
Premiere: Feaster Shares New Video for “Eyes Wide”
Debut Album Big Super is Out Everywhere Now
May 29, 2026 Photography by Kate O'Hare
Earlier this month, Pennsylvania-based band Feaster shared their debut full-length album, Big Super. The rock outfit first began as an offshoot of Snacks Chapman, the previous band from founding members Jared Rodriguez and Ian Lozinski. After filling out the lineup with bandmates Chris Hranj (formerly of Save Face) and Andreas Constantinou (Zaku, Mountain Chiefs, Dead World), the band released their debut EP, Pearly Gates in 2024.
Big Super came together after a break-up for Rodriguez and a period of unemployment for Lozinski. During that time, Rodriguez moved in with Lozinski, giving them the space and patience to indulge in wiry, psych-tinged stylistic turns while letting the album come together at its own pace.
Today, following the album’s release, the band are sharing a new video for their track “Eyes Wide,” premiering with Under the Radar.
Feaster leans into their volatile creative chemistry with “Eyes Wide,” delivering a nervy track doused in tangled post punk guitar lines, a churning rhythm section, and wild hairpin turns. Meanwhile, Rodriguez’s vocals come out in pointed chants and anxious howls, playing into the instrumentation’s frayed mania. However, the track’s most magnetic moments come when the band locks into a propulsive groove or an otherworldly psychedelic rabbithole, playing off each other in unexpected aesthetic pivots. In these moments, the band can be blistering and off-kilter, but they always work together to electrifying effect.
The band’s dialed-in chemistry and trippy turns are both equally on display with the accompanying video, with it all culminating in a bloody finale. For the video, the band paired with director Connor Meany, alongside producer Hailey Suzanne Smith, director of photography Chris Lundy, gaffer Mike Yadvish, and colorist James Orr.
Meany says of the video, “Upon first hearing the track, I very quickly attached myself to the sonic journey it took me through. The band’s choice to present long instrumental displays, and pair it with a dynamic vocal performance, really made me feel as I was being taken along a trip, but wasn’t sure where.
I tried to carry this idea into the overall theme of the video. We utilized dramatic shifts in color and lighting throughout the presentation to, hopefully, engage the viewer with a sense of unsureness; but also adventure. It was also important for me to not focus too heavily on either the performance or narrative scenes of the video, but to blend them together and keep the journey connected.”
Feaster continues, saying, “We wanted to capture what the song meant to us. There’s these scenarios you can find yourself in when sleep is the furthest yet most crucial medicine needed. Ruminating thoughts…like unwanted bad party guests causing a racket…disturbing the peace and quiet needed to tune out and reset. That’s how we wanted this video to come across. The kidnapping and killing off 3/4 of the band was just some gratuitous gore. Fun secret about the video is that one of the extras we used was a relative of ours and was an extra on Happy Gilmore 2 the week before we filmed.”
Check out the song and video below. Big Super is out everywhere now.
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