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Artist Spotlight: Shana Cleveland

Shana Cleveland is a singer-songwriter, guitarist, and visual artist known both as the frontwoman of the surf rock band La Luz and for her softer, more haunted solo work. She grew up in Michigan and went to school in Chicago, but it wasn’t until she relocated to Seattle in her mid-20s that she started playing in bands. Since releasing her last solo album, 2019’s Night of the Worm Moon, Cleveland successfully underwent treatment for a breast cancer diagnosis and moved to rural California, where she lives with her partner, the multi-instrumentalist Will Sprott. On her mesmerizing third LP, Manzanita, which was written while Cleveland was pregnant and shortly following her son’s birth, we find her immersed in the almost psychedelic experience of new motherhood and the wilderness, keenly reflecting on their strange joys and mysteries. A springtime album of wondrous, surreal beauty, Manzanita anchors in Cleveland’s fingerpicked guitar style and hushed vocals, with layers of keyboards, upright bass, pedal steel, and drums wandering alongside her, at once ghostly and gentle. A sense of post-apocalyptic menace courses through the song ‘Gold Tower’, but it also reveals the album’s true nature, one of peaceful, loving surrender: “I want to be yours, totally.”

We caught up with Shana Cleveland for the latest edition of our Artist Spotlight series to talk about the making of Manzanita, parenthood, her connection to the natural world, and more.


In a statement accompanying the single ‘A Ghost’, you said that the album could be subtitled ‘What to Expect When You Are Open to the Mysteries of the Universe.’ Which is obviously meant to be cheeky, but the real irony is that you never know what to expect, and there’s no good way of packaging that.

Yeah, that’s the joke, right? It’s like, the more open you are, the more you realize you don’t know what’s going on. Pregnancy was a big awakening in that way for me. As an artist, I’ve been really driven to create and to tour – I don’t have a boss, so I have to sort of be my own boss and always put a little pressure on myself to get things done. And when I was pregnant, it was the beginning of starting to realize that I wasn’t in control as much as I thought I was, starting to relinquish control, and also let go of the idea of what was going on or what was going to happen in the future. I found that, as an artist, to be really freeing and a real relief, in a way. With this album, I wanted to pay tribute to that openness and the feeling of being not just okay with uncertainty, but really enjoying the uncertainty.

What implications did that freedom have, whether in your artistic life or more generally?

I don’t know, I think I’m still figuring it out. I’ve always been interested in mystery – when I go to an art museum, I’m really attracted to paintings that I don’t understand. When I read poetry, I don’t want to try and understand it. I really enjoy just taking something in and seeing how it sits, not worrying about trying to figure it out. That’s why those particular lessons of pregnancy resonated with me so much; I think I was already interested in that. To actually experience it and not just have it be an idea, to actually be out of control, and to have this giant mystery – pregnancy is so interesting, because we can kind of say what’s going on with so many things that happen in our lives, and nobody knows what’s happening with pregnancy. Is it gonna be a boy or a girl? Is it gonna come out with all its fingers and toes? Is it gonna come out at all? Is it gonna work, you know? [laughs]And then, what’s that person going to be like?

I was just excited by this feeling that I could exist in the mystery a little bit more. That’s reality – there’s this illusion that we’re in control of things, and the reality is that everything’s kind of like pregnancy. We don’t actually know where we’re going to be tomorrow and what’s going to happen. In a way, that was sort of comforting. It was a step towards feeling more comfortable with the idea of death, which makes it more exciting to be alive.

Being confronted with the weight of that reality, did you find it challenging to then channel that into your creative process? Was it different from other things you’ve gravitated to songwriting-wise?

I’m not sure if the process was different. I feel like my process has always been to sort of let go of control. When I was younger, I studied the Surrealists and was really interested in the way that they were trying to let go of their conscious mind, to tap into the unconscious as a source of inspiration. To me, that just made a lot of sense. I feel like I’ve been doing that for a long time, just trying to get to a state where I’m not as critical. I feel like I’ve never written a good song when I was in a critical mindset or overthinking mindset. I won’t labour over a song; it feels like if it’s being laboured over, it’s probably not working or not true.

Manzanita revolves around the natural world, and you’ve also called it “a supernatural love album.” It seems like you were especially aware of the permeable boundaries between the natural and the supernatural.

Yeah, I feel like the closer attention I pay to nature, the stranger and more mysterious – I mean, to me, it feels psychedelic, because I don’t know what’s going on out there. [laughs] I think if I watch one thing closely for a long time in nature, it will always do something surprising, and it will always show me something I haven’t seen before. Living in a city, you don’t really ever have much of a chance to pay that close attention, and that’s something I’ve enjoyed out here, having this slow pace where I’m able to look deeper at the natural world.

There’s definitely a lot of watching and observing on this album. In an interview around the release of Night of the Worm Moon, you said you wanted your next solo record to be just guitar and vocals, but of course you do have a band playing with you on Manzanita. I feel like if it were a more traditional guitar-vocals album, one would get the sense that you’re more just an observer, but with the way that all the instruments weave together, it’s more like you’re a part of that beauty, participating in it. I don’t know if that was part of the intention.

Yeah, it was. That’s great to hear. I still want to make a record like that, just because I love records like that, just vocals and guitar. But I think that these songs felt just so set in a natural environment because I wrote them outside, and they were so inspired by these surroundings that it didn’t feel right to not try to create that atmosphere in some way. We bought all these other instruments in, but it was always with the intention of painting that backdrop, having them be more abstract. Like, there’s a pedal steel, but I think that it’s more atmospheric than country-western. There’s an upright bass, and sometimes the upright bass is doing the exact same thing as the synthesizer.

Sometimes it’s almost like the pedal steel, upright bass, and synths are all walking together, and one of my favorite songs in that respect is ‘Gold Tower’, which builds to this heartfelt declaration: “If I let you down, bury me to the ground.” What went into the making of that track?

That song was one I wrote while I was pregnant, and I feel like there’s a lot of dynamic between the verses and the chorus of that song, because it’s this very gentle, almost like I’m singing to myself on the verses. I had just read The Time Machine by H.G. Wells, which I’d never read before. It felt so interesting to me to read science fiction out here in the wilderness. It just felt like it could be real. I thought: This could be set here. Without any buildings or humans, you can sort of imagine anything happening. I was a bit haunted by that book while I was writing that song. The gold tower was sort of an imaginary science fiction thing in the distance of, like, my yard. [laughs] Singing to my son when he was still in utero, I wanted to chorus to kind of feel like science fiction, because that’s where my head was at. There’s a lot of buzzing, sizzling synth noises. I wanted this declaration of love in the face of total uncertainty, just saying “I’ll die for you” to this person that you’ve never seen before. I thought that that moment should feel strange and a bit surreal, because it felt like: Why do I feel like I’m ready to give everything to this invisible being? That, to me, seemed so in line with fantasy and science fiction.

The songs on side A were written before your son was born, and the ones on side B were written shortly after, but that strange feeling doesn’t seem to go away.

Yeah. I think of the song ‘Babe’. When I wrote that song, with the lyrics, I wanted it to feel almost like a horror film at first. Just talking about, you know, “I’m watching you.” But that feeling in the back of my head went from science fiction to horror, I think, after he was born. [laughs] I was like, This amount of love is actually terrifying. That was the genre switch in my mind.

Side B also struck me as somewhat quieter and more solitary. Is that in line with your headspace at the time?

It makes sense that it would sound like that. Those songs on side B, I mean, I was more alone, even though I was surrounded by people. It was such a strange time because me and my partner, Will, had just moved out to the country fairly recently, and I didn’t really know many people in town. He was on tour often outside of the country, all the time it felt like, while I was pregnant. That feeling of being alone and pregnant – it just really felt like I was able to connect with nature in a way that felt really meaningful to me. There was sort of this weird comfort in pregnancy of just walking around with this other person all the time. [laughs] I really did enjoy that. People on the street would be like, “Looking good!” People give this esteem to pregnant women sometimes. It almost felt like being taken out of society and put into this other place where I felt less lonely. I felt like I could be whoever I wanted to be and everybody was just like, “You’re doing great.” And then after you have your baby, you’re just kind of thrust back into the world of the individual again.

It’s interesting that your partner, Will, who was away for a lot of the writing of the album, also plays throughout it. Even though the songs come from this place of aloneness, there is a sense of companionship in the music, and even moments that are directly about that companionship, like ‘Faces in the Firelight’.

I feel like there’s always two stages to the writing process for me. I love to write alone, and then it’s great to take it to other people. And Will’s always the first person that I take my songs to when I’m ready. But I sort of have to get to the point where I feel like they’re done before I’ll even play them for him. There’s that solitary process, and then there’s the collaborative process, which is much shorter, because working with Will is so intuitive. We just know each other so well that he just understands the songs. And especially writing songs that are so personal – even though he wasn’t physically there for a lot of the time I was writing the songs, I was talking to him every day. We’ve just been together for so long that it’s just an easy collaboration. And with the other musicians, it’s similar – it’s not as intimate, but I’ve worked with everyone else who plays on the album for like a decade in various capacities. With Will I’ll work a little bit longer, but in the studio, everyone’s hearing the songs for the first time and playing really intuitively. I feel like that has always worked really well for this music.

On ‘Ten Hour Drive Through West Coast Disaster’, you ask, “Will you find a way to love this world?” It’s one of those lines that’s addressed to your son, but I’m curious if, inevitably, you’re also asking that question for yourself.

I feel like I ask myself that every day. I think that when you’re a parent, especially of a child so young – I’m sure that this relaxes at some point down the road – you’re completely focused on this kid. Like, there’s this delicious treat that you can have and there’s only one of them, you’re gonna give it to the kid. You’re not gonna eat it yourself. And that’s a really new experience in my life. I feel like I’ve been me-focused for my entire life. [laughs] I don’t have any siblings. I just have been really focused on myself. One of the great awakenings of having a kid was realizing that it was possible to feel that way about another human being. To think about their needs and their quality of life before mine. So, I don’t know if I thought about that for myself at that time. I really was just focused on him, but I do feel that way as well. I do have that same question.

You must get asked about how your process differs from album to album, from working with a band to working solo. But with Manzanita, it’s impossible not to talk about a shift in your whole philosophy and lifestyle as a result of that experience.

Yeah, that’s what this record is. That’s why I wanted to lean into it being almost a concept album about pregnancy and birth. There’s a couple songs on the record that aren’t about my son, but only a couple. It just felt like such a powerful time, and I was interested in what it would be like to really put my focus there and not cast as wide a net as I might usually do for a record’s source material.

Having had some space from the album, what would you say are the secrets or lessons you took from this process?

The realization that I am of nature, not just in nature. And that – I feel like it sounds so cheesy – but I’ve just been so obsessed with love since the time that I was writing these songs. Just feeling like that is the most important thing, and the place where I want to put my focus. I think I have a greater capacity for love, and not just love for my son, but for people – it just gives you so much more empathy, becoming a parent, if you’re open to it. I’m sure it doesn’t do that for everybody, but for me, it’s like an explosion of empathy.


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

Shana Cleveland’s Manzanita is out now via Hardly Art.

Phoenix and Clairo Team Up for New Version of ‘After Midnight’

Phoenix have enlisted Clairo for a new version of their Alpha Zulu song ‘After Midnight’. Listen to the remix below.

“We’ve loved Claire since day 1,” Phoenix remarked in a statement. “What a treat it is to have her sing with us! We hope you’ll enjoy it as much as we do.”

Clairo added, “I’ve been a massive fan of Phoenix for as long as I can remember, and I’m very grateful that they asked me to sing on this remix.”

Alpha Zulu, Phoenix’s seventh studio album, came out in November. Clairo released her sophomore album, Sling, in 2021.

Alison Goldfrapp Announces Debut Solo Album, Releases New Song

Alison Goldfrapp has announced her debut solo album: The Love Invention will come out on May 12 via Skint/BMG Music. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the new song ‘So Hard So Hot’, which follows recent collaborations with Claptone (‘Digging Deeper’) and Paul Woolford (‘Fever’). Solo versions of those tracks will appear on the LP, while the collaborative versions will be included in the expanded edition. Listen to ‘So Hard So Hot’ below and scroll down for album artwork and tracklist.

The Love Invention Cover Artwork:

The Love Invention Tracklist:

1. NeverStop
2. Love Invention
3. Digging Deeper Now
4. In Electric Blue
5. The Beat Divine
6. Fever
7. Hotel (Suite 23)
8. Subterfuge
9. Gatto Gelato
10. So Hard So Hot
11. SLoFLo

Jack White Shares Tribute to Meg White After Viral Tweet Calling White Stripes Drummer “Terrible”

Jack White has taken to social media to respond to a viral tweet posted by journalist Lachlan Markay calling Meg White a “terrible” drummer. On Instagram, White posted a picture of White along with an original poem, which reads:

To be born in another time,
any era but our own would’ve been fine.
100 years from now,
1000 years from now,
some other distant, different, time.
one without demons, cowards and vampires out for blood,
one with the positive inspiration to foster what is good.
an empty field where no tall red poppies are cut down,
where we could lay all day, every day, on the warm and subtle ground,
and know just what to say and what to play to conjure our own sounds.
and be one with the others all around us,
and even still the ones who came before,
and help ourselves to all their love,
and pass it on again once more.
to have bliss upon bliss upon bliss,
to be without fear, negativity or pain,
and to get up every morning, and be happy to do it all again.

III

Questlove also weighed in on the controversy, writing, “I try to leave ‘troll views’ alone but this right here is out of line af. Actually what is wrong w music is people choking the life out of music like an Instagram filter —trying to reach a high of music perfection that doesn’t even serve the song (or music). This is why I walk that Dilla path and play like a drunken sloppy af amateur because them flaws is the human element in music that is missing. Real film >>>>>>> IG filter photo.”

Jack White‘s ex-wife Karen Elson commented: “Not only is Meg White a fantastic drummer, Jack [White] also said the White Stripes would be nothing without her. To the journalist who dissed her, keep my ex husband’s ex wife name out of your f*cking mouth. (Please and Thank You)”

Markay has since issued an apology to White and walked back his comments. “By now you’ve probably seen an ill-advised (and since-deleted) tweet I sent out yesterday about the White Stripes and Meg White,” he said on Twitter. “It was an over-the-top take on TWS and White as a drummer, and was, let’s face it, just truly awful in every way. Petty, obnoxious, just plain wrong.” He added:

I don’t know if Meg White herself saw that tweet. I hope not, because I imagine it wouldn’t feel great to see a stranger dumping on you like that. So to Meg White: I am sorry. Really. And to women in the music business generally, who I think are disproportionately subject to this sort of shit, I am sorry to have fed that as well. I’m really going to try to be more thoughtful in the future, both on here and off.

“I’ve been thinking to myself as all this—again, completely justified—hate comes in over the last 24 hours: why did I actually write that? It’s not what I really think, and I like to think I’m not the asshole it made me out to be, or at least I try not to be.

I think the answer, in part, is that sort of vicious sniping is something that we—us online folks—tend to reward with eyes and clicks. And I think I got caught up in that implicit incentive structure with a needlessly inflammatory, downright mean, and most importantly false take.

The White Stripes are among this year’s nominees for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Jack White (@officialjackwhite)

Isabella Lovestory Shares Video for New Song ‘Latina’

Isabella Lovestory has unveiled a new single called ‘Latina’. It arrives with an accompanying video co-directed with Hugo Matula, which you can check out below.

According to Lovestory, ‘Latina’ is “a song about the empowerment of being Latina, as well as redefining the nuance of this empowerment. Tongue-in-cheek and playful, it’s a song that celebrates being Latina without being cliche and ‘dove commercial’ about it. It’s a commentary on the tokenizing of latinidad, reclaiming the uniqueness and poignancy of every experience each Latina has.”

Isabella Lovestory released her debut LP, Amor Hardcore, last year.

Shelly Fairchild and Shamir Cover Loretta Lynn’s ‘Fist City’

Nashville musician Shelly Fairchild has teamed up with Shamir for a cover of Loretta Lynn’s 1968 track ‘Fist City’. It comes along with a video shot at Lynn’s Ranch in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. Check it out below.

“I was scheduled to record at Blackbird Studios in Nashville with Blackbird Academy students, and as I was driving to the studio for my second day of tracking, I got a text that said Loretta had passed,” Fairchild explained in a statement. “Her music changed the face of Country for women. She wrote about what she was living, and she did not apologize.”

Shamir added: “The music of Loretta Lynn has always been a source of comfort. My love of country first began when I got my first radio when I was 9 years old. Every Sunday morning my local country station would play classic country and oldies, of course Loretta’s music was frequently played. The cherry on top of it all was being able to shoot in Hurricane Mills – it was incredible to see all her awards and collectibles.”

Xylouris White Share New Single ‘Long Doll’

Xylouris White, the duo of Jim White and George Xylouris, have shared the latest preview of their upcoming album, The Forest in Me. It’s called ‘Long Doll’, and it follows the previously shared tracks ‘Latin White’ and ‘Red Wine’. Check out its accompanying visual, directed by Lisa Little and Dee Hannan, below.

The Forest in Me is due for release on April 14 via Drag City.

Jesus Piece Release New Song ‘Silver Lining’

Jesus Piece have dropped a new single called ‘Silver Lining’. It’s the latest offering from their upcoming album …So Unknown, following the previously released ‘An Offering to the Night’, ‘Gates of Horn’, and ‘Tunnel Vision’. The song was inspired by vocalist Aaron Heard’s son. Check it out below.

…So Unknown is set for release on April 14 via Century Media.

Watch the Trailer for New Little Richard Documentary ‘I Am Everything’

Magnolia Pictures has unveiled the official trailer for Little Richard: I Am Everything, a new documentary that focuses on the iconic rock n’ roll musician. Check it out below.

According to a press release, the Lisa Cortés-film “tells the story of the Black queer origins of rock n’ roll, exploding the whitewashed canon of American pop music to reveal the innovator – the originator – Richard Penniman. Through a wealth of archive and performance that brings us into Richard’s complicated inner world, the film unspools the icon’s life story with all its switchbacks and contradictions. In interviews with family, musicians, and cutting-edge Black and queer scholars, the film reveals how Richard created an art form for ultimate self-expression, yet what he gave to the world he was never able to give to himself.”

Your Ultimate Guide to Catching Up on Your Favorite TV Shows

Do you feel like you’ve missed out on the latest episodes of your favorite TV shows? Are you stuck trying to catch up on all the plotlines, characters, and storylines from a show that has already been running for years?

Don’t worry – catching up on your favorite TV shows doesn’t have to be an impossible task. With some careful planning, dedication, and a few helpful tips, it is possible to get caught up with even the most complex series quickly and easily.

So if you’re ready to dive into your favorite show again, let’s get started!

Use a VPN to Bypass Geo-Restrictions and Access More Content

A VP stands for a virtual private network; it can protect your sensitive information from hackers and malicious activity. However, if you want to watch your favorite TV shows without having to worry about geo-restrictions, then using the top VPNs for Nvidia Shield TV, or whichever platform you’re using, is the way to go. A VPN will allow you to confidently bypass geographic restrictions by routing your IP address through a secure tunnel.

This secure tunnel connects and encrypts all of your available streaming services into one accessible portal so that no matter where in the world you are located, you’ll have plenty of options at your fingertips! 

Not only will a VPN keep your device secure and hidden from hackers and surveillance, but it will also give you access to more external content than ever before.

Stream on Multiple Devices to Get the Most out Of Your Subscription

If you have fallen behind on your favorite television shows, don’t worry! There are lots of ways to quickly get caught up. 

One great way is to take advantage of streaming services available for most major networks. Many subscriptions allow you to access content across multiple devices, including:

  • TVs
  • Tablets
  • Phones

This can be beneficial when it comes to catching up, as you’ll never miss an episode, no matter where you are. Streaming allows you to optimize your viewing experience and watch all the episodes in a series while conveniently continuing with the rest of your life at the same time!

 

Take Advantage of Streaming Services that Offer Free Content

If you love binge-watching your favorite series, streaming services are the way to go. With more and more options available that don’t require a subscription, you can finally catch up on all those must-watch shows! 

Take the time to explore different platforms and find out which ones offer the content you like, as some even allow watching classic shows and movies with no strings attached. From classics like Friends to modern favorites such as The Crown, make sure to try out streaming services if you haven’t already!

Watch Movies and Tv Shows in Batches Over a Weekend or Two

When you have five seasons of a show to catch up on, the task may seem daunting. To make it more manageable and enjoyable, try watching them in batches over a weekend or two with friends or family! 

Not only is this an exciting way to watch TV and movies, but it allows each viewer to appreciate the subtle nuances that individual episodes can bring to an overall narrative—scenes that stand out more when you’re watching multiple episodes back-to-back. 

Plus, having someone else’s commentary could make for some lively discussion afterward. 

Who knows, maybe you’ll end up loving the show even more than if you’d spaced out your viewing one episode per night. Get the popcorn ready and start streaming!

Keep Tabs on Upcoming Episodes and Use Calendars or Apps

Have you been wanting to catch up on your favorite TV shows but don’t know where to start? Have no fear, it’s important to have a plan of attack when tackling the huge list of shows that await you. 

To get started, keep track of new episodes as they come out, and make sure to add upcoming releases to your calendar or phone app. That way, you won’t miss an episode! 

Just like that, you can get caught up in no time and continue watching the newest seasons with everyone else. 

Catch Up on Your TV Shows Today

Catching up on your favorite TV shows doesn’t have to be a daunting task. With the right tools and strategies, you can easily stay in sync with all the latest episodes

Streaming services give you plenty of options for free content and watching multiple devices at once so that no episode slips away unnoticed! 

Don’t forget about setting reminders for upcoming releases by adding them to calendars or phone apps—this will help keep track of new seasons without any hassle. 

So what are you waiting for? Get out there today and start catching up on those must-watch tv shows!