Premiere: Zheani - "LAVA"
In Zheani’s newest music video, “LAVA”, made in collaboration with her creative partner Mik Shida and premiering today on office, a quote flashes at the bottom of the screen: “Zheani summons a being of light because she is lonely and has no friends”. She is then joined on her fantasy video game "holiday" by a friend with whom she can dance.
Her music videos take place in another realm, where magic and beauty is everywhere and danger lurks. The darkness present in Zheani’s music is accompanied by a glimmer of hope in positivity, wonder, and escapist beats that make you just want to have fun.
Hi Zheani! So tell me a little bit about where you’re from?
Sure! I am from rural Australia... the middle of nowhere. The bush. The scrub. Far away from city folk.
Where are you based now?
Just biding my time in Australia. The government here won’t let anyone leave. I feel very lucky to be based in the beautiful Byron shire, it’s a very special place surrounded by nature and well away from the madness of cities.
What brought you to music?
I had a great urge to start speaking after many years of just being a silent face locked inside my own mind. This was the main motivation behind learning how to make music. It just seemed to be the obvious art medium to utilise during this period of my life. Something interesting to mention is that I have never had a singing/music lesson in my life. Probably that’s not surprising though. My family didn’t have the ability to afford a luxury extracurricular activity like that. Where I grew up music was the kind of thing that kids from nice families got to do as an elective subject. Pay to play. So without the fundamentals I was forced to work with what I had and created music in the spirit of Outsider Art.
Your new EP begins with “LAVA”, a very fantastical and light song, but many of the other songs on it are quite dark. How did this dualism come to be for you?
The Zheani Sparkes EP begins with “LAVA” and ends with a track called “YIPPY KY YAY." I put them at both ends of the project as a spell, a fairy ring. They are there to bind all of the dark memories that live inside the other tracks. It was my intention to demonstrate in a symbolic way that despite how difficult life can be, a person should remain positive and continue striving to improve their life. Mind over matter... Force a smile until it becomes genuine. Eventually it will become genuine.
These tracks both belong to a specific genre that I make, a sound that my fans began to call fairy trap. The purpose behind all of these songs is pure joy and affirmation. They are also there to create balance and harmony with my darker aspect. My shadow self. If they didn’t exist my entire catalogue would be just a pool of pain with me sitting in the middle of it all, reliving my own personal hell for the world to see.
In reference to “LAVA”, you said, “At this point in my life I am happy in my heart, but with the current state of the world, expressing it outwardly feels performative”. Can you expand on this idea of the performativity of happiness and what the act of doing so accomplishes?
Much like its predecessor “LULU” the purpose of “LAVA” and its accompanying videoclip is escapism. I want to give the viewer the chance to escape reality. I want to portray my interpretation of happiness and demonstrate the act of having light hearted fun. I feel like real joy is increasingly lacking in the dystopian future we exist in. It’s all too easy to get bogged down with the constant assault of negativity we are bombarded with though our phones on a daily basis and being ignorant to it is sadly no longer an option for some.
The lyrics of “2002 (The Hook is a Prayer)”, a song off your latest EP, The Zheani Sparkes EP, tell stories of a dark childhood, and many songs on this project discuss your upbringing. Can you speak on this a bit?
The things I spoke about on this project were deeply personal memories that have been the cause of great shame and embarrassment throughout the course of my life. I wanted to transmute that pain into something that would help me transcend the past as I walk into the future. Like shedding another layer that is the human state of fear. The shame and embarrassment can no longer hold me back because I stepped into it and embodied it.
I don’t know of any other female artists who discuss the subjects that I do in this raw, personal and direct manner without resorting to metaphor. Speaking from my own experience this is probably because it is extremely hard to do and very embarrassing. Likewise, a lot of my listeners comment that they don’t know another artist that talks about these things. They relay that my music is deeply healing for them, it makes them feel less alone, it makes them feel heard and represented. That’s powerful feedback for me and makes me proud as this wasn’t the easiest path to walk. But there is meaning to it.
What is your writing process like?
Therapy.
I love your fantasy fairy imagery. Your videos created in collaboration with Mik Shida all seem to take place in a completely foreign realm. What are your inspirations visually?
To answer that question I need you to visualise the process of making a videoclip completely by yourself. It’s just me and my creative partner Mik Shida handling absolutely every element that is needed for completion. That process is all consuming. So often I choose subject matter that we can both enjoy and escape into. A holiday in our minds while we work hard to complete a visual concept. So for “LAVA” I decided to go visit my friend, ride a horse to reconnect with my childhood and play with goats to help me laugh. I think there are some nostalgic elements to the visuals. Holding onto elements of childhood wonder is a way to capture innocence and the ability to play. We are eternal creatures and “growing up” and away from that wonderment is a societal pressure that an artist should reject.
What’s next for you this year?
That’s not really up to me. I will continue to be flexible and adapt. This world has a sickness and I hope it gets better soon.