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THE BATS

"Raw Eggs" CD Album
Exclusive limited edition The Bats US Tour CD. 5 unreleased tracks plus rough mixes/demo versions of all the The Bats At The National Grid songs.
August 2006. BUY. Web Only

"It almost seems reactionary to release an album as good and straightforward as the Bats' latest, At the National Grid. Armed with a truckload of talent and an ear for pop craft that major record labels should be killing for, the band cheerfully and quietly puts out solid records like other bands do drugs and get hyped-up reviews."
- POP Matters

 

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The Bats Interview | The Bats Article | The Bats At The National Grid

Cover paintings by Robert Scott

Tracks

1. Don't You Rise
2. Western Isles
3. You Don't Belong [sample-568K-82 secs]
4. Up to the Sky
5. Face Inside The Sun
6. The Rays
7. The Birds and The bees
8. Hubert
9. Crazy Crowd
10. Horizon
11. Mir [sample-568K-100 secs]
12. Things I Cant Leave Behind
13. Pre War Blues
14. That's How You'll Find Me
15. Rehash
16. Single File
17. We Do Not Kiss The Ones We Kick
18. The Bells Are Ringing

Tracks 1, 3, 5, 14 and 15 Previously Unreleased

Others Rough Mixes/Demo versions of The Bats At The National Grid

Limited to 100 Copies. (Silver CDR with full colour artwork and labelled, standard jewel case.)

 

The Bats At The National Grid Reviews

"At the National Grid, the Bats' sixth full-length in 23 years and first since 1995, is immediately inviting, opening with some barely comprehensible studio banter and slipping into the floating, percussion-less twee pop of "Western Isles" almost by accident. Robert Scott's guy-next-door vocals invite you in while bassist/guitarist Kaye Woodward sings little "doot-doo" backing vocals and Paul Kean's bass comes in to give the song a rhythmic nudge quite casually, as though it just stopped by for tea and decided to stay for a few songs. The album slips into its groove on "Horizon", a bouncy slice of jangling indie pop with some nice, subtly tricky stickwork by drummer Malcolm Grant.

From there the album endears through a mixture of acoustic/electric jangle and friendly jamming, the latter of which contributes the album's only real low points. The band's almost off-handed interplay is one of their major strong points, but fuzzy instrumentals like "Hubert" are just a bit too stretched-out and meandering to complement their more tightly composed brethren. It's a small concern given how many songs go in the complete opposite direction. "Things" rides a surging rhythm section, nudging Scott's melancholy vocal forcefully into your memory banks, while "Single File" is the Bats at their most psychedelic, with garage organ piping tinnily in behind the bubbling guitars and harmonies.

In the 10 years since we last heard them on Couchmaster, the Bats have kept themselves busy, with Scott keeping the highest profile in a couple of fruitful reunions of the Clean, but they don't really skip a beat on At the National Grid. If anything, the album has more in common with their ultra-loose early albums, unafraid to slip into a noisy rave-up as they do at the end of "Flowers & Trees" or just explore a jam for a few minutes. The approach doesn't make for a perfect album, but it's a lovely one nonetheless. -Joe Tangari, Pitchfork

"It almost seems reactionary to release an album as good and straightforward as the Bats' latest, At the National Grid. Armed with a truckload of talent and an ear for pop craft that major record labels should be killing for, the band cheerfully and quietly puts out solid records like other bands do drugs and get hyped-up reviews. It's a skill that seems woefully under-appreciated at times, as press is diverted by colorful back stories, the exoticism of lesser-known cultures and their (sometimes great, sometimes merely adequate, but different) music offerings, and the good ol' thrill-of-anything-new game. The Bats aren't playing along. They're too busy working some day jobs and putting out records whenever they get a chance (this one is their sixth in 23 years). And it wouldn't seem reactionary if it weren't so good.

For those who have missed the Bats, here's the basics. Take the sound of early to mid-'80s college radio, throw in some pretty Velvet Underground influences, add the term "jangle pop" and a touch of psychedelia and what you have is a recipe for good tunesmiths, i.e. the Bats. "They say it's all about the journey," Robert Scott sings on "Horizon" and At the National Grid reinforces that idea through the course of the its 43 minutes. Listening is less about what's cool as it is what's beautiful about settling in with solidity. One sits back and enjoys the ride, content to momentarily escape the ups and downs that go along with keeping au courant with the rest of the music-loving world. That steadiness provides perfect moments as when the line "I just want to see the world through different eyes" is earnestly sung on "Pre War Blues" or Kaye Woodward's voice comes in on "Up to the Sky", or when one realizes that the Bats are good enough to have an intro become a song, as they do on "Hubert".

It's not until the fourth or fifth listen that the strength of the production (done by The Bats with John Kelcher as engineer, and mastered by Dale Cotton) really kicks in. It's simple really: the band (the aforementioned Robert Scott and Kaye Woodward, plus Malcolm Grant and Paul Kean) is so good together that there doesn't need to be any tricks. Everything seems recorded near the same level which, of course, could be a muddled mess. It turns out to be just right here. The band, the voices, the lines coming in and out are only complementary to one another. The spaces needed to let the song through are already inherent in the whole of the band; any additional production techniques would be too much. The listener can hear everything. If one wants to follow the bass line, she can, while the same goes for every other instrument.

To switch to the personal, and to quote another PopMatters writer, Rob Horning, "...once I finish reviewing an album, I never feel like listening to it...". At the National Grid is a rare exception to this truth. Not only did I find myself Not Sick of this record, I verily became more and more enamored of it. I asked myself why, as I have barely listened to CDs I have reviewed and given higher ratings to. I think the answer lies in the overall effect. The Bats will not change the course of music. They will not start a revolution. They can, though, make an individual life a little brighter for the better part of an hour. Some artists choose this course instead of the radical one and I thoroughly appreciate and applaud them. It makes me want to listen over and over again." Jill LaBrack, Pop Matters

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