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Like any artist, the Oklahoma City based band Thirteen Stars has been through
their share of styles, sounds and phases only to emerge more mature and tighter
than before. This is none more evident than on their newest release, These
Places which proves with Thirteen Stars, growing up is a very good thing.
Visit 13 Stars at MySpace here:
http://www.myspace.com/thirteenstars

Produced, in part, by Trent Bell (The Flaming Lips, Starlight Mints) and
mastered by George Geurin (The Polyphonic Spree, Flickerstick) These Places
continues on the path of evolution for the band. The record flirts with darker
melodies and added instrumentation, but still shows the bands ability to produce
well crafted pop songs. “This record has much more going on: keyboards, acoustic
guitars, and more. We wanted to do things we weren’t able to do in the past,”
says Scott.
The intense rocker “Failing Upwards” leads off the EP in a straight rock ‘n’
roll minimalist fashion. The catchy hooks in “Afterglow” and “The Story” follow
as the band delves into a recurring theme found through out their albums; the
tangles of love and relationships. The slow, dreamy “Secrets We Keep” finds a
similar narrative (“Does tomorrow have to follow today / When we both know what
it all holds now”) as the band experiments with new sounds on the track. The
record ends with the dark and jangly “These Places,” an ode to small town
beginnings.
When it came time to name the new EP, These Places proved to be an easy title
for the new disc. After 350 plus shows in nine states the band has more than
seen their share of interesting places, seedy hotels, shady people and
everything in between. But this philosophy of regional touring has helped them
gain many loyal fans in the southwest region and has allowed the band to play
alongside many nationally known artists such as Maroon 5, Dishwalla, Fastball,
The All-American Rejects and Blue October.

Of course the shows weren’t always of that caliber back in 1999 when the core of
Thirteen Stars, singer Scott Starns and bassist Annatomik, met through an ad in
a local newspaper. They quickly released their debut album “The Nova Project” in
2000. From there a few lineup changes ensued; guitarist Jason Deal was added in
2001 and drummer Mike Mosteller replaced the band’s previous drummer in 2003
bringing the band to its current state.
The months ahead look promising for Thirteen Stars, with more regional touring
to support These Places and more songwriting to supplement the ever changing set
list. “We are always writing new songs. It can only go further and it can only
get better. I hope everyone’s ready because we are,” says Jason. It seems with a
little help, Thirteen Stars may be getting out of “these places that we’ve
known” sooner than they think.
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