adaptations to blast beats and double bass patterns.[9] To apply his training, Yeung participated in early local performances around Rochester, joining high school bands for underage gigs at small venues, where he contributed to songwriting and demo recordings that honed his improvisational and collaborative abilities.[9] Following his graduation, he cultivated self-directed practice routines centered on speed and endurance, typically dedicating at least an hour daily to coordinated hand-and-foot warm-ups for five minutes, extended playing sessions, and audio self-assessments to sharpen bass drum precision and stamina.[9]Professional career
Early career and Hate Eternal (1997–2001)
In 1997, Tim Yeung co-founded the death metal band Hate Eternal in Tampa, Florida, alongside guitarist and vocalist Erik Rutan and bassist and co-vocalist Jared Anderson, establishing the group's core lineup as a key member on drums.[10][11] The band quickly developed a reputation for their aggressive, technical approach to death metal, with Yeung's precise and rapid drumming providing a foundational intensity to their sound from the outset. Yeung's primary contribution came with Hate Eternal's debut album, Conquering the Throne, where he handled all drumming duties during recording sessions at Greenhouse FX Studios in Tampa from February to May 1999.[12] Released on October 4, 1999, via Earache Records' Wicked World imprint, the album featured guest guitarist Doug Cerrito and showcased Yeung's proficiency in blast beats, particularly on tracks like "Dogma Condemned" and "Nailed to Obscurity," which highlighted his ability to maintain relentless speed and groove amid the band's complex riffs.[11][13] Following the release, Hate Eternal embarked on tours across North America and Europe in late 1999 and early 2000 to promote the album, with Yeung performing live and solidifying the band's early momentum in the underground death metal scene.[10] Yeung's tenure with Hate Eternal concluded in 2000 when he departed the band, marking the end of his initial involvement; he was replaced by drummer Derek Roddy, who handled subsequent touring and recording duties.[10] This shift allowed Yeung to pursue other opportunities while Hate Eternal continued to evolve their signature style.2000s collaborations (2002–2010)
Following his tenure with Hate Eternal, Tim Yeung established himself as a prolific session drummer in the extreme metal scene during the early 2000s, leveraging his technical prowess to contribute to a range of brutal and technical projects.[1] In 2002, Yeung provided drums for Agiel's debut album Dark Pantheons Again Will Reign, where his precise, high-speed blasts and intricate fills added intensity to the band's technical death metal sound with subtle metalcore breakdowns.[14] That same year, he joined Aurora Borealis as their drummer, appearing on Time, Unveiled, an album blending black and death metal with atmospheric elements and relentless aggression.[15] Yeung continued with the band through 2006. Yeung's session work extended to Decrepit Birth's 2003 debut ...and Time Begins, where he delivered ferocious, progressive death metal rhythms that complemented the band's complex guitar work during a period when the group operated primarily as a studio project. By 2005, he drummed on The Tenth Circle's Of War and Reflection, infusing the hardcore-tinged metal album with explosive energy and rapid tempos that highlighted the band's raw, aggressive style.[16] In 2006, Yeung co-founded World Under Blood alongside CKY's Deron Miller, contributing drums to the project's initial sessions and shaping its melodic death metal direction with groove-oriented blasts and thrash influences that persisted through ongoing recordings.[17] That year also marked his involvement in guest appearances, including performances with Vital Remains during their brutal death metal tours, where his speed and endurance bolstered the band's live intensity from 2003 to 2007. He further supported Nile on select shows, adding his technical death metal expertise to their Egyptian-themed extremity, and joined All That Remains for a temporary North American tour, adapting his style to their metalcore framework amid lineup changes.[1][18] A pivotal collaboration came in 2005 when Yeung co-founded Divine Heresy with guitarist Dino Cazares, blending death metal ferocity with industrial metalcore grooves on their 2007 debut Bleed the Fifth, where his versatile drumming—featuring polyrhythmic patterns and double-bass assaults—drove tracks like "Failed Creation."[2] The band followed with Bringer of Plagues on July 28, 2009, Yeung's performances on which further fused groove metal breakdowns and technical death elements, solidifying the project's hybrid sound before his departure around 2011.[19]Morbid Angel and Divine Heresy (2011–2015)
In early 2011, Tim Yeung completed his commitments with Divine Heresy following the release of their second album, Bringer of Plagues, in July 2009, including supporting tours alongside acts like Fear Factory in 2010.[20][21] The band, which had already seen lineup changes such as the departure of bassist Joe Payne in January 2011, effectively dissolved around this time as Yeung shifted focus to other projects, marking the end of their active period.[22] Yeung's extensive experience from collaborations in the 2000s, including stints with Hate Eternal and Nile, positioned him as a prime candidate when Morbid Angel sought a temporary replacement for drummer Pete Sandoval, who was sidelined by back surgery.[9] In 2010, the band contacted Yeung, leading to jam sessions that served as an informal audition, after which he officially joined as their drummer in 2011.[9] He contributed drums to Morbid Angel's eighth studio album, Illud Divinum Insanus, recorded between June 2010 and March 2011 and released on June 7, 2011, via Season of Mist.[9][23] The album represented a notable shift for Morbid Angel toward an industrial-death metal sound, incorporating electronic elements and programmed beats alongside traditional death metal aggression, with Yeung adapting by translating synthetic noises into acoustic drum patterns on tracks like "Existo Vulgoré" and "Blades of Baal."[9][24] His precise blast beats and technical proficiency provided a solid foundation amid the experimental production, though the stylistic evolution drew mixed responses from fans accustomed to the band's earlier pure death metal output.[9][25] Following the album's release, Morbid Angel embarked on extensive touring with Yeung on drums, maintaining a stable lineup featuring vocalist/bassist David Vincent, guitarist Trey Azagthoth, and second guitarist Destructhor.[26] The band made their live debut with Yeung in 2011, including a headlining performance at the Scion Festival in Pomona, California.[27][28] Through 2012–2015, they conducted multiple North American headline tours, European runs, and festival appearances, such as the 2014 Summer Slaughter Tour, where Yeung's high-speed drumming energized sets blending classics like "World of Shit" with new material.[29][30] These outings solidified the band's presence on the extreme metal circuit during this era. Yeung's tenure with Morbid Angel concluded in June 2015 after five years, prompted by financial disputes with the band.[31][32] In a statement, he reflected on the period as rewarding, highlighting worldwide shows and memorable experiences, while expressing openness to future endeavors.[31][32] This departure capped a pivotal chapter in Yeung's career, bridging his groove-oriented industrial metal work with Divine Heresy to Morbid Angel's evolving death metal legacy.2016–present
Following his departure from Morbid Angel in June 2015, Yeung joined forces with former Morbid Angel vocalist and bassist David Vincent to form I Am Morbid, a tribute band dedicated to performing the group's classic material from albums such as Altars of Madness (1989), Blessed Are the Sick (1991), Covenant (1993), and Domination (1995).[33] The project was announced in December 2016, with Yeung handling drums alongside Vincent and guitarists Ira Black and Bill Hudson, and the band has since toured extensively, including international dates in Europe, South America, and North America, delivering faithful renditions of early Morbid Angel songs.[34] In the years following, Yeung maintained an active schedule through session work and live performances with various acts, including tracking drums for the death metal band Pessimist's 2021 album Keys to the Underworld, released via Season of Mist.[35] This period also saw him contributing to other extreme metal projects, leveraging his reputation for precise, high-speed drumming in studio and touring contexts. Yeung expanded his portfolio in 2023 by joining Semi-Rotted, the death metal band led by former Five Finger Death Punch drummer Jeremy Spencer, where he provided drums for the single "Bloodbath," featuring guest vocals from Cannibal Corpse's George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher.[36] The track, released in June 2023 via Chop Chop Records, showcased Yeung's aggressive blast beats and groove-oriented fills in an old-school death metal framework. He continued his involvement with the band on their debut full-length Barrage of Brutality, a 12-track album released on March 1, 2024 that blends thrash-influenced riffs with brutal breakdowns, earning praise for its energetic production and Yeung's dynamic percussion.[37] On October 8, 2025, Yeung was announced as the new permanent drummer for As I Lay Dying, joining frontman Tim Lambesis and a revamped lineup that includes guitarists Bill Hudson, Jack Daniels, and Don Vedda, as well as clean vocalist Chris Clancy.[3] The band marked his arrival with the release of the single "Echoes," a metalcore track emphasizing heavy breakdowns and melodic elements, accompanied by a music video that highlighted the group's renewed energy.[38] As I Lay Dying has scheduled upcoming tours to support the single and future material, positioning Yeung at the forefront of their post-hiatus resurgence. Throughout this era, Yeung has sustained visibility in the drumming community through ongoing endorsements with brands like Axis Percussion, for which he serves as a signature artist promoting their longboard pedals designed for extreme metal applications.[2] He has also participated in drum clinics and masterclasses, demonstrating techniques from his extensive catalog and engaging with fans and aspiring musicians at events and online platforms.Musical style and achievements
Drumming technique
Tim Yeung is renowned for his mastery of blast beats, double bass patterns, and high-speed fills, which form the core of his contributions to death metal drumming. He employs variations such as the one-foot blast and the bomb blast, where sixteenths are played on the kicks with the snare on eighths, drawing inspiration from drummers like Pete Sandoval of Morbid Angel.[9] These techniques enable relentless precision at tempos exceeding 240 bpm, as demonstrated in tracks like "Existo Vulgore" from Morbid Angel's Illud Divinum Insanus, where 32nd-note runs maintain consistency through upper-arm and shoulder motion.[9] Yeung's formal training at the Hochstein School of Music in Rochester, New York, in 1995, emphasized jazz and Latin drumming, which he integrates into his extreme metal style to create polyrhythmic complexity. Influences from fusion drummers like Dave Weckl and Sean Reinert of Death inform his approach, blending odd-time signatures and dense patterns, such as the 12/8 grooves in Morbid Angel's "Beauty Meets Beast."[8][9] This fusion results in layered rhythms that add depth beyond straightforward aggression, evident in his early work with Hate Eternal on Conquering the Throne.[9] His aggressive and precise delivery earned him the nickname "The Missile" during the 1999 recording sessions for Hate Eternal's debut album, reflecting his explosive impact in both live performances and studio environments.[9] Over his career, Yeung's technique has evolved from the technical precision of his Hate Eternal and Divine Heresy periods to incorporating experimental industrial elements during his time with Morbid Angel. On Illud Divinum Insanus, he adapted electronic noise into percussive beats, expanding his palette while retaining death metal ferocity.[9]Notable accomplishments
In 2006, Tim Yeung won the Fastest Feet category at the World's Fastest Drummer competition held at NAMM, achieving 872 bass drum hits in one minute, a feat equivalent to 218 beats per minute and showcasing his exceptional speed and endurance.[1][40][41] Yeung has been widely recognized in the extreme metal community for elevating blast beat standards through his precise and rapid execution, with drumming publications highlighting his influence on the genre's technical benchmarks. He was inducted into the Sick Drummer Magazine Hall of Fame for his contributions to the genre.[42][9][1] His percussion work on Hate Eternal's debut album Conquering the Throne (1999) received praise for its raw intensity and technical prowess, establishing it as a landmark in brutal death metal and earning acclaim for driving the album's relentless energy.[13][43] Similarly, Yeung's contributions to Morbid Angel's Illud Divinum Insanus (2011) were noted for their technical proficiency, providing a highlight amid the album's experimental shifts in death metal.[44][23] In October 2025, Yeung joined As I Lay Dying as their permanent drummer, marking a significant milestone in his career and contributing to the band's metalcore revival with the release of their single "Echoes."[45][3][46]Equipment and endorsements
Drum kit and cymbals
Tim Yeung has maintained a long-standing endorsement with ddrum, utilizing custom wood shell kits designed for extreme metal's demands, including the Dominion Maple series in black gloss finish.[9] His core drum setup typically comprises an 8-piece configuration: a 22" × 20" bass drum, rack toms in 10" × 7", 12" × 8", and 13" × 9" sizes, a 14" × 13" tom, a 16" × 14" floor tom, and two 14" × 6.5" Tim Yeung Signature Detonator snare drums.[9] The Detonator snare features a custom jet-black shell with ebony hardware, engineered for aggressive projection and controlled response in high-intensity playing.[47] Around 2007, Yeung employed a more compact ddrum Dominion Ash kit in translucent black, consisting of two 20" bass drums, 9" × 12" and 9" × 13" toms, a 14" × 16" floor tom, and a 5.5" × 14" snare.[48] Subsequent setups, including the reinforced Paladin maple series, reflect an evolution toward greater durability and speed, accommodating the rigors of blast beat execution in modern performances.[49] Yeung endorses Sabian cymbals, favoring a setup that emphasizes cutting attacks and sustain for metal contexts, including 14" AAX Metal hi-hats, an 18" AAX Stage crash, a 22" HH Power Bell ride, an 18" B8 Pro Chinese, and a 19" AAX X-Treme Chinese for explosive punctuation.[9][50] Additional effects cymbals, such as an 8" AAX splash and stacked 12" AA Mini hat atop a 14" AA Mini Chinese, enhance versatility in his layered arrangements.[9] These cymbals, often from the AAX and AA series, provide the bright, trashy tones essential for cutting through dense guitar mixes during live and recorded extreme metal.[9]Other gear
Tim Yeung employs Axis Longboard pedals, specifically the A Classic Black model, for double bass control in his extreme metal performances. These direct-drive pedals are customized for speed and responsiveness, with beaters positioned approximately 7 inches from the heads at medium to medium-low tension to maximize rebound and tonal quality. Yeung has used Axis pedals for over two decades, praising their precision design that enables harder hits and consistent speed during intense playing.[9][2][51] For drumsticks, Yeung endorses Vic Firth models, which provide the durability and grip needed for sustained endurance in high-speed, technical drumming.[5] Yeung relies on Reunion Blues cases for transporting his equipment, selected for their robust protection during extensive touring and air travel. These cases have safeguarded his gear across numerous international tours since at least 2015.[8] In terms of additional hardware, Yeung incorporates Remo drum heads, tuned specifically for recording sessions and live settings to achieve balanced attack and sustain in death metal contexts.[52] This peripheral gear has contributed to Yeung's technical feats, including his 2006 World's Fastest Drummer title for 872 bass drum hits in one minute using similar setups.[8]References
- https://www.[youtube](/page/YouTube).com/watch?v=jdft0XzZwLY
