Natasha Khan, aka Bat For Lashes, has released her April intimate at-home live recording. The virtual performance including tracks from her discography is now available to stream.
The music set is available to listen to via musician’s Bandcamp where you can listen and purchase it from.
“NEW LIVE ALBUM!!!”…We are very pleased to announce that ‘Bat For Lashes, Livestream at Home. Los Angeles, 2021’ is now available to buy digitally, exclusively on @Bandcamp.
Click the link to follow Bat For Lashes on Bandcamp, and to get your copy: https://t.co/014aVEadOQ X pic.twitter.com/QyfSYxsEnN
— Bat for Lashes (@BatForLashes) June 7, 2021
The Live album comprises Khan’s ten well-known old and new songs like: “All Your Gold” (2012), “Deep Sea Diver” (2012), “Joe’s Dream” (2016) and “Kids In The Dark” (2019). The live stream also contains “some never before heard re-worked versions of classic Bat For Lashes material, a beautiful and personal document of a unique moment in time“. See the preview below. Recently, Bat For Lashes joined Patreon to share new music, tarot readings and mentorship. Khan, now based in the US wants the page to be a “place for you to feel part of a creative community and gain inspiration!”. A place that is “a safe haven away from the busy world of social media”.
We are very pleased to announce that Bat For Lashes is now on Patreon Every month Natasha will release content to the Patreon site including Tarot readings, original music, hand written letters, a monthly mood board, creative mentorship and more pic.twitter.com/QvjwRiJme4 — Bat for Lashes (@BatForLashes) May 11, 2021
Fans can subscribe to her Patreon here. There are few options to choose from: access to ‘Kids In The Dark‘ costs £5 per month (+VAT) and ‘The Sunday Lovers‘ costs £10 per month (+VAT).
Bat For Lashes latest release from 2019 “Lost Girls” received a four-star review from NME describing it as: “dance music with fairytale glam and star-gazing pop, characters and concepts, growing wiser each time. Here, on her most consistent work to date, she’s still dramatic, seductive and theatrical, but fully cut loose. This is Khan’s own heroic moment“.
The Guardian in their four-star review added: “10-track LP that unabashedly channels 80s pop and movie scores, is Bat for Lashes at her most playful – and ironically, given it’s her first record as an independent artist free of a major label contract, it’s also the sound of unadulterated pop”.