Bill Lloyd - Every Word Means No Don Dixon & Jamie Hoover - Horizon Doug Powell -Waters Part Tommy Womack - Make Up With Me The Saving Graces - Talking To Myself Spike Priggen - Last Chance Town Marti Jones - Room With A View The Crowd Scene - Writing The Book Of Last Pages The Trolleyvox - Crows On A Phone Line Neilson Hubbard - Fell King Fly - Every Dog Has His Day King Kilowatt - Mr Fool Soap Star Joe - I Feel Funny Velvet - Bad Machinery Failed Energy Giants(Tim Lee) - Blue (Pipe)Line Paul Chastain - Flags For Everything Girls Say Yes - Too Bad Drop Quarters - Two Yous Jerry Chapman - In Little Ways Bobby Sutliff - Badger
Includes a sumptuous 24 page booklet with tributes from members of R.E.M. and other pop-rock luminaries.
With a resume that includes R.E.M., Love Tractor, Game Theory, Velvet Crush and Pavement, producer and North Carolina native Mitch Easter almost single-handedly helped engineer the college rock explosion of the 1980s, and was the guiding hand behind some of the finest pop-rock of the 1990s.
Working from his legendary Drive-In Studio in his parents' garage in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Easter cemented his place in pop lore, combining a deft ear with a music fan's passion, to craft some of the most timeless records of the early American underground.
But for most of the 1980s, Easter was also the driving force behind one of the decade's finest and most commercially under-appreciated combos. Over the course of one EP and three long-players, Let's Active charted a unique course through the pop landscape, effortlessly combining Merseybeat jangle with swirls of psychedelia and unflinching blasts of guitar rock.
Now on "Every Word", some of Easter's closest friends and collaborators pay tribute to his formidable songwriting prowess.
From The Windbreakers' Bobby Sutliff and Tim Lee to frequent studio partner Don Dixon and Velvet Crush frontman Paul Chastain, songwriters and performers from across the spectrum have gathered to honour Easter's songwriting chops.
"Mitch is an amazingly inventive songwriter, able to bring together the diverse elements of perfect pop, psychedelia and hard rock (as well as other genres), without forsaking thoughtful lyrical content," says Lee. "Like a lot of the writers of the eighties, he is vastly underrated because people tend to lump that crowd under the pathetic heading of 'jangle rock'. But to anyone who listens closely, there's a lot more to Mitch's music than can be covered in a two-word stereotype."
Sutliff puts it this way: "Mitch has a brilliant, non-linear approach to songwriting that can hardly be compared to anyone else", he says. "His lyrics are deep, yet concise, and his approach to chords and melody can be counted on to take unexpected twists and turns."
The project is the brainchild of singer/songwriter and Winston-Salem native Michael Slawter, a lifelong Let's Active fan. Slawter said he decided to take on the project because he wanted Easter to know what a profound influence he'd had on not only his own work, but on the work of others.
"Putting this tribute together became much more about honouring a great band," he says. "I got to witness many people - musicians, writers, music lovers, etc. reminisce about what bands like Let's Active meant to them, how life-changing music can be."
So, sit back and enjoy, and listen to a heartfelt thank you card from one generation to another: Every Word - a Tribute to Let's Active.
Mitch, and I can speak from direct experience...a gent, a wizard, a true star. A man of style, substance and charm. Wicked guitar player. Oh yea, also, some things he recorded changed my life (not an exaggeration). Ken Stringfellow
Mitch's contributions to rock music will hopefully be fully recognized at some point in the future, especially since his band Lets Active inspired countless young groups. Its appropriate that many of his old friends have taken part in this tribute. Peter Holsapple
Let's Active was a jangle pop band based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The principal songwriter and sole continuous member was Mitch Easter, who kept the band active through most of the 1980s. Although critically praised, Let's Active had limited commercial success and are mostly known because of Easter's connections with R.E.M. as the producer of their early albums.
Let's Active formed in 1981 and soon signed with I.R.S. Records. The original trio, comprised of Easter (vocals/guitar), Faye Hunter (bass), and Sara Romweber (drums), recorded the EP Afoot (1983) and the full-length Cypress (1984). Romweber quit the band during a UK tour in 1984, and Hunter and Easter (a couple) split up shortly thereafter. However, the band name was kept alive by Easter, who played as Let's Active with Hunter and members of The Windbreakers until a new permanent line-up could be established.
Download -Right Click/Save As- A Video Clip Of The MIGHTY Ledz Circa 1986 "Writing The Book Of Last Pages"On The Old Grey Whistle Test.
The band's second full-length album, Big Plans For Everybody (1986), was actually largely a solo outing by Easter, who played most of the instruments himself and handled the mixing and production. On board for a few tracks, however, were bassist/vocalist Hunter, drummers Eric Marshall and Rob Ladd, and multi-instrumentalist Angie Carlson, who would later become Mrs. Easter.
By the time of Let's Active's third and final album, Every Dog Has His Day (1988), the band's sound had evolved into harder-edged power pop. The album was produced by John Leckie and Easter, and credited a line-up of Easter, Carlson, Marshall and new member John Heames, a bassist. Despite the credits, though, the album was largely played by Easter and Marshall, with significant contributions by Carlson. The subsequent tour featured a cohesive lineup of Easter, Carlson, Marshall, and Heames.
The band has been inactive since a final performance in early 1990 -- around the same time Easter and Carlson broke up. Carlson went on to form the band Grover, who released one album with Easter producing some of the tracks. Easter, meanwhile, concentrated on his production career, and rarely performed or recorded his own music throughout the 1990s, although he did join Velvet Crush as a touring guitarist for a time in the mid-1990s. In 2000, he re-teamed with Eric Marshall and his new wife, vocalist Shalini Chaterjee, to form the trio Shalini. The three also play as The Fiendish Minstrels, which features Easter's lead vocals, as well as a selection of Let's Active tunes in their repetoire.
North Carolina's Let's Active was probably the most misunderstood of the South's '80s new-pop bands. Though dogged by a rosy-cheeked nicest-guys-of-wimp-pop image, they could be downright moody. Producer/multi-instrumentalist Mitch Easter assembled the trio in 1981, but it only emerged nationally in the wake of R.E.M., whose first two discs Easter co-produced at his Drive-In garage studio outside of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Joining that band's label, Let's Active released a six-song EP, Afoot, bringing new meaning to such overused pop adjectives as crisp, bright and ringing. All the songs, even those with melancholy lyrics, are hook-filled, boppy and ultra-hummable. Pick to click: "Every Word Means No."
But things were not as they seemed. Although perceived as the engineer of the now-sound-of-today in American guitar pop, Easter's own tastes were running towards the electronic gadgetry of techno-rock. (His career as a producer was also taking off.) Also, his two original partners bassist Faye Hunter and drummer Sara Romweber (sister of Flat Duo Jets' Dexter Romweber) were viewed as sidepeople, despite Easter's egalitarian efforts to the contrary. In real life, the trio were not just simple, cheerful popsters. Both Easter's love of "sounds" and the band's inner conflicts were explored on Cypress, a record that is deeper and more enduring, though not as immediately winning, as Afoot. Denser, rambling textural pieces some wistful, even angry came to the fore. Few records sound so multi-dimensional, and Let's Active has, for that reason, been tagged psychedelic they make sounds you can almost touch. (In 1989, IRS combined Afoot and Cypress on a single CD.)
After Hunter and Romweber (who went on to Snatches of Pink) left the band, Easter did shows with other players (including Windbreaker Tim Lee) and recorded Big Plans for Everybody piecemeal with four people, including Hunter and two permanent associates: Angie Carlson (the future ex-Mrs. Easter; guitar, keyboards) and Eric Marshall (drums). Far less twinky and hardly cute, Big Plans for Everybody is disturbingly downcast, a doleful version of pop music that isn't about sad things, but still leaves you feeling that way. The album connects emotionally, its offbeat songs making a strong impression.
Adding bassist John Heames and a few dBs of electric power, Every Dog Has His Day effectively combines Easter's homey studio approach with co-producer John Leckie's chartworthy British experience. From the blazing-guitars title track and the stomping romance of "Sweepstakes Winner" to the overtly Beatlesque "Mr. Fool," the best songs (most of them on Side One; "I Feel Funny" dominates the flip) are classic Easter: unsettled emotional lyrics and eccentric pop melodies that have him straining on vocal tiptoes to reach the hard bits.
How are you, Let's Active? Haven't checked in on you lately, so I swung by to wish you a happy halloween & hope you are feeling well! Listen, I have another track up on my page, "Attack Of The Mushroom People." You can Hear it right Now, if you'd like at: www.myspace.com/psychedelicpablo adios for now! Pablo
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Just stopping by to say hello and give you some news. The new album 'Coolgilly and the Freakshow' from Centascope is now available worldwide from CD Baby and directly from the merchandise page of the official website. You can also get the album from Apple iTunes, MSN Music, Rhapsody, Napster, Amazon and many more.
The new album 'Coolgilly and the Freakshow' from Centascope is now available worldwide from CD Baby and directly from the merchandise page of the official website.
You can also get the album from Apple iTunes, MSN Music, Rhapsody, Napster, Amazon and many more.
Hey Mitch, Hope you are doing well. Barbara & I are fine. I came across something that made me think of you. I saw a real cool pedal organ in great condition at Habitat For Humanity in Greensboro on High Point Rd. It's 295.00. It looks like the wood was hand carved. If your in town check it out. They close at 5:30. Later, Ronald
Let's Active !! Too overlooked- found your record in the used bins, took it home and was an instant fan- I noticed many of the songs ended with an upstroke- very arty. Thank you for the experience. PJR