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Let's Active

Let's Active was an American rock group formed in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in 1981, and often identified with the jangle pop guitar work of the group's frontman and songwriter Mitch Easter.[1] After disbanding in 1990, the group reformed in August 2014 to play a benefit show in North Carolina.[2]

Let's Active
Let's Active performing in 2014
(Suzi Ziegler, bass; Mitch Easter, guitar)
Background information
OriginWinston-Salem, North Carolina
Genres
Years active1981–1990, 2014
LabelsI.R.S. Records
Past membersMitch Easter
Faye Hunter
Sara Romweber
Angie Carlson
Rob Ladd
Eric Marshall
Jon Heames
Suzi Ziegler

History edit

Formation (1981–1982) edit

Let's Active was formed in 1981 by Mitch Easter, a guitarist and songwriter best known as a record producer, with Faye Hunter on bass.[3] Drummer Sara Romweber,[4] then 17 years old (a full decade younger than Hunter and Easter), joined to form the original trio two weeks before their first live performance.[3]

The name of the group was taken from a T-shirt sold in Japan bearing an inadvertently nonsensical English phrase (a popular fashion at the time). In a 1984 interview, Hunter said, "It's embarrassing for people to ask you what the name of your group is and you don't want to say it out loud", and noted that the band had been erroneously billed by promoters as "Let's Dance" and "Les Active".[5]

The group played their first performance on November 13, 1981, at the 688 Club in Atlanta, opening for R.E.M., whose first EP, Chronic Town (1982), was produced by Easter. He also co-produced R.E.M.'s first two albums (1983's Murmur and 1984's Reckoning) with Don Dixon.[6][7]

Afoot and Cypress (1983–1984) edit

The band was signed to I.R.S. Records in 1983, shortly after filming the video for "Every Word Means No" as guests on I.R.S. Records Presents: The Cutting Edge,[8] the label's MTV television program. According to Easter, the cheaply made "econo-video" was based on the band's concept of having dogs running through the set, "which would make it chaos. But they couldn't get dogs, so instead they got these puppies, which changed the vibe considerably – and changed the worldview of our band for all eternity, because these puppies were just so adorable".[8]

The original trio of Easter, Hunter and Romweber released the six-song Afoot EP on I.R.S. in 1983. Lynn Blakey, later of Tres Chicas, joined to tour with the group in 1983.

The group released the full-length Cypress in 1984. Romweber quit the band during a UK tour that year, and Hunter and Easter, a couple, split up shortly afterward. However, the band was kept alive by Easter, who played as Let's Active with Hunter and two members of The Windbreakers, Jay Peck (drums) and Tim Lee (keyboards), until a new permanent lineup was established.[9]

Big Plans for Everybody and Every Dog Has His Day (1985–1990) edit

In 1985, Easter brought Angie Carlson, previously a rock journalist, into the band to play guitar and keyboards.[10] After Hunter's departure, Carlson also took on a role as vocalist, and would later marry Easter.[10]

The band's second full-length album, Big Plans for Everybody (1986), was largely a solo recording by Easter, who played most of the instruments himself and handled the mixing and production. On board for a few tracks, however, were Carlson, bassist/vocalist Hunter, and drummers Rob Ladd and Eric Marshall. Dennis Ambrose played bass at the beginning of the group's 1986 tour, with the lineup of Easter, Carlson and Marshall.[11] Ambrose was later replaced on bass by Janine Cooper Ayres for the fall leg of the 1986 tour opening for R.E.M.[12]

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 listed a lineup of Easter, Carlson, Marshall and a new member, bassist Jon Heames (credited as "John Heames"). Despite the credits, though, the album was largely recorded by Easter and Marshall, with significant contributions by Carlson. The subsequent tour featured a cohesive lineup of Easter, Carlson, Marshall and Heames.

The band became inactive after a final performance in early 1990 – around the same time Easter and Carlson broke up.

Post-breakup careers (1990–2014) edit

After the dissolution of Let's Active, Carlson went on to form the band Grover in 1993, which released a single and one full-length album, My Wild Life (1995), with Easter producing some of the tracks.[10]

Easter, meanwhile, concentrated on his production career, and rarely performed or recorded his own music in the decades following Let's Active's dissolution. He made a few appearances on tribute albums, performing solo renditions of hits by R.E.M. and The Hollies, and joined Velvet Crush as a touring guitarist for a time in the mid-1990s. In 2000, re-teaming with Marshall, Easter formed the trio Shalini with singer-songwriter and bassist Shalini Chatterjee, who was then Easter's girlfriend (now former wife). Easter wrote some of Shalini's material, but the focus was on Chatterjee, the band's lead vocalist and primary writer. The same three musicians also briefly played under the name the Fiendish Minstrels, which featured Easter's lead vocals as well as a selection of Let's Active tunes in their repertoire. Beginning in the mid-2000s, Easter also resumed recording and performing under his own name. His first—and to date only—official solo album, Dynamico, was released in 2007.

Romweber was a founding member of the band Snatches of Pink. In 2007, she joined her brother, Dexter Romweber of the Flat Duo Jets, to record and perform as the Dex Romweber Duo.

Hunter committed suicide on July 21, 2013, in Advance, North Carolina, at the age of 59.[13][14][15]

Reunion (2014) edit

 
Sara Romweber on drums at Let's Active reunion show

In August 2014, Easter and Sara Romweber reunited Let's Active for a benefit performance for a cancer charity, the Be Loud! Sophie Foundation.[16] Easter invited former Game Theory member Suzi Ziegler to join the group, stepping in to fill Hunter's role as bassist.[2] Easter had previously worked with Ziegler when he produced Game Theory's 1986 album The Big Shot Chronicles.[17] The trio, supported by keyboard player Missy Thangs (of the Love Language) and vocalist Lynn Blakey, performed a set that included "Every Word Means No" and "Edge of the World".[18]

Sara Romweber died of a brain tumor on March 4, 2019, at the age of 55.[19][20][21]

Legacy and critical response edit

Despite critical praise, Let's Active had limited commercial success and initially became known because of Easter's production work with R.E.M., the Bongos and Pylon.[7]

According to Billboard, the 1984 song "Every Word Means No" was a "quintessential gem" of its period, and the early Let's Active was "one of the more intriguing garage pop bands", with "endless hooks and cleverly skewed lyrics".[9]

AllMusic's Mark Deming wrote that the group's recordings established that Easter "deserves to be acknowledged as one of the finer songwriters of his time and place," and "by all rights, should have made him the darling of the college radio (and maybe even the pop charts) with their sharp hooks and insightful lyrics".[22]

Let's Active was the subject of a tribute album, Every Word: A Tribute to Let's Active (2003), which featured 20 cover performances by artists such as Don Dixon, Bill Lloyd, Bobby Sutliff and Tommy Womack.[22][23]

Personnel edit

Discography edit

Albums edit

EPs edit

Singles edit

Year Title Chart position Album
US Modern Rock
1984 "Blue Line" Cypress
1984 "Waters Part" Cypress
1986 "In Little Ways" Big Plans for Everybody
1986 "I Feel Funny" non-album (Bucketfull of Brains magazine flexi)
1988 "Every Dog Has His Day" 17 Every Dog Has His Day

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Strong, Martin Charles (2003). The Great Indie Discography. Edinburgh UK: Canongate. ISBN 1-84195-335-0. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  2. ^ a b Menconi, David (August 7, 2014). . The News & Observer. Raleigh, N.C. Archived from the original on August 29, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Mills, Fred (2007). "Mitch Easter: Perfect Sound Forever". Magnet. from the original on 2014-02-22.
  4. ^ "Sara Teresa Romweber 1964 - 2019". walkersfuneralservice.com. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  5. ^ Fricke, David (October 21, 1984). "Easter hopes his mother knows best" (PDF). The Sunday Register. Vol. 107, no. 97. Red Bank, N.J. Monmouth Magazine, p. 5. (PDF) from the original on 2013-09-15.
  6. ^ Sullivan, Denise (1998). R.E.M.: Talk About the Passion : An Oral History. Da Capo Press. p. 80. ISBN 0-306-80857-9. Retrieved 2011-01-10.
  7. ^ a b McCormick, Moira (October 6, 1984). "Producer Easter Gets Active As Performer". Billboard. Vol. 96, no. 40. p. 36. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  8. ^ a b Amar, Erin (March 2011). "Mitch Easter – Beyond and Back". Rocker. from the original on 2013-10-13.
  9. ^ a b McCormick, Moira (December 22, 1984). "Talent in Action: Let's Active". Billboard. Vol. 96, no. 51. p. 41. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
  10. ^ a b c Bessman, Jim (May 6, 1995). "Former Writer Turns Songwriter on Grover's Debut on Zero Hour". Billboard. Vol. 107, no. 18. p. 11. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
  11. ^ Hochman, Steve (July 19, 1986). "Talent in Action: Let's Active". Billboard. Vol. 98, no. 29. pp. 22–23. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
  12. ^ Strange, Jay (December 20, 2011). "Janine Cooper Ayres and her tour with Let's Active". Art into Dust. from the original on 2014-08-15.
  13. ^ "Faye Elizabeth Hunter" (obituary). Hayworth-Miller Funeral Home. July 2013. from the original on 2016-04-10.
  14. ^ McGovern, Kyle (July 22, 2013). "Faye Hunter, Let's Active Founding Bassist, Dead of Apparent Suicide". Spin. from the original on 2016-03-05.
  15. ^ Brandle, Lars (July 22, 2013). "Let's Active Founding Bassist Faye Hunter Dies of Apparent Suicide: Reports". Billboard. from the original on 2015-10-06.
  16. ^ "Be Loud 14". Be Loud! Sophie Foundation (official website). from the original on 2014-08-12.
  17. ^ Deming, Mark (2001). "The Big Shot Chronicles". In Bogdanov, Vladimir; Woodstra, Chris; Erlewine, Stephen (eds.). All Music Guide: The Definitive Guide to Popular Music. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 165–1666. ISBN 9780879306274. from the original on 2013-06-02.
  18. ^ "Let's Active Setlist at Cat's Cradle, Carrboro, NC, USA". Setlist.fm. August 9, 2014. from the original on 2014-08-12.
  19. ^ "Original Let's Active drummer has died. She was vital to the influential Winston-Salem pop band". Winston-Salem Journal. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  20. ^ Sam Sodomsky (2019-05-05). "Sara Romweber, Drummer of Let's Active, Dead at 55". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  21. ^ "Sara Romweber 1964 - 2019". WUNC. March 7, 2019. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  22. ^ a b Deming, Mark. Every Word: A Tribute to Let's Active at AllMusic.
  23. ^ Every Word: A Tribute to Let's Active (CD). Laughing Outlaw Records. July 22, 2003. ASIN B0000AGWR1.

External links edit

  • Let's Active discography at Discogs

active, american, rock, group, formed, winston, salem, north, carolina, 1981, often, identified, with, jangle, guitar, work, group, frontman, songwriter, mitch, easter, after, disbanding, 1990, group, reformed, august, 2014, play, benefit, show, north, carolin. Let s Active was an American rock group formed in Winston Salem North Carolina in 1981 and often identified with the jangle pop guitar work of the group s frontman and songwriter Mitch Easter 1 After disbanding in 1990 the group reformed in August 2014 to play a benefit show in North Carolina 2 Let s ActiveLet s Active performing in 2014 Suzi Ziegler bass Mitch Easter guitar Background informationOriginWinston Salem North CarolinaGenresJangle poppower popalternative rockYears active1981 1990 2014LabelsI R S RecordsPast membersMitch EasterFaye HunterSara RomweberAngie CarlsonRob LaddEric MarshallJon HeamesSuzi Ziegler Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1981 1982 1 2 Afoot and Cypress 1983 1984 1 3 Big Plans for Everybody and Every Dog Has His Day 1985 1990 1 4 Post breakup careers 1990 2014 1 5 Reunion 2014 2 Legacy and critical response 3 Personnel 4 Discography 4 1 Albums 4 2 EPs 4 3 Singles 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editFormation 1981 1982 edit Let s Active was formed in 1981 by Mitch Easter a guitarist and songwriter best known as a record producer with Faye Hunter on bass 3 Drummer Sara Romweber 4 then 17 years old a full decade younger than Hunter and Easter joined to form the original trio two weeks before their first live performance 3 The name of the group was taken from a T shirt sold in Japan bearing an inadvertently nonsensical English phrase a popular fashion at the time In a 1984 interview Hunter said It s embarrassing for people to ask you what the name of your group is and you don t want to say it out loud and noted that the band had been erroneously billed by promoters as Let s Dance and Les Active 5 The group played their first performance on November 13 1981 at the 688 Club in Atlanta opening for R E M whose first EP Chronic Town 1982 was produced by Easter He also co produced R E M s first two albums 1983 s Murmur and 1984 s Reckoning with Don Dixon 6 7 Afoot and Cypress 1983 1984 edit The band was signed to I R S Records in 1983 shortly after filming the video for Every Word Means No as guests on I R S Records Presents The Cutting Edge 8 the label s MTV television program According to Easter the cheaply made econo video was based on the band s concept of having dogs running through the set which would make it chaos But they couldn t get dogs so instead they got these puppies which changed the vibe considerably and changed the worldview of our band for all eternity because these puppies were just so adorable 8 The original trio of Easter Hunter and Romweber released the six song Afoot EP on I R S in 1983 Lynn Blakey later of Tres Chicas joined to tour with the group in 1983 The group released the full length Cypress in 1984 Romweber quit the band during a UK tour that year and Hunter and Easter a couple split up shortly afterward However the band was kept alive by Easter who played as Let s Active with Hunter and two members of The Windbreakers Jay Peck drums and Tim Lee keyboards until a new permanent lineup was established 9 Big Plans for Everybody and Every Dog Has His Day 1985 1990 edit In 1985 Easter brought Angie Carlson previously a rock journalist into the band to play guitar and keyboards 10 After Hunter s departure Carlson also took on a role as vocalist and would later marry Easter 10 The band s second full length album Big Plans for Everybody 1986 was largely a solo recording by Easter who played most of the instruments himself and handled the mixing and production On board for a few tracks however were Carlson bassist vocalist Hunter and drummers Rob Ladd and Eric Marshall Dennis Ambrose played bass at the beginning of the group s 1986 tour with the lineup of Easter Carlson and Marshall 11 Ambrose was later replaced on bass by Janine Cooper Ayres for the fall leg of the 1986 tour opening for R E M 12 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 listed a lineup of Easter Carlson Marshall and a new member bassist Jon Heames credited as John Heames Despite the credits though the album was largely recorded by Easter and Marshall with significant contributions by Carlson The subsequent tour featured a cohesive lineup of Easter Carlson Marshall and Heames The band became inactive after a final performance in early 1990 around the same time Easter and Carlson broke up Post breakup careers 1990 2014 edit After the dissolution of Let s Active Carlson went on to form the band Grover in 1993 which released a single and one full length album My Wild Life 1995 with Easter producing some of the tracks 10 Easter meanwhile concentrated on his production career and rarely performed or recorded his own music in the decades following Let s Active s dissolution He made a few appearances on tribute albums performing solo renditions of hits by R E M and The Hollies and joined Velvet Crush as a touring guitarist for a time in the mid 1990s In 2000 re teaming with Marshall Easter formed the trio Shalini with singer songwriter and bassist Shalini Chatterjee who was then Easter s girlfriend now former wife Easter wrote some of Shalini s material but the focus was on Chatterjee the band s lead vocalist and primary writer The same three musicians also briefly played under the name the Fiendish Minstrels which featured Easter s lead vocals as well as a selection of Let s Active tunes in their repertoire Beginning in the mid 2000s Easter also resumed recording and performing under his own name His first and to date only official solo album Dynamico was released in 2007 Romweber was a founding member of the band Snatches of Pink In 2007 she joined her brother Dexter Romweber of the Flat Duo Jets to record and perform as the Dex Romweber Duo Hunter committed suicide on July 21 2013 in Advance North Carolina at the age of 59 13 14 15 Reunion 2014 edit nbsp Sara Romweber on drums at Let s Active reunion show In August 2014 Easter and Sara Romweber reunited Let s Active for a benefit performance for a cancer charity the Be Loud Sophie Foundation 16 Easter invited former Game Theory member Suzi Ziegler to join the group stepping in to fill Hunter s role as bassist 2 Easter had previously worked with Ziegler when he produced Game Theory s 1986 album The Big Shot Chronicles 17 The trio supported by keyboard player Missy Thangs of the Love Language and vocalist Lynn Blakey performed a set that included Every Word Means No and Edge of the World 18 Sara Romweber died of a brain tumor on March 4 2019 at the age of 55 19 20 21 Legacy and critical response editDespite critical praise Let s Active had limited commercial success and initially became known because of Easter s production work with R E M the Bongos and Pylon 7 According to Billboard the 1984 song Every Word Means No was a quintessential gem of its period and the early Let s Active was one of the more intriguing garage pop bands with endless hooks and cleverly skewed lyrics 9 AllMusic s Mark Deming wrote that the group s recordings established that Easter deserves to be acknowledged as one of the finer songwriters of his time and place and by all rights should have made him the darling of the college radio and maybe even the pop charts with their sharp hooks and insightful lyrics 22 Let s Active was the subject of a tribute album Every Word A Tribute to Let s Active 2003 which featured 20 cover performances by artists such as Don Dixon Bill Lloyd Bobby Sutliff and Tommy Womack 22 23 Personnel editMembers Mitch Easter guitar vocals 1981 1990 2014 Faye Hunter bass guitar vocals 1981 1986 died 2013 Sara Romweber drums 1981 1984 2014 died 2019 Angie Carlson guitar keyboards vocals 1985 1990 Rob Ladd drums 1985 1986 Eric Marshall drums 1986 1990 Jon Heames bass guitar 1987 1990 Suzi Ziegler bass guitar 2014 Touring musicians Lynn Blakey vocals 1983 2014 Tim Lee keyboards 1984 1985 Jay Peck drums 1984 1985 Dennis Ambrose bass guitar 1986 Janine Cooper Ayres bass guitar 1986 1987 Missy Thangs keyboards 2014 Discography editAlbums edit Cypress 1984 I R S Big Plans for Everybody 1986 I R S Every Dog Has His Day 1988 I R S EPs edit Afoot 1983 I R S Singles edit Year Title Chart position Album US Modern Rock 1984 Blue Line Cypress 1984 Waters Part Cypress 1986 In Little Ways Big Plans for Everybody 1986 I Feel Funny non album Bucketfull of Brains magazine flexi 1988 Every Dog Has His Day 17 Every Dog Has His DaySee also editAthens GA Inside Out 1987 archive footageReferences edit Strong Martin Charles 2003 The Great Indie Discography Edinburgh UK Canongate ISBN 1 84195 335 0 Retrieved 2014 05 20 a b Menconi David August 7 2014 Let s Active reunites to play for friends including absent ones at Be Loud Sophie The News amp Observer Raleigh N C Archived from the original on August 29 2014 a b Mills Fred 2007 Mitch Easter Perfect Sound Forever Magnet Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 Sara Teresa Romweber 1964 2019 walkersfuneralservice com Retrieved May 14 2020 Fricke David October 21 1984 Easter hopes his mother knows best PDF The Sunday Register Vol 107 no 97 Red Bank N J Monmouth Magazine p 5 Archived PDF from the original on 2013 09 15 Sullivan Denise 1998 R E M Talk About the Passion An Oral History Da Capo Press p 80 ISBN 0 306 80857 9 Retrieved 2011 01 10 a b McCormick Moira October 6 1984 Producer Easter Gets Active As Performer Billboard Vol 96 no 40 p 36 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved 2014 05 20 a b Amar Erin March 2011 Mitch Easter Beyond and Back Rocker Archived from the original on 2013 10 13 a b McCormick Moira December 22 1984 Talent in Action Let s Active Billboard Vol 96 no 51 p 41 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved 2014 08 08 a b c Bessman Jim May 6 1995 Former Writer Turns Songwriter on Grover s Debut on Zero Hour Billboard Vol 107 no 18 p 11 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved 2014 08 08 Hochman Steve July 19 1986 Talent in Action Let s Active Billboard Vol 98 no 29 pp 22 23 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved 2014 08 08 Strange Jay December 20 2011 Janine Cooper Ayres and her tour with Let s Active Art into Dust Archived from the original on 2014 08 15 Faye Elizabeth Hunter obituary Hayworth Miller Funeral Home July 2013 Archived from the original on 2016 04 10 McGovern Kyle July 22 2013 Faye Hunter Let s Active Founding Bassist Dead of Apparent Suicide Spin Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Brandle Lars July 22 2013 Let s Active Founding Bassist Faye Hunter Dies of Apparent Suicide Reports Billboard Archived from the original on 2015 10 06 Be Loud 14 Be Loud Sophie Foundation official website Archived from the original on 2014 08 12 Deming Mark 2001 The Big Shot Chronicles In Bogdanov Vladimir Woodstra Chris Erlewine Stephen eds All Music Guide The Definitive Guide to Popular Music Hal Leonard Corporation pp 165 1666 ISBN 9780879306274 Archived from the original on 2013 06 02 Let s Active Setlist at Cat s Cradle Carrboro NC USA Setlist fm August 9 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 08 12 Original Let s Active drummer has died She was vital to the influential Winston Salem pop band Winston Salem Journal Retrieved March 12 2019 Sam Sodomsky 2019 05 05 Sara Romweber Drummer of Let s Active Dead at 55 Pitchfork Retrieved 2019 03 06 Sara Romweber 1964 2019 WUNC March 7 2019 Retrieved May 14 2020 a b Deming Mark Every Word A Tribute to Let s Active at AllMusic Every Word A Tribute to Let s Active CD Laughing Outlaw Records July 22 2003 ASIN B0000AGWR1 External links editLet s Active discography at Discogs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Let 27s Active amp oldid 1208545073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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