Lindsay Mitchell
Dr. Lindsay Christopher Mitchell, PhD (born 28 May 1949) is an English-born Canadian musician, and songwriter who achieved success as the guitarist and founder of the rock band Prism.
Early life
Born in London, England, Mitchell emigrated to Alberta, Canada with his family in 1957, finally settling in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1962, where he honed his burgeoning guitar skills by emulating instrumental surf-rock bands (The Shadows, the Ventures, the Astronauts, etc) and Brit-rock heroes the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and the Yardbirds.
Musical career
Upon graduating from high school two years early at age 15, he joined local Vancouver pop-rockers William Tell & the Marksmen, later becoming a member of the "psychedelic sixties" era band, the Seeds of Time. During his tenure with the SoTs he was fortunate to tour and play with venerated bluesmen Willie Dixon and T-Bone Walker... experience which instilled a lifelong veneration for the Blues.
Prism
He then left the SoTs to front the Vancouver R&B band, Sunshyne, having been recruited to help transform their sound from jazz-rock into blues-rock. To enhance the chances of securing a record deal, Mitchell voluntarily withdrew as lead vocalist and was replaced by Ron Tabak, whom he himself had discovered fronting the local band Not Fragile. The project was renamed Prism and its self-titled debut album released on the GRT label in 1977. The album hit platinum status in sales, a first for a debut artist in Canada. Although drummer Jim Vallance was initially the principal songwriter for the band, Mitchell assumed the role after Vallance
quit in 1978 (replaced on drums by former SoT Rocket Norton). Mitchell went on to compose "Armageddon", the title track for the third album and one of the band's most recognizable songs, later receiving a SOCAN Song of the Year award for "Night to Remember", a ballad written for the Armageddon album.