Stars

Seeing Stars
Another Indie Buzz Band Claims the World for Canada
By Andrew Clayman
Published (with edits) in The Scene (Cleveland), March 2008



Their name might seem more appropriate than presumptuous these days, but the Canadian indie outfit known as Stars clearly didn’t put much thought into search-engine optimization when they selected their handle. Type “Stars” into Google, and you might find more info about constellations and Dallas hockey teams than Toronto pop bands.

Then again, that may have been a part of the plan all along. Whether you’re looking for their Myspace page or trying to wrap your head around the tangle of personal and political conflict in their songs, Stars demand a little more attention than your average ‘80s revivalists. And they’ve gotten plenty of it lately, following in the footsteps of their Arts & Crafts labelmates Broken Social Scene and Feist by packing auditoriums across the globe and converting critics along the way.

It’s a level of success that’s been hard-earned for Stars’ frontwoman and rhythm guitarist Amy Millan. In the midst of a sold-out tour of Australia, she still seems in awe of it all.

“I never, ever get used to it,” she says. “When we play, and there are people in the audience singing the songs and spending their hard earned cash on coming to see us, I am blown away. Like right now, we’ve come across the world, and to sell out all these Australian shows-- it feels like a dream.”

Millan, 34, is a Toronto native who spent the better part of a decade trying to find her niche in the music biz. The journey took her to Los Angeles for a while in her early 20’s, but it wasn’t until she found her way back to Canada that things started to fall into place.

In Toronto, she fell in with a community of musicians who would soon be influencing the sound of indie rock the world over—though it was hardly a case of overnight rags to riches.

“We had many empty shows and years of empty pockets,” Millan says, “but we had all these bands-- Metric, the Dears, Broken (Social Scene)—all fighting the same fight. We would go lay in the park, drink cheap wine and find someone cute to make out with.”

Millan is still a member of the Broken Social Scene family, which has seemingly engulfed most of Ontario and Quebec. However, her ship to breakout stardom really came in when singer Torquil Campbell and keyboardist Chris Seligman recruited her to join Stars in 2001. Over the band’s subsequent four albums, her role has steadily grown, both as a dynamic lead vocalist and perfect foil to Campbell’s melodramatic Morrissey croon.

“They are my family and my best friends,” Millan says of her Stars bandmates, who also include bassist Evan Cranley and drummer Pat McGee. “We share a life together. I knew from our first rehearsal it was a special chemistry among us, and I feel very lucky that this group of people has had so much faith in me and my work. I trust them. That can be hard to find. We also know how to fight, which is one of the reasons we’re still a band. And we know how to party.”

It’s safe to assume the parties have become a little more lavish in recent years, as have Stars’ already highly ambitious studio productions. Last year, the band followed up their acclaimed 2005 album Set Yourself On Fire with the dramatic, theatrical In Our Bedroom After the War, which has notched indie hits with the infectious anthem “The Night Starts Here” and the Moz-like rocker “Take Me to the Riot.”

“I suppose it is the most ambitious record we’ve done,” Millan admits, “but I think to make a record of any sort is always a giant leap of faith. If you listen to our record Heart (2003), we didn’t have the budget we did for In Our Bedroom, but songs like “Time Can Never Kill the True Heart” were hugely ambitious, and we only had one mic to record everything on. Sometimes throwing money at something can make it sound bigger, but we always wanted to achieve that kind of sound, even when we had no money.”

As for translating In Our Bedroom’s complexities to the stage?

“We approach the songs from scratch when putting together a show,” Millan says. “They aren’t going to sound exactly like the record, but that’s a good thing. Why pay money to come see it live if it sounds exactly as it would on your couch? I call the live show ‘the ruckus.’ We exude a lot more energy than we do on record. It’s a celebration of all the hard work in the studio.”

While Stars’ sound is deeply rooted in the strangely free-spirited type of introspection that made legends of The Smiths, Millan is the magic bullet that gives them an undeniable style unto themselves. She is the voice and lyricist behind some of the band’s finest songs, including “Elevator Love Letter” and “Ageless Beauty,” and her ability to shift from punk spunkiness to jazzy seductiveness has drawn her favorable comparisons to two of her old Broken Social Scene sisters— Emily Haines (Metric) and Miss 1,2,3,4 herself, Feist.

“I remember meeting Leslie (Feist) working at a bar in downtown Toronto,” Millan says. “She had just self-released her record and wanted to know what to do next. That was ten years ago. What she did was work her ass off. She played and wrote and played and wrote and now she is playing arenas.”

While Feist is the undisputed queen of Canadian indie rock at the moment, her career arch has paralleled that of her friends Millan and Haines in many ways. All three have split their time between bands and solo projects, with Millan releasing her well-received country-folk effort Honey From the Tombs in 2006. Most importantly, all three women are still close friends, and at times, just a little competitive.

“With a grin, I say, oh yah, there’s healthy competition,” Millan laughs. “But it’s good for us. It makes us work harder. Before anyone knew about our bands, we were writing for each other. In the end, when things go well for someone-- like Feist’s four Grammy nods-- we are proud. When things aren’t going well for someone, we worry for them. The pride I carry is for my friends. I am amazed that this crew of gangly teenagers who grew up together, who wanted to travel the world playing music, has found the people out there who support it.”



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