It's hard to live up to a name like theirs, and harder still to shine brightly for over fifteen years, but Stars have not only lost none of their shimmering allure - they've somehow turned an amorphous Canadian collective, on par and in cahoots with Broken Social Scene, into a consistently productive and evolving group. That's not to say the Toronto band hasn't encountered hardship and loss. In fact, a cancer diagnosis of their longtime manager and friend, Eoin O'Leary, spurred them to create the most defiantly celebratory album of their career. The truth about No One Is Lost is that we all actually are. Fortunately for us, though, Stars found their way to the KEXP studio to share a few ecstatic new songs, proving if we're going to get lost at all, it might as well be among Stars.
San Francisco’s Moon Duo once again light up the KEXP live room as they launch into their special psychedelic blend of astronomically awesome audio that is bound to elevate your mind into an altered consciousness. Casting some light on their newly released LP, Shadow of the Sun, the duo have built …
A "rain plan" is practically unknown in the Northwest. It rains here too frequently, but rarely fervently, for anyone to need that kind of contingency. Instead, for us rain plans are active ones, scenarios for doing and being. Maybe that's why Israel Nash's 2014 album, Rain Plans, gripped us so fir…