Night of the Worm Moon
Shana Cleveland has been beguiling listeners for
years in her role as the superlative frontwoman for elastic surf rockers La
Luz. Now Cleveland is evolving her sound on the new solo full-length Night of the Worm Moon, a serene album
that flows like a warm current while simultaneously wresting open a portal to
another dimension.
As much a work of California sci-fi as Octavia
Butler’s Parable novels, Night of the Worm Moon incorporates
everything from alternate realities to divine celestial bodies. Inspired in
part by one of her musical idols, the Afro-futurist visionary Sun Ra (the
album’s title is a tip of the hat to his 1970 release Night of the Purple Moon), the record blends pastoral folk with
cosmic concerns.
Cleveland dreamt up this premise while living in
Los Angeles, a city where–as deftly explored on La Luz’s recent Floating Features–reality and fantasy
casually co-exist. One particularly evocative scene laid the groundwork for Night of the Worm Moon’s psychedelic
undercurrents. As Cleveland tells it, “Shortly
after I moved to Los Angeles I went to a hip hotel to watch a poolside
screening of a documentary about a local alien-worshiping cult. Out front
celebrities were getting out of the backs of cars and rushing past autograph
hounds into some roped-off room where a secret dinner was about to commence. In
the lobby a woman was being paid to exist inside a glass box. [Then] a car
dressed as a spaceship pulled up in front to release 30 white doves into the sky
above Sunset Boulevard.”
Appropriately enough, Night of the Worm Moon was recorded
during a rare cosmic occurrence: 2017’s solar eclipse. “We took a break from recording during [the] totality
and looked at the sun’s image through a piece of cardboard projecting onto a
garbage can,” Cleveland says. “When we came back inside the studio was covered
in dozens of tiny crescent suns, refracted from a mirrored disco ball that
[engineer Johnny Goss] had hanging in a window.” Abetting Cleveland during the
recording process was a familiar gallery of co-conspirators:
multi-instrumentalist Will Sprott of Shannon & the Clams, original La Luz
bassist Abbey Blackwell, Goss, pedal steel player Olie Eshelman, and Kristian
Garrard, who drummed on Cleveland’s previous solo effort (with then-backing
band The Sandcastles), 2011’s Oh Man,
Cover the Ground.
But whereas that album was internal and contemplative, Night of the Worm Moon occupies a
different, vibrant kind of headspace. UFO sightings, insect carcasses, and
twilight dimensions are all grist for Cleveland’s restless creativity, and they
and other inspirations collide beautifully on the album’s 10 kaleidoscopic
tracks–a spacebound transmission from America’s weirdo frontier.