Forced into isolation, thereā€™s been more than enough opportunity to reflect on ourselves and the world around us over the last year. The little cabin Bat For Lashesā€™ Natasha Khan performs her latest livestream from (April 9) seems like the perfect place to have some epiphanies on transformation: plants bathe in the orange glow of opulent lamps, as curtains block out whateverā€™s outside and make it feel like a soothing sanctuary.

Khanā€™s set suggests that thatā€™s at least partly true. As she shares stories between songs, she talks often of change and especially how her perspective on her own material has shifted over the years as her life has evolved.

Towards the end of the set, she plays ā€˜Joeā€™s Dreamā€™ from 2016ā€™s ā€˜The Brideā€™, recreating it ā€“ as with nearly every song here ā€“ on keys alone. She notes that, while itā€™s a song about ā€œbad thingsā€ happening to you, the experiences of 2020 have made it more positive to her. ā€œFor me, this song is realising you had the power all along and ā€“ perhaps subconsciously ā€“ this was an invitation to transform and change,ā€ she explains. ā€œWhat does it mean?/ The bad things Iā€™ve seen,ā€ she ponders as the song comes to a close; you canā€™t help but consider the ways weā€™ve searched for meaning and value in this torrid period.

Bat For Lashes
Bat For Lashes CREDIT: Press

The starā€™s life has changed significantly on a personal level recently, too. This is the first performance sheā€™s given since having a baby and she jokes as she struggles with an omnichord that ā€œmum brain is realā€. When she plays the desperate ā€˜Liliesā€™ from 2012ā€™s ā€˜The Haunted Manā€™, she gets caught up in its sentiment, recalling writing it when she was yearning for a child. ā€œSinging it now, having my little girl ā€“ itā€™s super emotional,ā€ she says, but even without Khanā€™s personal attachment, itā€™s a moving highlight of the set.

Transformation comes into play more obviously tonight, with the musicianā€™s stripped-back arrangements of songs that are usually lush with layers. Sat behind a keyboard, she shares softer, sparser versions of old favourites (the spooky break-up song ā€˜Whatā€™s A Girl To Do?ā€™, ā€˜Kids In The Darkā€™) and ā€œmore obscure special treatsā€ (a cover of The Carpentersā€™ ā€˜Weā€™ve Only Just Begunā€™, her Twilight soundtrack contribution ā€˜Letā€™s Get Lostā€™).







Most stunning of all is the finale, 2012ā€™s ā€˜Deep Sea Diverā€™, which rarely makes it into Bat For Lashes shows thanks to its reliance on ā€œold-school synths and arpeggiosā€. Khanā€™s version here takes the audience right into the heart of the song, unveiling a message of strength and hope that feels both comforting and invigorating as we (hopefully) start to move closer to the light at the end of theĀ tunnel. We should soon be free from our own individual, metaphorical cabins, but Khanā€™s sanctuary will always exist for us in her music, no matter what life throws at us next.

The post Bat For Lashes live in Los Angeles: a beautifully intimate ode to transformation appeared first on NME.

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