Biggar and Rogers met in the early '80s and worked together in several bands in their youth, exploring underground sounds that as they developed their own noise. Before Major Stars, they worked with former Galaxie 500 members Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang in the short-lived space rock band Magic Hour. When Magic Hour disbanded in 1996, the two opened up the Twisted Village record store and label in Cambridge, Massachusetts and shortly afterwards started Major Stars. The band amplified the celestial fuzz of Magic Hour, injecting it with blazing guitar solos and a sometimes-sinister edge. The two guitarists were joined by bassist Tom Leonard and drummer Dave Lynch for the band's initial lineup, and their debut album, Rock Revival, was released on their Twisted Village label in 1998. Space/Time followed in 1999, and the bandmates spent the following two years recording their third effort, Distant Effects. The record was released in 2002 on the Virginia-based Squealer Music label; that same year, Major Stars toured alongside Japan's Acid Mothers Temple as an opening act and performed at the South by Southwest Festival in Austin, Texas. Touring wrapped up in May 2003 and a limited-edition split release with Comets on Fire entitled Live in Europa was released, bringing the band to the attention of new listeners. They decamped to a proper studio in New York to start work on their fourth album, the aptly titled 4. Lineup changes soon plagued the group, however. By the time 4 was released in spring 2005, Major Stars had lost one member (Lynch) and picked up three more (drummer Casey Keenan, bassist Dave Dougan, and vocalist Sandra Barrett), with previous bassist Tom Leonard opting to play guitar instead. The group soldiered on as a sextet, releasing Syntoptikon in 2006 and Mirror/Messenger in 2007. In 2010, Major Stars released their seventh album, Return to Form, on Drag City, followed by Decibels of Gratitude in 2012. Though the band toured consistently, they didn't issue another recording for four years. With Motion Set, issued in late 2016, they enlisted several singers to deliver Rogers' lyrics in the studio, including Hayley Thompson-King, who fronted the group for the album's first single "For Today." Three years later they returned with Roots of Confusion Seeds of Joy, another burning chapter of their ongoing work which featured new vocalist Noell Dorsey. Dorsey's harmonies brought a new color to the album but didn't take any space away from Biggar's and Rogers' time-honed guitar assaults. ~ Alex Henderson & Andrew Leahey, Rovi