[now-playing] - let's active - cypress - 1984
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[now-playing] - let's active - cypress - 1984

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Let's Active - Every Word Means No
The Salt Collective â A Brief History of Blindness (Propeller Sound)
Salt Collective is a power pop band with a deep rolodex. This second full-length from the Paris-based trio features contributions from many of melodic rockâs best-known artists, including 1980s college rock icons Chris Stamey (who also produced), Mitch Easter (whose North Carolina studio birthed this album) and Letâs Activeâs Lynn Blakely who sings lead or back-up on nearly half the tracks. Other bold-faced contributors include Nada Surfâs Matthew Caws, Lemonjellyâs Jason Falkner, Aimee Mann, Mike Mills and Andy Partridge.
Letâs Active - Every Word Means No

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363: R.E.M. // Murmur
Murmur R.E.M. 1983, IRS
Some Short, Disconnected Statements on the Matter of Murmur
1. Insert the following into Waring blender
The Velvet Underground, Pylon, the Byrds, Gang of Four, Patti Smith, the Feelies, Joy Division, the Method Actors, Big Star, the dBâs, the Monkees. Press âBlendâ button. (Iâve never owned a blender; I donât know what the buttons say.)
2. Easy formula for a great band
Having one temperamental genius songwriter guy sounds kind of hard to maintain. Have you considered simply getting four people who are really excellent and distinctive at the respective things they do (at least three of them great singers), who all write well, get along, lack substance abuse issues, have good taste, and modest egos? Why donât more bands do this?
3. Notes on the early discourse
A lot of the things people wrote back in the early â80s to champion this band were dumb as hell. R.E.M. werenât good because they didnât use keyboards or synths; pop music didnât need to be returned to its "honest" folk-rock roots; giving them a thumbs up for not wearing flashy clothes and makeup is dork behaviour.
They were good because they made weird music that derived organically from their time (early â80s), place (a college town in the South), and selves (bright, independent, adventurous, sincere, Âź gay).
Anyone who listened to Chronic Town or Murmur, with their post-punky murk and lyrical references to LaocoĂśn and Marat, and thought to themselves, âAs yes, the second coming of Roger McGuinn, this will put those effete new wavers to flight,â was an idiot.
4. Veteran of the psychic war
Somewhere around age 22, R.E.M. took over the mantle Metallica had held as My Favourite Band in the World Forever and Ever, and I proceeded to be almost as annoying about them as I had been Hetfield and the boys. I posted a lot about them; rigged âbest musicâ polls on random message boards I didnât even post on in their favour; cornered people at parties; crowbarred them into playlists; grumpily chose to dislike bands I saw as stealing their shine; etc. etc. Some (some) of this is maybe cute in retrospect, but really: donât be like this about music. If you love a band this much, learn how to play their songs on an instrument; write a few poems; paint something. Worst case: review them.
5. Learning nothing, 2024
6. Athens: Lyrics & Enunciation
The matter of what exactly Stipe was singing on the early R.E.M. records was a subject of intense speculation, and eventually, parody. Some of the mysteryâs in the mixing, someâs in his Georgian accent, and someâs in his enunciation (never quite as mushy as people claimed, but not exactly Ella Fitzgerald either). But most of itâs in the arbitrary decisions he makes with regard to syntax that cause even accurate transcriptions to seem implausible. Stipe is probably a little bit autistic, which goes some way to explaining the impressionistic intuitiveness of his words, and also went to art school, which fetishizes that sort of thing, but he was always shy of people seeing the words to something like âSitting Stillâ on the page because he thought he might be exposed as a nincompoop. âUp to par and Katie bars / The kitchen side, but not me in / Sitting top of the big hill / Waste of time sitting still,â goes the chorus, according to at least one gnostic sect, but the important passage is the one everyone agrees on, when the stream of impassioned babble releases into a howled âI can hear you / Can you hear me?â
Later on, when he would sing more clearly over airy arrangements, with the lyrics neatly printed in the booklet, heâd occasionally try one of those old sound-over-sense moves and embarrass himself (âLeaving New York was never my proudâ still rankles). But Murmurâs eternal elusiveness is in the way fragments of sense catch your ear from out of its sleeptalk glossolalia:
âThe pilgrimage has gained momentumâ âConversation fearâ âLighted, lighted / Laughing in tuneâ âHear the howl of the rope / A questionâ âA perfect circle of acquaintances and friends / Drink another, coin a phraseâ âShaking through / Opportuneâ âTake oasisâ âHeaven assumes / Shoulders high in the roomâ âDid we miss anything?â
7. Permission to be arbitrary
I remember sitting in the basement of my college house with my old hometown buddy Brad (mostly a metal/classic rock guy), playing him âShaking Throughâ and explaining one of the things I love about old R.E.M. is that itâs great music to yell to. I donât know how much he really got it, but we were drunk and itâs a catchy song, so we howled and made keening, wordless, Stipean noises along with it and the next few until one of my roommates came and asked us to keep it down.
Also: one theory for why cats purr when theyâre injured is that the vibrations somehow reduce pain and encourage healing. From many experiences humming these songs while wrapped up in headphones and bedsheets in the middle of a day thatâs passing like a kidney stone, I can confirm.
8. Note on the modern discourse: Influence?
Black Francis, Kurt Cobain, Bob Mould, Steve Malkmus, Bob Pollard, and Thom Yorke loved R.E.M. So did, to his own apparent consternation, Metallicaâs Cliff Burton. Still, you sit down with someone and listen to those musicians with the goal of showing them the R.E.M. influence (donât do this, why would you do this?) and itâs honestly pretty oblique. Most of the bands who directly aped aspects of R.E.M.'s early sound were at best pleasantly minor (see Captured Tracksâ Strum & Thrum comp), and the ones who seemed to be listening most closely to their â90s efforts were not who you want.
Their ultimate influence was probably simply showing what an art-first, indie-adjacent rock band could accomplish by sticking to their guns and bending the system to their desires instead of being bent by it. They were like a Velvet Underground for the college rock era, except everyone talented who heard them was inspired to start a band that didnât sound much like them. They always used their spotlight to introduce people to other bands and, when they really got huge, they modeled how to deal with success. There donât seem to be many R.E.M. stories, Peter Buckâs airplane incident aside, about them being anything other than kind. Thatâs a fundamentally less exciting type of influence than most other âgreatâ bands have. But I do think itâs kinda cool they were the wise old heads for an entire national movement of alternative music.
8b.
Of course, it still bugs me people donât think theyâre cool. Murmur at least, should be considered cool. And Reckoning, mostly. Chronic Town for sure. Some of Fables. Am I crazy for saying some of Monster and New Adventures even? Iâll stop. Iâll go on.
9(-9). The music
They were a pop band, they were an art band; they sounded like children, and like craggy old men buried in kudzu weed; natural and pretentious; date-stamped and timeless. Decide yourself. Happy 41st birthday Murmur.
363/365
11/12/24.
About once a month I run across a release like The Vines "Walk The Floor" - a band who released an album decades ago who now are posting the album on Bandcamp.
The Vines (Montclair, New Jersey) originally released "Walk The Floor" back in 1988 and it definitely has a 1980s jangle reminiscent of R.E.M or Let's Active. But there were so many other bands from the era that jangled comparably yet have been forgotten. We've covered a few over the years - The Wilmas, and The Wind, come to mind. Add The Vines to that list.
This also jangles like Downy Mildew or any number of bands on the Strum & Thrum compilation. The Vines played at Maxwell's (Hoboken) during the same era as fellow Hobokenites The Feelies and Yo La Tengo (who also jangled back in the 1980s). Best of all, this was produced by Mitch Easter. This was originally released by Hoboken based label Aquablue Records.
Mitch Easter (born 15 November 1954)