within “with” me: stacey rozich the morning after

May 3, 2013 in event reviews

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If the planets align just right, then the title of this article will generate some interesting google search hits on Stacey’s name.

How many of us can say that we have a favorite… anything. Say it definitively, our hearts full of conviction, without doubt and the belief that it’s not just a passing fancy? As I sit here right now I can’t pin down a favorite movie, band, song, or food.  I can’t agree on my favorite book, television show, restaurant, or even hairstyle.  Try it, and be honest.  It’s not as easy as you think.  Which is why when I say that Stacey Rozich is not only one of my favorite people, but my favorite artist, you understand that I mean it.

Last night I had the pleasure of attending Stacey’s latest gallery show: Within Without Me,  at Roq La Rue in Pioneer Square.  It’s been almost a year since her last opening in Seattle, The Last Wave, and with Stacey’s work a year is a long time.

The Last Wave presented us with a hipster culture take on her familiar themes of folkloric people, beasts, and animals.  She incorporated modern accessories, shoes, cigarettes, beer cans, clothing and narratives.  There was still that familiar mythical whimsy, but these scenes had the feeling of a delightful fever dream, or perhaps an acid trip that was slowly melting your consciousness into a bubbling puddle on the floor.

A year later, the work continues to evolve, in a way that was so perfectly designed. More so than ever before I felt that Stacey had really hit on the emotional core of her characters and her scenes.  The narrative storyline of the paintings affected me far more than I expected, they were funny, they were scary, they were quaint, they were heart breaking.  Particularly affecting was,  The Cause Was Never Clear, which depicted her masked characters holding the limp body of a dead child, a backpack and pair of binoculars lay on the ground, a menacing murder of crown hovers above, one picking at the child’s sock.

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Innocent moments turn sinister, evil is always lurking behind a couch, bush, or wall, and seemingly looking over all is a god like figure who commands his children.  Death seemed to play a strong role, as a terrifying unknown, as a humorous dismantling of life, and in all it’s delicate beauty.

Then you have the intricately designed patterns that adorn her subjects.  When I interviewed Stacey she explained to me how easily she can get lost in these patterns.  The design is so intricate and detailed that she loses hours in a characters shirt.

My favorite painting of the night was Bad Dudes Bad Dudes. An intimidating quintet of masked dudes gambling and brandishing wicked looking gardening tools.  But each has a superbly detailed pattern on their outfit, some of the most intricate I’ve ever seen from her.

Perhaps from the first time I laid eyes upon the cover for the Curious Mystery’s We Creeling I knew that Stacey Rozich was my favorite artist.  It’s like someone made a checklist of all the things I love and generated those letters into beautifully rendered paintings.  Within Without Me is an outstanding collection of new work that breaks new ground for Stacey.  If you missed it last night, don’t worry.  You can stop by and see it until June 1st.

stacey rozich ~ within without me

April 24, 2013 in events

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Since Secretly-Important began a couple years back, I’ve interviewed more than a dozen artists from various mediums.  Many of these artists were well established, others were on the cusp of reaching recognition.  Every single guest is someone who I respect deeply and admire, but the guest who has left the most lasting impression on me has been artist, Stacey Rozich.

Like many, I was introduced to her work through the cover of The Curious Mystery’s album We Creeling.  A colorful, bushy haired beast, with long protruding horns, and intricately detailed patterned clothing.  I was immediately inspired by the image and wanted to know more about the artist.  I took a plunge and discovered a treasure trove of material from artist Stacey Rozich.  I couldn’t get enough of her art, it was as if some one had penetrated my brain and extracted the information necessary to make art that would tug at my deepest desires.

Stacey’s work has served as one the of the greatest inspirations in my life, both personally and artistically.  I take no shame in admitting that I have in fact written more than one short story based on Stacy’s work.  I’ve watched her work grow and evolve, always in new and tempting ways.  Around this time last year I noticed that her mythical and folkloric images had adopted hipster culture.  This blending of the old and the new world is a physical representation of how I’ve always interpreted her work, as a modern representation of classic world culture.

I’ve become familiar enough with the Rozich cannon, that I’ve begun to identify  reoccurring characters, for whom I’ve projected story lines, beliefs, and emotions upon.  A towering void of a being whose body is both impressive and empty.  A great hairy beast, whose muscles ripple with tension, gently reveals the truth behind his mask, a face full of snakes.  A congregation of Imps whose aim is to wreak havoc, drinking your Rainier Beer, smoking all your cigarettes.  I always look forward to creating new narratives for her work.

Stacey’s credits are so impressive that by far the least important thing she’s done is appear here.  Her art appeared in a Fleet Foxes video, on album and book covers, the cover of Seattle’s The Stranger, banners for the Capitol Hill Block Party, and accomplished publications… as well as any other medium I might have missed, Stacey is a busy woman.  That’s right, like when she won the Nelly Cornish award.

Though we’ve taken to mostly/only promoting and covering music events, I will always make an exception for the art of Stacey Rozich.  Next Thursday May 2nd at Roq La Rue Gallery in Seattle from 6p-9p, is the opening for Stacey’s latest collection of new work titled Within Without Me.  You would be a fool not to check it out, you would be a fucking fool to do anything else.  I believe that Stacey is hands down, Seattle’s greatest working artist, you should get out there and support her, and at the same time give yourself the gift of some exquisite artwork.

As I understand it, Roq La Rue has just moved to a new location at 532 1st Ave S (near King St) in Pioneer Square.  You can also find Stacey Rozich at staceyrozich.com.

interview with shana cleveland

October 17, 2012 in interviews, shana cleveland

Perhaps you’re familiar with Andrew WK’s Cartoon Network show Destroy Build Destroy?  The concept is obvious, two teams Destroy a set of random objects like cars, musical instruments, or boats.  In turn they salvage parts from their destruction and Build them into another device, compete against other team and the winner Destroys the losers contraption.  This was immediately what came to mind when I thought of Shana Cleveland’s career, well, on a far more simple level.

It’s safe to say that this would not have been the image that first came to mind had Shana and her band mates in the infamous Curious Mystery not decided to call it quits just a few short weeks before our interview.  The Curious Mystery had become a centerpiece of K-Records and their Olympia Washington indie rock empire.  We Creeling, their 2011 follow up to the album Rotting Slowly was beautiful, intense, and nothing short of amazing.

The specific image that penetrated my brain was of Shana gently planting a tightly wound bundle of dynamite underneath the rusty hulk of a handful of musical styles.  She runs quickly unraveling the fuse before attaching it to a comically large plunger marked TNT.  She pushes down and watches as shrapnel of notes, trebel clef’s, and bars go flying.  When the dust settles she marches back into the blast zone with a wicker basket and precedes to gather the building blocks she’ll need for her next project.

Then off in a laboratory somewhere she sits at a work bench delicately reassembling the pieces into something new and beautiful.  When she tires of this construction she’ll start this whole process over again.

Generally I find that I really like about two thirds of any given musicians projects.  It seems there’s almost always one that just misses the mark for me, when it comes to Shana Cleveland the projects she’s been involved in, I love them all.  No matter what she stamps her seal of approval on, it always lives up to my expectations.

It began in her collaboration with Nick Gonzalez forming The Curious Mystery a psych-folk-indie-rock band that included everything and the kitchen sink.  While working with TCM, Shana joined with Olie Eshleman to record an album under the name Evening Plains.  It’s an album brimming with so much airy folky(ness) that you can almost literally see and feel golden grass blowing in the wind with a bleached cow skull nestled near the roots.

Another of Shana’s musical involvements is with The Sandcastles.  A “quiet time collection” of soulful folk music that is absolutely delectable.  In many ways that band might be the best pure expression of what Shana is capable of, a sultry voice that swirls and wafts like freshly blown cigarette smoke.  Smooth folky guitar that has so much texture to it you could literally pick it up with your hands.

Then you have Shana’s most recent project La Luz, an all girl surf rock band.  It’s that classic surf music constructed with classic rock and roll structures and wavy distortion pedals like water logged ears.  I’ve been a longtime fan of bands like the Ventures, and Dick Dale & the Del-Tones, La Luz cuts right into that genre with a switch blade and inserts the lovely twist of female voices, namely Shana’s.  Which also happens to be exhibited at its best.

I almost feel as if a big thanks is owed to Shana’s mother (a singer herself) who visited Seattle while Shana was wandering the strip malls of North Hollywood and the Valley.  It was an issue of the Stranger sent to her from her mother that sparked her interest and initiated a move to the PNW.  It’s possible she would have gone on to play music elsewhere, but we have her right here in our back yard.

I met Shana in her University District home in North Seattle, just a few blocks from where my wife and I lived years before.  The house is nestled in between a series of tall trees that wrap its branches around it like a great leafy hug.  Inside it was just as I’d imagined Shana’s home to be, earthy, organic, and textural.  All around was a mixture of her own beautiful artwork and a number of oil painted landscapes; a mountain towering over a placid glacial lake, or golden rolling hills.  Shana Cleveland’s music practically radiated straight out of the canvases.

After the interview was finished Shana and I spent a little time out on her porch (as I waited for my wife to pick me up) talking music, Los Angeles, and Anacortes.  I’m trying to prepare myself for the day I encounter some really nasty artist who hates me and my interview, but that hasn’t happened yet, as once again Shana was an absolute delight to meet and spend a couple of hours with.  As I said before, it’s rare to find a musician who’s various projects are as consistently incredible as Shana’s.

As an interviewer my goal is constantly to become more relaxed and conversational, every time I sit down with an artist I get a little closer and this might be my best attempt yet.  We covered so much more ground than what I had initially planned and the end result is some fascinating audio.  What follows is just a microscopic fraction of my conversation with Shana and I highly encourage you to download the full audio podcast, which you can hear for free here or in itunes.

brian snider
For the past six or so years you’ve been most associated with your role in The Curious Mystery.  What made you all decide to move on from that band?

shana cleveland
We’d been doing that for a long time and I felt like it had run its course.  We went on this long tour last Spring and I started listening to different styles of music and forming an idea for a band that I would start when I got home.  Then I realized that I really couldn’t be doing three bands, so I had to get rid of one of them.  I love The Curious Mystery, but I felt like I’d grown past it in a way.  My whole life I’ve really love building and then being okay with leaving it.  I think it’s really important as an artist to not just stay with what’s working, to challenge yourself to move forward.

What did it do for the band to meet Calvin Johnson of k-records and his network of musicians?

That whole network of k bands was really inspiring because it’s people doing their own thing.  There’s nothing really trendy happening there, it’s all people who just make the music that they want to make, and it’s not with an eye towards what’s going to sell or be popular or cool.  It’s just about pure artistic expression.  It’s also so diverse, the roster of artists on k, it’s all over the place.

There’s a really sweet story about how your parents met.  Would you mind telling that story.

My dad met my mom when he was on tour with a band, I think a Country Swing band.  My mom was dancing, she’d just gone to the bar to dance.  They liked each other and then my dad would come through every now and again on tour and try to get ahold of my mom.  Eventually she just started traveling with them, she ran their sound for awhile to pull her own weight.  Then she started back-up singing.  And she’s a singer now, and a harmonica player.

What was the catalyst to get The Sandcastles started?

There’s a bunch of folk musicians that are really inspiring to me.  Certain albums are really exciting as far as albums that sound quiet and relaxed but also feel sloppy, like you’re just hanging out in a barn with these people.  Like Viva Last Blues and this girl from Maine, Caethua, her albums were influential to me and I really wanted to get at that intimate rough folk sound.

On your bandcamp page you called these songs, “quiet time songs… I think they sound best on a windy morning or at night with no lights.”  I really like that description  because while it’s not exclusive to how you should listen to the album, it’s very accurate of the sound.

You’re not going to put them on and party, it’s not going to make you want to get up and move.  There’s some albums that make you want to turn off the lights, and just sit in a room and listen to them by myself. That’s what I had in mind for the album.

Tell us about your latest band La Luz.

It’s pretty much a combination between surf rock and a girl group.  Not that we’re all girls, which we are, but the 60’s girl group, the Phil Spector sound.  I was listening to a lot of girl group music and was getting into four part harmonies; ooh-ah’s and doo-whops.

You mentioned that this is the music that you’ve been wanting to play for a long time.  Why is that?

I’ve been getting into early rock and roll in a lot of different areas of the arts.  The late 50’s and 60’s rock and roll style is so powerful, you can see that in the fact that on every continent people have tried to imitate that style.  It’s not white music or black music, or even American music, even though it started as American music.  It’s cheesy but it’s like the power of rock and roll music.

The Northwest has a tradition of female rock bands, especially with the whole Riot Grrrrl movement in the early 90’s.  What was your inspiration for wanting an all girl band?

I really like the way that women’s voices sound together when it’s all women.  And I don’t really run across a ton of sexism in the music industry, but I do every now and then and I just got tired of playing shows where the sound guy didn’t take me seriously.  I got tired of that attitude.  I really liked the idea of being in a band with four women that are really awesome, not just that we’re all cute, it’s that we’re really good.  You kind of have to take us seriously.  Even though I’ve always played with open minded guys, I just got tired of people adjusting my amp or thinking that I couldn’t do those things myself.

Another thing that makes me excited to be in an all girl band was, I have this goal to be the most killer guitar player ever [laughs].  I was just feeling like there was a lack of really awesome female rock guitar players, and part of my goal is to try and fill that space.***

To hear the entire podcast interview go here or subscribe to our podcast in itunes.

 

The purpose of Destroy Build Destroy is two fold, make awesome machines from scrap, and blow shit up.  This is where the analogy fails when talking about Shana Cleveland.  It’s just the end result of years spent perfecting one sound and the desire to create something new.  La Luz is still just a newborn less than a month removed from its mothers womb, there are still plenty of years before a stick of dynamite is placed at its feet.

In September La Luz released their debut EP Damp Face which you can find at laluz.bandcamp.com.  In October they began playing live with one final performance on October 26th opening for Lonesome Shack at Cafe Racer in Seattle.  You can find the Curious Mystery’s albums at k-recs.com, and The Sandcastles at shanacleveland.bandcamp.com.

Again, there is so much more to hear that you’ll completely miss out on if you don’t listen to the podcast.  I’m really proud of the conversation we had and the topics we covered.  You can listen to the full audio podcast here or in itunes.  And while you’re there please take a brief moment to rate and review us, thank you.

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shana cleveland and the sandcastles ~ oh man, cover the ground

May 5, 2012 in album reviews, reviews

 

 

The PNW’s The Curious Mystery, is a modern version of a 1960’s psychedelic band, merging the tonal qualities of subdued and relaxing Eastern music with the western rock.  They are truly a Northwest prize, who’s been touring the country spreading the word of their awesomeness.  Their 2011 album We Creeling built beautifully off their debut Rotting Slowly.  I saw them perform last year at NW Folklife and loved their stage presence, their ability to rock hard and sooth you with sensual melodies is second to none.

Shana Cleveland the front woman for the Curious Mystery has been involved with a number of side projects but perhaps my favorite is: Shana Cleveland and the Sandcastles, a neo-Americana folk band.  I found them some time last year while researching a song of the week for the Curious Mystery, and was blown away.  Oh Man, Cover the Ground, is a perfect album for a cold and nasty Northwest day, of which their are many.  I found myself listening to it on repeat last year during a weekend in a foggy and damp weekend in the San Juan Islands.

Despite being recorded rather low rent on a simple reel-to-reel, it sounds surprisingly well polished and at the same time just low tech enough to give it a completely organic feel.  The Sandcastles are more traditional than say The Curious Mystery, far less psychedelic and much more relaxing and earthbound.  In my recent conversation with Angelo Spencer we got talking about landscape music, the term is pretty undefined and largely subjective but the Sandcastles are my idea of the perfect landscape music.  Images of long isolated road of the American West are conjured.

As far as side projects go Shana Cleveland and the Sandcastles are a pretty little gem.  You can buy their album through bandcamp on tape, compact disc, and mp3.  Perhaps even more exciting, you can watch them live at this years NW Folklife festival.

interview with stacey rozich

October 25, 2011 in interviews, stacey rozich


Consider these monumental life shifting moments.  Finding that perfect pair of jeans, ones that hug and hang in all the right places.  Hearing a song for the first time and knowing instantly that this is the best song you’ve ever heard.  Reading a story and identifying with every word of it.  Meeting someone and falling in love.  The feeling you get from all these moments is exactly how I felt when I first saw the work of Stacey Rozich.

Some people buy wine based on the description of the flavor, some buy for price, I buy for the labels.   I feel similarly about album art.

This past February I got my first glimpse at the artwork for the Curious Mystery’s new album We Creeling.  A mystical looking beast with a big bushy head of hair and long horns protruding out from the sides, a red toothy face nestled in the middle of that fur, and brightly colored clothing with angular designs.  The beast had a pair of gentle black hands with red fingertips, coddling a little red rose.  The image did everything that great album artwork should make you want to do, listen to the music.

For me the image did so much more, it made me think about this beast, his flower, and the story behind him.  I listened to the music and spent hours inventing stories surrounding his adventures.  It was some time later that I discovered the website of the artist.  It was like finding a gold coin on the beach, cherishing it, and then months later finding a treasure chest full of gold coins.

Staceyrozich.com is a menagerie of mythical and folkloric creatures, people and animals locked into scenes of violence, love, betrayal, comfort, longing, and humor.  Each piece felt familiar and at the same time was completely unique.  In my conversation with Stacey, one comment stood out as a perfect encapsulation of what I was seeing in her work.  “I definitely mishmash everything together, because that’s how I’m creating my own narrative, my own cultural voice.”  As a white kid from Seattle without any particular cultural ties, this is exactly what I have been doing with my own mythological writing for years.

As we become more homogenized so do our cultures.  At its heart Stacey’s work is a contemporary cultural narrative, from the tall tales of your grandfathers fishing expedition, to universal creation myths from around the world, and the beasts that haunt the darkest holes everywhere, these stories are becoming part of a singular narrative.  It’s Stacey’s work that represents that narrative perfectly.

What surprised me the most about this body of work is that it is still quite young.  She told me that she was just twenty when she began working in the style that you see here.  Since then she’s created worlds of exceptional characters on paper and wood.  Along with her father (amazing chalkboard artist John Rozich) she created large wood cutouts of her characters.  Working with her very good friend (Maddie Romansic) they created an eerily lifelike soft sculpture which I just realized is for sale… ( christmas surprise?)  Then, as of yesterday you can get a sneak peek of Stacey’s work in motion for the Fleet Foxes latest video.  It’s twenty six seconds of basically the best thing ever.

 The night before I sat down with Stacey to pick her genius artistic brain, I had a dream.  I was wrapped in a white and blood red blanket  surrounded by golden savanna grasses tall enough that from my keens I could see nothing but their stalks.  I could feel the tremors of heavy foot steps, labored nasal breathing, and heart thudding sobbing all around me.  I rose to my feet and peered over the tips of the blades and there were a four furry monsters tromping through the golden grass.  One was crying tearfully, one was laughing hysterically, another so angry smoke billowed from his nostrils, and the last grinning from… horn to horn.  I couldn’t move I was so frightened, they circled around me seemingly unaware of my presence yet their circle continued to constrict  around me until the crying beast caught my eye and I woke up.

This is what went though my mind as I prepared to meet Stacey Rozich and try to understand where these beautiful scenes came from.  I need only to say that she was an absolute joy to talk with.  My animals took to her immediately including my dog Olive who is generally weary of new people entering her house.  What follows here is a heavily edited version of our interview, to hear the unedited hour long podcast, go to itunes starting next week.

brian snider

Start by describing your process from the beginning to the end of a single piece.

stacey rozich

I do a lot of research, that’s the strong foundation for most of my work.  I go to a lot of blogs, specifically BibliOdyssey, I don’t know where this curator finds these things but  it ranges from old maps to pieces of illuminated manuscripts and just really beautiful work from all over the world from the past two millennia.

I do a lot of sketching, I’ll be out at drinks and I’ll have a napkin and I just see a composition in my head and know that I need to write it down because I will forget it if I don’t put it on paper.  So I do have a collection of old scraps and notebooks filled with drawings that I want to get back to.  It’s a combination of blending all this research and all these drawings into something which if I can piece together, get it on a piece of watercolor paper and start putting color to it, then from there I can start laying in a lot of textures and patterns.  Then before you know it I have a piece.

When you are researching are you looking for just images or are you looking for ideas?

 I keep a folder on my desktop where I save images I see all over the internet.  I can be on a whole trip where I’m looking for moorish patterns, or coptic christian artwork, or tiling.  And before you know it you’re going down a rabbit hole and finding a whole new world of different ideas you weren’t even expecting.

 It’s hard to ask someone to describe their work without just looking at it, but can you try and describe it anyway?

 That’s a tough one, but I’d say my illustration work is based heavily on cultural folktales.  It can range from wild beasts to spiritual beings.  There’s always a strong base of color and texture and a lot of patterning.  That’s something I’ve found is a real common thread in a lot of cultures, is a lot of beautiful textiles that utilize different symbols that I try and bring into my work.  I think it gives it an extra level of depth.

 You have a lot of intricate and detailed patterns in your work, does this come from images in the research you talked about?

 A lot of it comes from research.  There can be a specific garment from a Norwegian vest or something that I see that has a lot of really beautiful stitching of flowers and stuff like that.  Then there are just simple patterns I always use, the zigzags and the stripes, because that’s an easy one to offset really complicated patterns I spend a lot of time on.

 When did you find the style that you’re working with now?

 I think I was about twenty years old.  I had just moved back to Seattle, I was going to school in San Francisco and studying illustration.  So I had that basis of knowing that I could use specific mediums, but I didn’t necessarily have a certain voice with my work other than a lot of my narrative stuff was usually humorous.  It was only until I found this book on Yugoslav traditions and costumes.  That first year I got it, it was integral to my work, because I would see beautiful costumes mixed with really amazing folkloric masks from different ceremonies and fairs.  I’d never seen anything like this before.  So that got the ball rolling for me, kind of imagining it through my own lens.

 Do you find Seattle to be an inspirational place?

 I grew up here and I have a big support system here with my family who I’m very close with, but I really don’t know many artists here.  I know there is a good art scene here I’m just not really a part of it because I don’t consider myself a fine artist, even though others may beg to differ.  I feel like kind of a solitary worker.

 A lot of my good friends who are artists live all over the country and I make sure to keep in contact with them, I’m really good at keeping tabs on certain artists who inspire me, but in Seattle, that’s been my constant battle.  I’ve been thinking about how I want to move, how I really want that new challenge of being in a place and being uncomfortable and finding out what my style is.  Does that even make sense for me?  I’m so lucky to live in a place where I am comfortable and it’s easy to live here, it’s beautiful, and I love it.  There is a really good history here.  I feel like I can’t give a definitive answer on that because I love it, but I’m not one hundred percent fulfilled.

 Your main inspiration has been Eastern European folklore and that’s because you have roots within that culture.

 Yes, my Dad is Croatian by way of Detroit.  All my great grandparents on my fathers side are from Croatia, one of them is actually from Mostar Bosnia.  They all came to the States in the teens and twenties, and they were all coal miners in the Midwest.  But they really did keep their culture alive by marrying other Croatians and having more kids that were Croatian.  

Having that cultural identity to me was really fascinating.  I didn’t really have it a lot growing up until my dad started talking to me about it and his childhood, being raised by his grandmother.  I don’t think it was really that different for him because that’s  just what he grew up with, but for me I was just so enthralled to hear these stories and hear about what she cooked and what she would say.

 Your work represents a lot of different cultures, are you always keeping a constant lookout for different designs and ideas?

 Yes, that’s how I keep things fresh, it started off with Yugoslav, mainly Croatian.  That was a jumping off point for me to realize that so many different cultures have different costumes and traditions in terms of their textiles and weavings and tapestries and I just was really excited.  I’d never really researched this before but the more I started digging the more I started finding different cultures from Russia and Bulgaria.  Then going as far as West African countries, have an incredible array of costumes that are scary, and weird, and hilarious, and amazing, all these knit full length onesies.  They have beautiful zigzags and patterns.  I just try and think about what part that would play in their culture.

 Are you consciously trying to stay within one cultural concept, or do you borrow from everywhere and throw it on the paper?

 That’s what I do.  I don’t think I ever created anything that’s one specific group.  I definitely mishmash everything together because that’s how I’m creating my own narrative, my own cultural voice.  It can look like it belongs but when you actually get down to the nitty gritty of everything I can point out to you, “no that’s Hopi Indian, that’s something I got from Romania.”  I just kind of piece them together, sew them up and hopefully it looks cohesive.

 Does each picture have a story?  

 Yeah, some of them are shorter stories than others.  Some are long in depth tales of struggle, evil versus good, man versus animal, some have a lot of humor in them.  Those are a lot more simple, I like those a lot.

 Do the stories and the paintings ever clash?

 Sometimes they don’t work.  I’ll have a great idea and I’ll try and put it down and it just looks bad.  I’ll think “no no, this is not how it’s supposed to come out,” then I’ll just scrap it.

 Can you tell me about the humor in your work?

 Sometimes it can’t always fit together for me and that was the way of alleviating the drama.  Sometimes I don’t want to put too much emphasis on violence, especially between a man and an animal.

 Is there a particular culture or series of folktales that you’ve been looking at recently?

 I haven’t been looking at a lot of stories, but I have been looking at a lot of South Western, Pueblo and Hopi.

 You were first brought to my attention with the artwork for the cover of the Curious Mystery’s We Creeling album.  How did you get connected with them and k-records?

 That’s a really funny connection, and also shows the power of the internet (she used a cheesy announcer voice for that phrase).  It was my first quarter at Seattle Central and I was in an illustrator class and one of the assignments was to create a gig poster for whatever you want.  And so the night before we started this project I was at a show at the Josephine, a really cool small community space totally hidden in Ballard.  I went out with some friends to see LAKE and Karl Blau, I couldn’t stay out late because of school, so I really only specifically caught the first act which was this really wonderfully talented musician named Shana Cleveland.  I was totally taken by her style… so beautiful, it was like Cat Power but more soulful, a little darker and I just really loved her stuff.  So the next day I get the assignment and start working on it.  At the time I really liked the poster because I’d never really incorporated my style into a poster.  I put it on my blog which I’d just started and I was so proud of myself.

Then two weeks later I get this email from Shana Cleveland saying “Hey, I played that show, what do you think about doing album artwork?”  We got together and she told me everything she liked and wanted for the piece.  It took me a while because I’d never really down a whole album before, because I thought it would be super easy I was like “no, I’ll do the whole thing.” Which was a stupid bonehead move on my part because I didn’t know what I was doing.  Luckily everyone at K [records] is so nice and so patient and the record came out great.  It always makes me happy when I see it at record stores.

 Did you hear the music before hand?

 She [Shana Cleveland] played the cd for me and I thought, “wow, this is pretty great.” Because it’s like, psychedelic, folky, garage rock and Shana has this amazing voice and Nick Gonzalez has the sitar, it’s just so good.  A lot of my work did seem like a good fit.  We just worked together on sketches and what she thought, we actually became good friends over it.  I would come over to her house and just sit at her kitchen table and just draw and paint.  It was a collaborative thing for her because she’s also artistic.  She would give me input and we’d listen to more of the new mixes of the cd, it was one of the more involved processes for working on an album.  But it has been one of the more rewarding ones.

 Have you thought about how you could mix mediums with your art?

 I just saw a rough cut of an animation that I did with my work.  It’s supposed to come out hopefully within the next month.  It’s a music video and it’s pretty cool.  These were all stop motion hinged puppets that I made of my work and I was amazing to see my work move like that.  The song is great and they work so well together.  I think that was a new highlight of my life, seeing the next level of my work. **

 

The purpose of interviewing the people I do here at secretly-important, is that that’s exactly what these people are.  But my hope is to help drop the secretly and make them just important.  I don’t pretend to believe that I have anything to with that transition, Stacey is already an incredible artist, dare I say my favorite and in introducing her to you, imagine that we’ve just met at a party and I’m telling you all my favorite things.

As I mentioned before, this is a heavily edited version of our conversation, next week we will be releasing the full audio interview here as well as on itunes.  You can here more discussions of her work as well as her time at California College of the Arts and Seattle Central, hear what it was like for her to quit her day job, and hear about some delicious sounding food cooked by her Croatian grandmother.

Stacey told me at one point in the interview, she has a hard time representing herself and convincing people that they should buy her work and hang it in her house.  Well, I’ll step in and help her out, because I can’t think of anyone who shouldn’t have a piece by Stacey hanging in their home.  If it inspires you only half as much as it’s inspired me then it’s worth every penny.

If you happen to be in Seattle between October 28th and November 21st.  You can see her work displayed along side the show the Mormon Bird Play at WET.

song of the week: night ride reeling~ the curious mystery

October 13, 2011 in song of the week

I had another song all picked out for this week, but then I decided to change it after my interview with artist Stacey Rozich.  Stacey was first brought to my attention thanks to her cover art for The Curious Mystery’s, We Creeling. So this week in honor of Stacey, we hi-light The Curious Mystery’s Night Ride Reeling.

I’ve read a review which used the term snore core to describe the Curious Mystery’s sound, and I’m not sure if that is meant to criticize or compliment.  I understand the point that is being made with that term and yes, if listened to long enough while laying on the couch you might fall asleep.  But if you’ve seen these guys live then you know they can bring it live.

Psychedelic rock, is another way they’ve been described and while I feel that this is more accurate, they just seem like so much more to me then the soundtrack to acid trip hallucination.  There are genuine rhythms contained within We Creeling, amidst the tribal drum beats, the slow burning sitar, the sizzling guitar, and the seductive and sweet vocals of Shana Cleveland, and you have truly unique and moody music beats.

This is far less pop then our last two entries for song of the week, this comes much closer to experimental, but don’t let that scare you, there’s great stuff here.  That much is present when you hear their first album Rotting Slowly, which has a similar feel and tone to this is remarkably different.  We Creeling is more spiritual, perhaps a little more put together, a little more spiritual.

It can sometimes be difficult to write or get my work done when listening to music that has me singing along and banging on things.  The Curious Mystery are perfect for setting a mood and helping me power thorough the things I need to get done.  That’s not to say that I don’t find myself tapping my toes and humming Night Ride Reeling long after I’ve moved on.  It spirals up your spine and burrows into the back of your brain.  Days later I’ll be singing it and wonder, why.

As is the case with so many Northwest bands you can mind map their side projects and find other really great music that’s just as rewarding.  Shana Cleveland not only adds her hauntingly sexy vocals to the Curious Mystery but also a side project called Shana Cleveland and the Sandcastles.