In late 2007, friends Michael Gooden and Jon Cook decided to focus and change directions from previous musical attempts and formed Shapes Stars Make. "Shapes Stars Make sound exactly the way you would expect a band with this name to sound like. The music is airy with gentle flickers that light up small and large. The music consumes the listener like the lights in the night sky and lets you dream out loud." (AbsolutePunk)
Shapes Stars Make crafts emotionally-rich indie rock, heavy in post-rock influence. The band's songs are well-crafted harmonies that balance beautifully layered melodies and lyrics. In January 2008, Shapes Stars Make recorded their debut album with Producer/Engineer John Congleton (The Appleseed Cast, Explosions in the Sky, This Will Destroy You). The self-titled album was recorded and mixed during six rainy and cold days in Texas.
"Evident on the band's debut EP is a sound unique in its atypical condensation of genre techniques. Where as most indie bands experimenting with post-rock textures tend to develop around mellow, restrained build-ups and finishes, Shapes Stars Make represents six tracks equally gentle and melodic as they are massive in volume."(The Neo-Surrealist Movement)
really glad you guys found a drummer! i'll be in touch with you this fall. i may be in a position on campus activities board to be directly in charge of booking bands.
yah, i was nosing about and found your blog about your finger - that seriously stinks man. hope it gets healed up so you guys can hit the scene again. how's stevie?
Cheers lads for the request. You have some great musical influences there and 6 days of rain to keep you in the studio recording. Sounds great! Steve NZ
just downloaded your album from itunes for some reason post rock bands from texas keep adding me lol and each time i listen to their music its awesome great album keep it up and keep me updated =] x
I have your EP, I really dig it, in fact I should probably put you in my top friends. I was wondering though - you seem to have two guitar parts playing in most of your tracks and both of them seem fairly integral to the songs - how do you get around this live?