Named a top 100 SXSW Artist by NPR Music, Twin Cities based Collapsing Stars shaped their distinctive sound touring through the American West. In recent years they have blossomed into an internationally acclaimed touring act performing on global stages. Blending folk, blues and Americana sounds with beautifully interlaced cello and vocal harmonies, comparisons range from Iron & Wine and Gregory Al
an Isakov, to Nick Drake and early Bon Iver. When the pandemic shuttered music venues, they launched a web series titled Forest Folk Sessions – intimate acoustic performances in a breathtaking natural setting. Featured on NPR’s All Songs Considered, their sophomore album “Chapter” has received international critical acclaim. In the last few years they’ve toured internationally, earned producer credits on a record for Rhymesayers Entertainment, performed for over 120K people at Red Bull Crashed Ice, played the Sligo Live Festival in Sligo, Ireland, and Ruby Sessions in Dublin - a showcase graced by the likes of Ed Sheeran, Mumford and Sons, Hozier, Damien Rice and others. Their debut record titled ‘2012’ received critical acclaim including praise from Dan Wilson, the Semisonic frontman who has co-written songs for the Dixie Chicks, John Legend, Weezer, and Adele’s 2011 hit Someone Like You. They were named a top 100 SXSW artist by NPR Music out of 2000 showcasing acts, and in response to pandemic related touring restrictions, venue closures and cancellations in 2020 and 2021, the group launched a new web series titled Forest Folk Sessions - intimate acoustic performances in a breathtaking natural setting. Featured on NPR's All Songs Considered, their sophomore album “Chapter” is out now! Story
5 years ago Collapsing Stars frontman Justin Wayne Nelson quit his job, sold his very practical Honda Civic, bought a mini van and started touring the country with drummer Mike Langhoff. After 10 years of working a dead-end job, which Nelson refers to as his "lost decade," it was time for a change. In the years that followed, he earned producer credits on a record for Rhymesayers Entertainment, performed with Mike at the renowned Hotel Cafe in Los Angeles, and in 2016 played for over 120K people at Red Bull Crashed Ice (in a fake fur coat while fireworks shot out of his guitar). His Alt Folk group Collapsing Stars was selected as an official SXSW artist in 2018, and named a top 100 act to watch at SX by NPR Music. He rolled over in bed, his eyes still half shut. There was a new message from Dan Wilson. “The record sounds really good, and I love the artwork too.” “I wasn’t sure if I was awake or still dreaming, said Nelson. One of the most highly sought after songwriters in the world said that he liked some music that I wrote, which is extremely high praise coming from such an authoritative source.” The list of Wilson’s song writing credits is extensive. In addition to co-writing Adele’s Someone Like You, Wilson has written songs for Taylor Swift, Weezer, John Legend, and The Dixie Chicks, just to name a few.
2012
Collapsing Stars’ debut record 2012 is the culmination of an artistic process that took roughly four years, a process that at times wasn’t always smooth. “For the first time in my life, I was experiencing some sort of creative block while trying to compose lyrics,” said Nelson. “I thought that in time it would pass, but after close to a year without any tangible progress on our record, I knew that I needed help.” Nelson decided to reach out to national recording artist Jeremy Messersmith. “Jeremy is extraordinarily accomplished in his own right, but what people might not know is that he’s a Dan Wilson disciple. So I was the beneficiary of the wisdom and experience of two incredible songwriters. He walked me through his creative process and showed me some word exercises that helped break me out of my artistic paralysis. And a lot of the methodology he was passing along to me was stuff that he learned from Dan when he produced Jeremy’s second record, The Silver City.”
Nelson wrote the first verse of the title track “2012” on December 20th, 2012. It was the eve of the highly publicized (and widely misinterpreted) “Mayan Apocalypse,” the end-date of a 5,126-year-long cycle in the Mayan calendar. “It seems like every year, some fanatical group is predicting the end of the world, and I approached this prediction with the same indifference as all the others. But it piqued my curiosity so I decided to write a song about it. The first half of the song is in keeping with the doomsday theme, and I wrote it on the night of the 20th. I woke up the next morning, still breathing. No fire and brimstone. Everything was fine. Here I was, left with half a song to write and I wasn’t exactly sure how to finish it. But the more I thought about it, the more I began to realize that everything isn’t fine. There was no cataclysmic event that brought the world to an end that day, but you can’t turn on the tv or pick up a newspaper without being reminded of the countless existential threats that humanity faces. And there’s a feeling of helplessness as you watch social, political, and environmental stability erode. These themes inspired the material for the rest of the song, along with several others forming the body of work called 2012.”
"Collapsing Stars' languid folk songs are punctuated by forceful stabs of bluesy guitar — and, in the case of "The Storm," a few appropriate nature sounds. The effect can be whispery and beautiful, but the band's music maintains a welcome undercurrent of reflection, doubt and even dread." - Stephen Thompson, NPR Music
04/01/2026
One of my new hobbies is hunting for the best free campsites in National Forests. Our public lands are such a unique gift that most of us take for granted, I know I do. And they’re under constant threat from budget cuts and extraction industries who are one crypto bribe or ballroom donation away from getting whatever they want. I can’t tell you how many times I saw piles of trash that some as***le dumped in an otherwise pristine location. The park system just doesn’t have the resources to keep up.
This spot was a 15 minute drive to some of the best hiking in North Cascades National Park, the second least visited NP park in the U.S. (Really underrated if you ask me) 6 minute drive to a brewery. Mountain view. Free range cows! Good cell service so I could work. It was tough to leave. Looking forward to continuing the hunt for more spaces like this over the summer!
03/10/2026
01/02/2026
Brisbane is sold out!!! (10 tickets available at the door) Sydney only has 6 tickets left! I can’t thank yall enough for the support for our first Australian tour. This week has been full of reminders of why I loved living here. Grab our Sydney and Melbourne tickets in the link in bio before they sell out! We’ll see ya soon!