Love Tractor is a band from Athens, Georgia, founded in spring 1980 by guitarists Mark Cline and Mike Richmond, and bassist Armistead Wellford, students at the University of Georgia. Like The B-52's, Pylon and R.E.M., Love Tractor has been lauded by critics and music historians as one of the founders of the Athens, Georgia, alternative rock scene. Love Tractor toured extensively and recorded six critically acclaimed albums, consistently topping the college and alternative charts. Love Tractor was particularly known for their instrumental rock.[1]

Love Tractor
The band members in front of an industrial building
Love Tractor in 1986
Background information
OriginAthens, Georgia, U.S.
GenresAlternative rock
Years active1980 (1980)–2002, 2016–present
LabelsDB, Big Time, RCA, Razor & Tie
Past members
  • Mike Richmond
  • Mark Cline
  • Armistead Wellford
  • Kit Swartz
  • Bill Berry
  • Andrew Carter
  • Tommy Daughtry
  • Doug Stanley
  • Tom King
  • John Poe
  • Billy Homes
  • Ben Holst
  • Tom Lewis
  • Darren Stanley
Love Tractor
Love Tractor in 1980

After a return to the public eye in the late 1990s, Love Tractor released The Sky At Night in 2001. The group went back on hiatus in 2002. They reformed in the mid-2000s with a new line-up which recorded three albums.

In 2016 founding members Armistead Wellford and Mark Cline, along with Bill Berry and multi-instrumentalist Douglas Stanley (of The Glands, who had been a major contributor to the band's 2001 album The Sky at Night), released the instrumental single "A Trip To the Museum", heralding a return to the band's instrumental roots. On August 13, 2016, all original members of Love Tractor (Mark Cline, Mike Richmond, Armistead Wellford and Andrew Carter) reformed to perform at the Athens Popfest at the Georgia Theatre in Athens, Georgia. The band was accompanied on stage by guitarists Bryan Poole (Elf Power, Casper & the Cookies) and Jay Gonzalez (Drive-By Truckers), drummer Joe Rowe (The Glands, Casper & the Cookies, Pylon Reenactment Society), and synthesist Kevin Dunn (The Fans, Regiment of Women). This enhanced version of Love Tractor (including all three original members) continues to perform live and will be re-releasing the Love Tractor catalog on vinyl as well as previously unreleased songs and new material.

History

edit

The band was formed in April 1980 by guitarists Mark Cline, Mike Richmond and bassist Armistead Wellford students at the University of Georgia. The band played their first few gigs (including their debut on July 9 on Barber Street in Athens also known as Pylon Park)[2] with only a drum machine, but drummers Kit Swartz (formerly of The Side Effects) and Bill Berry (future R.E.M. drummer) soon took over rotating duties as drummer. In 1983 Andrew Carter would take over as full-time drummer; after Carter's departure, John Poe of Guadalcanal Diary rounded out the lineup. Producer and studio keyboard player Alfredo Villar (of The Fans) contributed to the first two albums.[3] Love Tractor originally performed only instrumental material, but minimal vocals from Richmond were added starting with their second album, Around the Bend.

In 1981 the band signed to DB Records. Their first release was a self-titled album, produced by Bruce Baxter (Pylon) and Alfredo Villar. 1983 saw a second album, Around the Bend. While on a tour promoting that album's release, Jon Pareles of The New York Times saw them at Danceteria; in his September 1983 review, he said:[1]

Most of Love Tractor's material moved at the steady pace of 1960's folk-rock, using winsome guitar leads above a cushion of rhythm guitar and a reassuring bass. Like instrumentals by the Ventures or the Raybeats, Love Tractor's tunes use two or three recurring segments and little improvisation. But they don't repeat – they develop. Where song lyrics might have told a story, Love Tractor let the texture of the music thicken. The drumming would get busier, or the bass line pushier, or the lead guitar line more intricate; the clear, catchy melodies grew more urgent with each reprise. When a vocal would float in for a few moments, it was just one more unassuming, thoroughly melodic piece of a song.

After two albums, and a college-chart-topping cover of Kraftwerk's "Neon Lights" (from 1984's "Till The Cows Come Home" EP), the band signed to Big Time (America)/RCA, releasing This Ain't No Outerspace Ship in 1987.[3] After 1989's Themes from Venus, produced by Mitch Easter, the band went on semi-hiatus.[3] Wellford later joined Gutterball.[3] The band stopped touring completely in 1992, but Cline, Richmond, and Wellford continued in Athens to write songs.[4] Later, the original lineup recorded for RCA and Razor and Tie Records. The band re-formed in 1996 as a performing entity eventually recording 2001's 'The Sky at Night' for Razor and Tie.[5] In 2005 the band released the album Black Hole via Fundamental Records, albeit with a substantially changed line up with only Mike Richmond remaining from the original members, and a new progressive rock-influenced sound, with King Crimson, Yes and Uriah Heep cited as reference points.[6] The following year they released Green Winter[7] and Before and After Christmas, a Christmas album that featured a cover of Pink Floyd's "See Emily Play" and artwork parodying the Brian Eno album Before and After Science, through Fundamental Records.[8]

Currently[when?] Love Tractor is in the middle of rereleasing their back catalog, with a new album expected in 2023.

Discography

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Folk-Rock: Love Tractor, a September 13, 1983 article from The New York Times
  2. ^ Party Out of Bounds: The B-52's, R.E.M., and the Kids who Rocked Athens, Georgia (1991), Rodger Lyle Brown
  3. ^ a b c d Strong, Martin C. (1999) The Great Alternative & Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 0-86241-913-1
  4. ^ Love Tractor Ride Again[dead link], a March 22, 2001 article from Rolling Stone
  5. ^ Love Tractor plows into the future Archived 2012-12-09 at archive.today Rock Athens March 1, 2001
  6. ^ Deming, Mark. "Black Hole - Love Tractor". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  7. ^ Deming, Mark. "Green Winter - Love Tractor". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  8. ^ Lamb, Gordon (8 November 2006). "Threats & Promises: Music News and Gossip". Flagpole Magazine. Vol. 20, no. 44. Athens, GA: Flagpole, Inc. p. 33. Retrieved 14 January 2024 – via Georgia Historic Newspapers.
  9. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/CMJ/1983/CMJ-New-Music-Report-1983-10-24.pdf#search=%22love%20tractor%22 [bare URL]
  10. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/CMJ/1984/CMJ-New-Music-Report-1984-10-15.pdf#search=%22love%20tractor%22 [bare URL]
  11. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/CMJ/1989/CMJ-New-Music-Report-1989-05-05.pdf#search=%22love%20tractor%22 [bare URL]
  12. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/CMJ/2001/CMJ-719-2001-03-19.pdf#search=%22love%20tractor%22 [bare URL]