An Interview With Surf Noir Quartet La Luz's Frontwoman Shana Cleveland

It seems like something dark and catastrophic always happens right before surf-noir quartet La Luz records an album. Before the first album, it was a mass shooting in Seattle. Before the second album, it was a catastrophic car accident on a highway whilst the band was on tour. All of this misfortune, perhaps melded with the dark overcastness of the Pacific Northwest, gives the band a murderous and deliciously baleful sound. Just take the track Oranges off their newly released album entitled Weirdo Shrine, which was produced by the lo-fi, garage funk master, Ty Segall, in a surf shop in San Dimas. The song, which was inspired by a deeply haunting poem by the suicided beat poet Richard Brautigan, starts off with a fuzzy guitar riff that sends a dagger through your spleen and then, as the blood seeps out, becomes an instrumental ballad that is the perfect soundtrack for a homicide in the coolest spy film youโ€™ve never seen. All in all, though, the entire record reminds you of some of the greatest from Spector, but remains contemporary in its beauty โ€“ the bandโ€™s harmonies and lead vocalist Shana Clevelandโ€™s voice is near angelic. Autre got a chance to ask Shana a few questions about the band, the accident, and their collaboration with Ty Segall.   

Oliver Kupper: How would you describe the sound of La Luz? A lot of press releases have described it as surf noir. Is this accurate?

Shana Cleveland: I like the surf noir description. Itโ€™s a description that a friend who used to work at Hardly Art came up with. When a lot of people hear the term โ€œsurf rock,โ€ they think of the Beach Boysโ€”something light, or party music. It seems nicely clarifying to add โ€œnoir.โ€ It hints at the fact that thereโ€™s something darker at play than simply cars and girls. I donโ€™t know how to describe itโ€”thatโ€™s the best description.

OK: Did you naturally arrive at the sound?

SC: Itโ€™s just what came out. When we started the band, the idea was to have a lot of vocal harmonies. I wanted to see more rock bands that had soul-influenced vocal harmonies. We also wanted to incorporate the surf-guitar sound. That was intentional. The โ€œnoirโ€ part is just what came when writing the music.

OK: Did you grow up in Seattle? It seems like a far stretch from the world of those classic surf-guitar riffs.

SC: I actually grew up in Michigan, which is even farther away from any sort of coast. I started listening to surf rock when I moved to Seattle. I saw this band that could more aptly be described as โ€œsurf noir.โ€ They were a super dark, experimental, instrumental surf band. They were playing at a house party, and everyone was dancing. It was one of the first times I had ever been to a show where people were having so much fun. It made a big impression on me. I started listening to more surf rock. I learned to play songs by The Ventures.

OK: Whatโ€™s unique about Seattle is that you can do thatโ€”go into an abandoned building or someoneโ€™s grandmaโ€™s house and play music. Have you noticed that?

SC: Those places are always appearing and disappearing. Iโ€™ve lived in Seattle for ten years now. I donโ€™t think any of the same DIY spots that were open when I moved here are still around. But there are always new ones cropping up. Where I live, in the University district, thereโ€™s a lot of that. There are so many kids; there are so many new bands. Itโ€™s inevitable that people are going to find crazy new places to have shows.

OK: Did you grow up in a musical environment? Did you know that you wanted to play music?

SC: Yeah. My parents are both musicians, and all of their friends are musicians. Plus, Iโ€™m an only child. I was always surrounded by musicians and hanging out at shows. At the time, I found it super boring. But when I was old enough, I gravitated towards it.


"If the accident made any influence on the feeling of the album, it was from how close weโ€™ve become as a band."


OK: The accident seemed to have a major shift in the band, especially in the sound. Can you talk about how that changed the direction of the band?

SC: Itโ€™s hard for me to see. Itโ€™s definitely in there, but not obviously or literally. There is a heavy mood that is hovering over things. But I also think that in the first album there is a lot of that as well, so itโ€™s hard for me to tell how much the accident had direct influence. I was dealing with some pretty heavy stuff when the first record came out. There was a mass shooting in Seattle, in a place where a lot of my friends hung out. Ultimately, itโ€™s hard to say. If we made another album, and we had a great year leading up to it, we would still probably come up with something dark. If anything, it made us closer. In the last year, weโ€™ve spent so much time together. Weโ€™ve been touring constantly. We recorded Weirdo Shrine at Ty Segallโ€™s house in LA, and we left immediately from there on another month-long tour. If the accident made any influence on the feeling of the album, it was from how close weโ€™ve become as a band.

OK: You recorded at a surf shop in San Dimas?

SC: Yeah. That was a happy accident. We were supposed to be recording at Tyโ€™s new studio, but we couldnโ€™t. At the last minute, we had to find a new place. His friend, Tyler, owns a surfboard company called Year One Boards. He offered his space, and a bunch of people from Tyโ€™s band came to help move all this big, analog equipment into the surf shop. It was actually a great place to record. It was a big room with a lot of possibilities for mic placement and manipulation of the sound.

OK: There is a serious rawness to the album.

SC: Yeah, thatโ€™s definitely Tyโ€™s influence. His idea was to make it feel alive, to capture the energy of live shows.

OK: How did you meet Ty Segall? 

SC: We opened for him in Portland. We really wanted to play with him. Afterwards, he approached us with a lot of excitement for the band. Even after that show, he said, โ€œYeah, letโ€™s go on tour together.โ€ I was like โ€œYeah, sure, buddy.โ€ About a year after that, sure enough, we went on tour with him. In the meantime, I wrote to him and asked if he had any suggestions of whom we should record with. I really liked the way all of his recordings sound. And he said, โ€œYou should just record with me.โ€ It worked out really well. On the tour, he got to hear a lot of the songs we had been working on. He was really familiar with them by the time we got to the studio.

OK: So, whatโ€™s next for La Luz?

SC: Thereโ€™s a big change coming, but we havenโ€™t talked about it publicly yet. We have a lot of stuff in mind. For the next month and a half or so, weโ€™ll be on tour in Europe. Iโ€™m going to stay and travel around with Shannon and the Clams doing merch. Iโ€™m hoping to find some time to write more music. Weโ€™re working all the time. Iโ€™d like to get the next album out as soon as possible, but I have to start writing it first.


You purchase/download La Luz's new album Weirdo Shrine here. Keep up to date with current shows here. Text and interview by Oliver Maxwell Kupper. Follow Autre on Instagram: @autremagazine


Seattle's La Luz play their hit song "You Disappear" for the Ethnic Cultural Hour. Things get weird.