All the world lay at your feet
Does it mean anything
Float a leaf upon the sea
And set off drifting
Octavian Winters turn their gaze upward on By the Stars, a swooning pop ballad that reveals the San Francisco band at its most lush and otherworldly. Released ahead of their appearance at Wave-Gotik-Treffen in Leipzig, and produced once again by William Faith, the single drifts away from the darker angles of Elements of Air into a slower, more spacious form of grandeur. The song moves as if carried by tide and starlight, with toms beating beneath luminous guitar lines and low, patient bass, each element arranged with the care of someone reading a map by candlelight.
Ria Aursjoen’s voice gives the track its immense vertical reach. She seems to draw its horizon wider with each phrase, rising from intimacy into something almost celestial. Around her, Stephan Bryan Salit’s guitar glows in long, fine arcs, Jay Denton’s bass supplies a deep undertow, and Randy Gzebb’s drumming keeps the song moving with the quiet insistence of oars against black water. In its soft majesty, By the Stars brings to mind Strange Boutique, Cocteau Twins, Enya, and a little Mazzy Star, though Octavian Winters treat those references as distant constellations rather than fixed coordinates.
“The song has the feel of a sea voyage,” says Ausjoen. “The images for me were always ones of the vastness of the sky and the sea, and the feeling of the magnificent beauty of the world. The call and answer vocals are like two people calling back and forth across a valley. It’s meant to encompass that feeling of transcendence when you take a meta view of life and of the natural world, and just fall into the beautiful patterns of it all.”
The lyrics look past worldly power toward the vast indifference and mercy of nature. Gold, bones, leaves, sea, stars, and northern lights become images of surrender, as if the self, stripped of possession and certainty, might find release in drifting. The song carries grief without turning heavy, placing human fracture against a sky too immense to answer back.
“The song is symmetrical in 3 parts that are about life stages,” Ausjoen explains. “In the first verse, it says “throw your gold into the sea and set off drifting”, in the middle it’s “float a leaf upon the sea and set off drifting’ and finally “throw your bones into the sea and set off drifting”. It’s about not being afraid, taking the next step, whether that’s when you are young and setting out on your path, or when you are older and shrug off other people’s opinions and follow your own way, or at the end of life when you drift away and let your spirit go.”
“I remember playing an all-ages show in Northern California, looked up mid-song and saw these two young goth girls at the front of the stage with tears streaming down their faces,” recalls drummer Randy Gzebb. “That moment told me everything I needed to know about ‘By the Stars’. You know a song matters when it reaches people like that.”
David Kruschke’s video extends that sense of transport into a strange, theatrical realm. Drawing from the expressionistic grammar of 1910s silent cinema, it begins in stark black and white, with a masked figure presiding over the frame like an antique omen. As the clip passes into full colour, the figure’s authority weakens, and the band appears suspended in another dimension, performing inside a vision where beauty outlasts fear.
Watch the video for By The Stars below:
Octavian Winters have built their reputation on tightly wrought songs that move from moonlit expanse to dark post-punk drive, matched by enveloping live performances. Their 2023 debut EP, The Line or Curve, now leads toward a William Faith-produced sophomore EP, following Wave-Gotik-Treffen and A Murder of Crows, with Absolution ahead.
Listen to By The Stars below and order the single here.
By The Stars by Octavian Winters
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The post San Francisco’s Octavian Winters Gaze Upon the Beauty of Life in Expressionist Video for “By The Stars” appeared first on Post-Punk.com.

