Logjam Presents

La Luz

Spacemoth

The ELM

Bozeman, MT
Add to Calendar 08/17/2026 20:00 08/18/2026 01:00 America/Boise La Luz

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome La Luz for a live concert performance at The ELM on Monday, August 17, 2026 with Spacemoth. Tickets are on sale now and will be available to purchase in person at Logjam Presents Box Offices and online while supplies last. All tickets are general admission standing room only. All ages are… Continue Reading

Logjam Presents - Missoula, Montana false MM/DD/YYYY
7:00PM (door) 8:00PM (show)
$33 (Adv.) $37 (DOS)
All Ages
Tickets Lodging

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome La Luz for a live concert performance at The ELM on Monday, August 17, 2026 with Spacemoth.

Tickets are on sale now and will be available to purchase in person at Logjam Presents Box Offices and online while supplies last. All tickets are general admission standing room only. All ages are welcome.

Take a look at these tips to best prepare yourself for a smooth ticket buying experience.

Additional ticketing and venue information can be found here.


Psychedelic surf-rock band La Luz will perform at The ELM in Bozeman on August 17, 2026, with support from Spacemoth.

Originally formed in Seattle, La Luz have spent the past decade crafting a sound that drifts between surf rock, dreamy garage pop, and lush psychedelia. Led by swirling melodies and tight vocal harmonies, the band has become known for music that feels equally suited for late-night drives and packed dance floors.

Their fan-favorite 2018 album Floating Features—along with its standout title track—helped establish them as one of indie psych-rock’s most distinctive modern acts, while newer releases like their latest EP Extra! Extra! continue to expand the band’s dreamy, atmospheric sound.

Songs like “Sure As Spring” and “Cicada” showcase the group’s knack for pairing catchy hooks with immersive textures, and their live shows take things even further—building from mellow, hypnotic moments into full-on waves of fuzzed-out energy.

About La Luz

“I was in a dream, but now I can see that change is the only law.”

With a credo adapted from science fiction author Octavia E. Butler, an album title from a collection of metaphysical poetry, and an expansion in consciousness brought on by personal crisis, guitarist and songwriter Shana Cleveland learns to embrace a changing world with unconditional love on News of the Universe, the new full-length from California rock band La Luz.

News of the Universe is a record born of calamity, a work of dark, beautiful psychedelia reflecting Cleveland’s experience of having her world blown apart by a breast cancer diagnosis just two years after the birth of her son. It’s also a portrait of a band in flux, marking the first appearance for drummer Audrey Johnson and the final ones from longtime members bassist Lena Simon and keyboardist Alice Sandahl, whose contributions add a bittersweet edge to a record that is both elegy for an old world and cosmic road map to a strange new one.

But is there any band in the world more suited to capturing the chaos of change in all its messy beauty than La Luz? Formed by Cleveland in 2012, La Luz is beloved for their ability to balance bedlam and bliss, each new record another fine-tuning of the band’s mix of swaggering riffs with angelic vocals borrowed from doo-wop and folk; a band so reliably great that it makes the huge step forward in confidence and sheer musicality that is News of the Universe all the more formidable. Cleveland, also a writer and painter, has developed into a truly original songwriter with her own canon of haunted psychedelia that, in recent years, has drawn upon the changing landscape around her rural California home for inspiration, notably on last year’s critically acclaimed solo release, Manzanita, a magical realist documentation of her pregnancy and early motherhood that appeared on many year-end lists.

Yet if Cleveland has spent years writing songs about ghosts, what lurks in the shadows of News of the Universe is nothing less than death itself. “There are moments on this album that sound to me like the last frantic confession before an asteroid destroys the earth,” says Cleveland.

Sonically, the record is all urgency. Songs trip over themselves as if trying to outrun the apocalypse: the breathless pitter-pattering of toms on “Strange World,” the title track’s finger-tangling opening riff drenched in murky distortion. An atmosphere of doom hovers hazily over the Sgt. Pepper-esque baroque pop song “Poppies,” on which Cleveland sings of a wavering orange idyll about to be set ablaze by the late summer sun. On the similarly kaleidoscopic “Dandelions,” she figures the yellow flowers for unsuspecting “little suns” soon to be “turning into moons” as the season marches on. The synthesized sounds used on the band’s last record, 2021’s La Luz, to mimic the languid buzz and crackle of a summer’s day in the countryside have been cut adrift in space—now they are silvery comet tails, dapplings of space dust, showers of stars.

These earthy observations are inspired by Cleveland’s walks around her home in the shell-shocked days post-diagnosis when she found she had to be very intentional about what she consumed. “Seeing the cycle of life, seeing things grow out of decay, the decay of other living things—was super comforting to me. I had to get to a place where I felt more comfortable with the idea of death,” she says.

But for every moment of fear, there is one of pure ecstasy. Shimmery chamber pop song “Blue Moth Cloud Shadow” puddles into a twinkly organ-driven reverie; “I’ll Go With You” starts out with the record’s sludgiest riff before turning into its prettiest song. “Always in Love” is a real power-of-love ballad that serves as the record’s centerpiece and is capped off by a fiery and jubilant guitar solo, Cleveland’s own “November Rain” moment.

The powerful sense of openness that permeates News of the Universe is at least partially due to the fact that it is a record made entirely by women—from the performing, writing, and producing all the way through to the recording, engineering, and mastering. “There is something inherently and simultaneously sweet and brutal about womanhood,” says Cleveland. “That is something I hear on this record.”

Working with producer Maryam Qudos (Spacemoth), the all-female environment allowed Cleveland to feel safe tapping into difficult places and expressing hard emotions women are socialized to suppress. “Having that kind of connection and that comfort straightaway let us push it further,” she says. “We didn’t spend the first half of the session being careful not to offend someone’s ego.”

Qudos also helped shape the songs, bringing ideas to the table “that to me felt like choices that I would not normally make, but I was really stoked about,” says Cleveland, pointing out that the dubbed-out effects on “Moon in Reverse” were all Qudos. “Sometimes she would have ideas about the structure of the songs, which a producer often doesn’t really mess with. But as a songwriter herself, I think she felt really comfortable with us.” Their working relationship was so organic that Qudos has since joined La Luz full-time on keyboards to replace the departing Sandahl.

Unashamedly vulnerable, unabashedly feminine, and undeniably triumphant, News of the Universe is another knockout record from a band so reliably great that it has perhaps led people to overlook how pioneering La Luz really are: women of color in indie music forging their own path by following their own artistic star into galaxies beyond current musical trends, always led by an earnest belief in the cosmic power of love and a great riff. Never is that more true than on News of the Universe, which might be La Luz’s most brutal record to date but also their most blissful. After everything, how could it not?

Spacemoth

About Spacemoth

As Maryam Qudus was writing and recording what would become Inward Eye, the new record by Spacemoth, she was in the midst of another deeply personal project: digitally archiving her family’s extensive collection of home movies with a VCR left constantly running in her living room. Walking in and out of her home studio while working on the new album, Qudus would randomly catch footage of her younger self captured at a moment in time, the ephemeral images flickering across the screen transporting her back to childhood and acting as a portal to the core of herself: a kid making weird loops with a guitar and pedal in her bedroom, now a professional musician still making weird loops with the same pedal she’s owned since she was a teenager.

The years preceding the making of Inward Eye had been busy ones for Qudus. As an engineer and producer at Oakland’s Tiny Telephone Recording, Qudus worked with an eclectic range of artists such as Toro y Moi, Spellling and Frankie and the Witch Fingers. Following the release of Spacemoth’s 2022 debut, No Past No Future, Qudus took Spacemoth on the road as the support act for Tortoise, Spellling, Speedy Ortiz and others. In 2024, Qudus was behind the board for psych rock band La Luz’s News of the Universe LP, a collaboration that led to her joining the group on the road over the last few years. While criss-crossing the country on various tours, Qudus ensconced herself in the back of the van with a tiny synthesizer and started piecing together the songs that became Inward Eye as the world rolled by outside the window in hypnagogic motion. She began looking forward to the longer drives “because it meant I could really dive in deep. I would sit in the back of the van, stare out the window and add parts and ideas to songs that I’d started, or I’d write brand new songs. Being on the road ended up being an inspiration.” 

These are the experiences that inform Inward Eye, a collection of cosmic psychedelic pop documenting a spiritual journey through both the inner and outer worlds. It’s tightly arranged layers of pulsating rhythms and loops of sounds inspired by cycles of nature and the way they refract into the cycles of life as they roll with a momentum all their own. “It’s a metaphor for the mind’s eye, your imagination and memory, your ability to visualize experiences and emotions,” says Qudus. “When I think about the happiest moments in life, it’s like this perfect light at sunset and you’re a kid running around in a field and you’re just so happy, or you’re with a person you love—it’s those moments.”

The record establishes a bigger vision for Spacemoth’s sound, one charged with groove and motion. It’s instantly audible on opener “Do We Exist?” a spacey pop banger that begins with a lone repeating bassline and slowly builds to a galactic cacophony, Qudus adding and subtracting elements as she goes: a twinkly synth arpeggio here, a crunchy sampled guitar there, her own undulating vocals repeating the phrase “we’re all alone in this world” in different cadences until it sounds less like a declaration and more like a question—are we all alone in this world?

“Do We Exist?” serves as a statement of intent for Inward Eye, as it was “one of the first songs where the sonic concept for the record came into view,” says Qudus. “Creating drum parts, bass lines and sequences that coexist tightly, loop around and morph as the song goes on. How tightly wound those parts intertwine and loop together connects to how tightly wound life can be and how we’re constantly running in these little circles.

Finding focus in a world of distraction is a theme throughout Inward Eye, as is the importance of cherishing love and cultivating happiness. On “Internet Fantasy,” Qudus explores the idea of “trying to be present and appreciating your own reality. We’re all addicted and consumed by the Internet in a way where you’re constantly in someone else’s world.” Here again Qudus expertly constructs and dissolves distinct musical motifs to hypnotic effect, a droning organ and modulated vocals overlaid on a bouncing bassline and crisp drum pattern that soothes in their repetition and predictability—before blasting into another dimension with a shower of synthesized stardust as the song builds to an epic close. “North Star” is the record’s most straightforward love song, an ode to connection over time and distance, while “Flower Memory” reflects the nostalgic glow of the family movies that played while she was making the record.

Sonically, Inward Eye is indebted to the interplay inherent to bands with multiple players: the masterful intricacy of Can, the layered post-rock of Tortoise, the colorful avant-pop of Stereolab. The cool self-command of Kraftwerk and Cluster were also huge influences. Qudus points out that krautrock as a genre is “emotionally ambiguous. It’s an open canvas, but still very controlled.” On Inward Eye, Qudus extends a similar invitation with exquisitely patterned, cyclical music that still feels loose and imaginative, arranged to evoke positivity while allowing space for listeners to map out their own emotional journeys through their inner worlds. The people we once were and the experiences we’ve had may recede into the rearview, but remain visible forever within the mind’s eye, playing on in an endless loop.