
Minorย Stars:ย Throughย Pinholesย inย theย Sky
โ โ โ โ
[Self-released; Oct. 25]
Release show: Saturday, Oct. 26,
9 p.m., Local 506
With the release of its 2010 debut, The Death of the Sun in the Silver Sea, the Chapel Hill psych-rock band Minor Stars had its sights set on big stages and a career playing rock music. But soon after the albumโs release, the original lineup shifted, with new recruitsโdrummer Iain Watt and bassist Joe Mazzitelliโstepping in to keep the group rolling, before life interrupted in other ways, too. Nine years later, Minor Stars is looking for a second chance withย Through Pinholes in the Sky. โThis record almost didnโt get made,โ the band says in its press materials. โDeath, loss, and mundane everyday life all conspired against its completion.โ
The disillusionment of false starts and setbacks is palpable in the first lines of the opening track, โSo Many Years Ago.โ โTime is not on our side anymore,โ Eric Wallen sings. โWhat was once open road is another detour. Now itโs dark and I donโt know the way.โ
But that disillusionment, combined with a defiant tenacity, propels the bandโs delayed follow-up to the musical heights its predecessor aspired to reach.
Minor Stars has always had a knack for layering pop melodies on heavy riffs that showed off its Black Sabbath roots. On songs like โCavepainter,โ they prove they havenโt lost heft, with a fuzz-dragging riff that feels akin to Swedish doomsters Monolord.
But Pinholes also pushes the bandโs stadium-rock influences into the foreground. Lead single โAs You Climb from Your Bed,โ soars with guitar vamps that sound more like Brian May than Tony Iommi, while Wallen declares, โThe sun has finally broken through the dark clouds hanging over you.โ
Throughout, the band shifts easily from heavy grit to airy, crystalline pop, suggesting the ethos of heavy-rock shapeshifters like Birds of Avalon or Boris and never settling into a one-dimensional groove. In this fusion of indie-pop and vintage hard rock, heavy psych, and hazy shoegaze, Minor Stars successfully avoids an easy RIYL tag. Itโs telling that the band has drawn comparisons as disparate as The Melvins, T. Rex, Mastodon, and Dinosaur Jr.โall powerful guitar-centric bands, but each fundamentally different.
Even the bandโs decision to record with indie-rock impresario Mitch Easter (Polvo, R.E.M.,ย Pavement) plays against heavy-rock clichรฉs. In the sessions with Easter, spread over four years, Minor Stars summoned a powerful album shaded by heavy metal and heavy circumstances but girded by irrepressible determination. It feels less like a comeback than a fresh start.ย
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