* En anglais uniquement
Mitch Easter carved his place in music history as a hip producer in the '80s, most notably for the early
R.E.M. albums
Murmur and
Reckoning. These achievements, however, often overshadowed and distracted him from giving his full commitment to his own recording career with
Let's Active, a band that, between 1983 and 1988, released some of the finest Southern power pop/jangle pop of the decade. Like
R.E.M., they updated the jangly guitar sound of
the Byrds for the new wave era. The personnel changed drastically, but
Easter remained at the center, releasing three albums before ceasing operations around the end of the decade.
After a short stint with
the Sneakers, a band he formed with future
dB's member
Chris Stamey in North Carolina in the late '70s,
Mitch Easter set up his legendary Drive-In Studios in 1981 and formed
Let's Active with bassist
Faye Hunter and drummer Sara Romweber. The trio released a six-song EP, 1983's Afoot, on IRS Records. In 1984, the band released the more experimental Cypress. While the EP and album sold modestly, they found a strong following in the emerging alternative/"college rock" audience.
Hunter and Romweber left shortly after the release, leaving
Let's Active as essentially a solo project for
Easter. Romweber later went on to join
Snatches of Pink and
the Dexter Romweber Duo (the latter led by her brother, the founder of the group
Flat Duo Jets).
Easter recruited drummers Eric Marshall and
Rob Ladd along with multi-instrumentalist
Angie Carlson (
Hunter returned temporarily for bass duties) for Big Plans for Everybody in 1986, another critically praised yet commercially undervalued album. The harder-edged
Every Dog Has His Day, which saw
Hunter replaced with full-time bassist John Heames, was released in 1988. Following a small-scale promotional tour of college campuses, the band hung in limbo -- no subsequent albums were recorded.
Easter has continued producing in subsequent years while also playing with other bands such as
Velvet Crush,
Vinyl Devotion,
Shalini, and the Fiendish Minstrels. He released his first solo album,
Dynamico, in 2007. Sara Romweber died in March 2019, after being diagnosed with a brain tumor. ~ Chris Woodstra