Stars' music has been described as "beautiful, eloquent indie pop", characterized by lush instrumentation, nimble production and mixing, narrative lyrics, and soft but nuanced vocals. Stars released their eighth album, There Is No Love in Fluorescent Light, produced by Peter Katis, on Octoon Last Gang Records worldwide. Various Canadian bands covered songs from The Tragically Hip to commemorate the Hip's 30th anniversary. On January 1, 2017, the band was part of CBC's The Strombo Show's Hip 30. Stars were on the line-up for the WAYHOME festival in the summer of 2016, north of Toronto. Chris McCarron, formerly of Land of Talk, officially joined the band as the lead guitarist he had previously contributed to The North and toured with the band. The band released their seventh album, No One Is Lost, in October, 2014. Stars performed at the 2013 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival as well as the Field Trip Arts & Crafts Music Festival, celebrating the tenth anniversary of their label Arts & Crafts Productions.
It was promoted by offering a free download of the first single "The Theory of Relativity" in exchange for signing up for the band's official e-mail list. The band's sixth studio album, The North, was released on Septemvia ATO Records.
It has been distributed worldwide via Vagrant Records. In Canada, the album was released via Soft Revolution, the band's own new label. In June, 2010 the band released their fifth studio album, The Five Ghosts. The CD was released worldwide in May, 2010. Stars have covered The Smiths' "Asleep" for American Laundromat Records' charity CD "Sing Me To Sleep - Indie Lullabies".
Their single "Celebration Guns" is the title song for the television series ZOS: Zone of Separation and was provided for free as part of a collaboration with Moms Against Climate Change.
On September 1, 2008, the band released the EP Sad Robots through their online store and also sold it during live shows. Millan has released two solo albums, Honey from the Tombs in 2006 and Masters of the Burial in 2009. Meanwhile, Campbell was also an active member of the band Memphis. It is a collection of interviews with the band and the band's close friends as well as live performances around the globe it was directed by Anthony Seck. The CD release included a bonus DVD, a film called "Are we here now". Other indie artists have been guest collaborators on many of their tracks, especially for an early period including the release of their first LP.Īnticipating that their album In Our Bedroom After the War would leak at some point between the final mixing and the official release, Stars was one of the first bands to make their album available in digital form the day after it was completed on July 10, 2007. They covered The Smiths' " This Charming Man" on 2001's Nightsongs and The Pogues' " Fairytale of New York" in 2005. Stars have cited a wide variety of musical influences ranging from Berlioz to Outkast, citing among others Paddy McAloon, New Order, The Smiths, Brian Wilson, and Momus. The record received good reviews, and, along with the band's live performances, established them on the national indie rock scene in Canada. It was recorded at Studio Plateau in Montreal and was produced by the band and Tom McFall. For a month and a half, the five of them lived together and wrote Set Yourself on Fire. Stars rented a house in the Eastern Townships in the middle of winter. Heart appeared on the !earshot National Top 50 chart in March, 2003, and won critical acclaim. While on their first North American tour together, Stars and Broken Social Scene shared and swapped members on a nightly basis. Heart was released on the new label Arts&Crafts, which also hosted their friends Broken Social Scene. In Montreal, they met Patrick Mcgee, who became their drummer. Cranley then recruited Amy Millan to be part of the band.Īfter a short stint in New York, the four musicians moved to Montreal and began to work on the second full-length album, Heart. When they began to do live shows, they called in Evan Cranley, a childhood friend, to play bass. Torquil Campbell and Christopher Seligman recorded the first Stars album Nightsongs in New York in 1999. All members of Stars grew up in Toronto, Ontario.