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 albumโ€™s release, the original lineup shifted, with new recruitsโ€”drummer Iain Watt and bassist Joe Mazzitelliโ€”stepping 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. โ€œThis record almost didnโ€™t get made,โ€ the band says in its press materials. โ€œDeath, 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, โ€œSo Many Years Ago.โ€ โ€œTime is not on our side anymore,โ€ Eric Wallen sings. โ€œWhat was once open road is another detour. Now itโ€™s dark and I donโ€™t know the way.โ€

But that disillusionment, combined with a defiant tenacity, propels the bandโ€™s 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 โ€œCavepainter,โ€ they prove they havenโ€™t lost heft, with a fuzz-dragging riff that feels akin to Swedish doomsters Monolord.

But Pinholes also pushes the bandโ€™s stadium-rock influences into the foreground. Lead single โ€œAs You Climb from Your Bed,โ€ soars with guitar vamps that sound more like Brian May than Tony Iommi, while Wallen declares, โ€œThe 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. Itโ€™s telling that the band has drawn comparisons as disparate as The Melvins, T. Rex, Mastodon, and Dinosaur Jr.โ€”all powerful guitar-centric bands, but each fundamentally different.

Even the bandโ€™s 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 

[email protected]


Support independent local journalism.ย Join the INDY Press Clubย to help us keep fearless watchdog reporting and essential arts and culture coverage viable in the Triangle.ย 

Bio: Bryan Reed lives in Raleigh, where he nerds out about punk rock and comic books. He's written about music for INDY Week since 2008.Twitter: http://twitter.com/BryanCReed