Easter Island
Gig Seeker Pro

Easter Island

Athens, Georgia, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2010 | SELF

Athens, Georgia, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 2010
Band Alternative Rock

Calendar

Music

Press


"Easter Island: Better Things EP"

I have to wonder what it must have been like to have been a music reviewer in the early ‘80s and be the first to receive an EP called Chronic Town. It must have been a sense of awesome discovery, a feeling that you’d stumbled onto something great, something that made you feel very special; knowing that you had a potential game changer in your hands, even if some of those early reviews were mixed and some critics didn’t know what to make of the record. Of course, I’m referring to R.E.M., who pretty much overhauled the American alternative rock landscape of the ‘80s before blowing up and becoming, for a time, the biggest rock band in the world. Well, now there’s another band hailing from Athens, Georgia (and there’s been a whack of them ranging from the B-52’s to the Indigo Girls to Neutral Milk Hotel), whose debut EP, Better Things, imparts that sense of something very special. In fact, I think Easter Island has the potential to get snapped up by a major label and, for better or worse, become the US answer to Coldplay. The two bands share a haunting, epic, slow-to-mid tempo rock sound. There’s an overall consistency that both groups possess, too; I’ve listened to Coldplay at friends’ houses and couldn’t really tell where one song ended and where another one began. The same goes for Better Things. You can’t really pick out the individual songs when you listen to it, and it all kind of washes over you in a blur.



This is a strong start for a new band that doesn’t always score points for originality, which, in addition to similarities with Chris Martin and crew, also sometimes actually recalls the early jangle of R.E.M. (particularly on parting track “Second Handers”). The band name, too, is not new. You see, a little research shows that there was another Easter Island, a Minneapolis band that was locally popular in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s. Despite being a wee bit derivative, Better Things is a well-crafted, short album with an obvious high point in the pretty piano ballad “Into Bedrooms”, which could easily pass for the best song Coldplay never wrote. - PopMatters


"Easter Island: Better Things EP"

I have to wonder what it must have been like to have been a music reviewer in the early ‘80s and be the first to receive an EP called Chronic Town. It must have been a sense of awesome discovery, a feeling that you’d stumbled onto something great, something that made you feel very special; knowing that you had a potential game changer in your hands, even if some of those early reviews were mixed and some critics didn’t know what to make of the record. Of course, I’m referring to R.E.M., who pretty much overhauled the American alternative rock landscape of the ‘80s before blowing up and becoming, for a time, the biggest rock band in the world. Well, now there’s another band hailing from Athens, Georgia (and there’s been a whack of them ranging from the B-52’s to the Indigo Girls to Neutral Milk Hotel), whose debut EP, Better Things, imparts that sense of something very special. In fact, I think Easter Island has the potential to get snapped up by a major label and, for better or worse, become the US answer to Coldplay. The two bands share a haunting, epic, slow-to-mid tempo rock sound. There’s an overall consistency that both groups possess, too; I’ve listened to Coldplay at friends’ houses and couldn’t really tell where one song ended and where another one began. The same goes for Better Things. You can’t really pick out the individual songs when you listen to it, and it all kind of washes over you in a blur.



This is a strong start for a new band that doesn’t always score points for originality, which, in addition to similarities with Chris Martin and crew, also sometimes actually recalls the early jangle of R.E.M. (particularly on parting track “Second Handers”). The band name, too, is not new. You see, a little research shows that there was another Easter Island, a Minneapolis band that was locally popular in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s. Despite being a wee bit derivative, Better Things is a well-crafted, short album with an obvious high point in the pretty piano ballad “Into Bedrooms”, which could easily pass for the best song Coldplay never wrote. - PopMatters


Discography

The Sneaking EP - 2010
Better Things - 2011

Photos

Feeling a bit camera shy

Bio

Based out of Atlanta and Athens, Georgia, Easter Island is a dream-pop act fronted by guitarists Ethan Payne and Ryan Monahan, whose sound has been likened to Explosions in The Sky, My Bloody Valentine, DIIV, and more. The band’s airy and panoramic ambience is backed by Asher Payne on keyboards, John Swint on drums, and North Carolinian Justin Ellis on bass – adding gravity to an otherwise weightless sound.

The band has traveled as far as Japan to work on the new songs, and to film material for their music video, “Island Nation”, recently premiered by Paste Magazine. Produced and engi- neered by Monahan, the songs received additional engineering, mixing, and mastering from Mike Albanese at Espresso Machine Recording in Athens.  The follow-up single, “Always Room For Another”, premiered on Billboard in fall 2018.

The past three years have seen the band working in secret quarters on their new record while also touring all over the US. Easter Island have performed at a number of festivals including SXSW in Austin, CMJ in New York City, Treefort in Boise, ID, and Athfest in their hometown of Athens, GA. The band’s debut record “Frightened” was released in 2012, and led to several of its’ songs being featured in several high-profile television licenses, including ABC’s “Off The Map” in 2011, MTV’s “Awkward” in 2015, and CW’s “Dynasty” in early 2019 – which featured the band appearing as itself on the show’s second season.  The band has shared stages all over the country and at home with such acts as David Bazan, Cindy Wilson, The Low Anthem, Bully, Wild Nothing, White Rabbits, Valley Maker, and more.

Band Members