The Bats have spent more than a decade forging a reputation based
on their excellent songwriting and reliably buoyant pop performances.
On record, they often appear as modern day pastoral musicians, revealing
the charms of their music and words in gentle pop epiphanies, while
their live performances have gathered acclaim for the energy that
the group's insistently strummy rock instils in crowds.
1993
has seen The Bats bring these two sides of their musical character closer together through
the release of a powerful new album, Silverbeet, and four months of international touring
as part of a Flying Nun package called Noisyland followed by a tour of major American
cities with Belly and Radiohead. In short, it has been a great year for the band.
Silverbeet was welcomed as the Bats' best leap forward since 1987's
classic Daddy's Highway (named one of the year's most noteworthy
independent releases in American Billboard ). Released through Mammoth
Records in America, the album featured strongly on college radio
charts and outsold last year's Fear of God. The Noisyland tour,
featuring The Bats, Straitjacket
Fits and JPS Experience, was
Flying Nun's highest profile international touring expedition ever,
trekking across three continents and being warmly--and in many places,
even ecstatically--received wherever it went.
The Bats pulled something of a surprise from their bag-of-a-thousand-songs with
Silverbeet, their fourth album for Flying Nun. Surprising not because it contained another
13 slices of that simple yet chaotic pop (it did) but because it captures the sound of the
Bats stretching to deliver something brilliant and distinctive in the studio with a noisy
set of tunes selected by the group for their freshness and their diversity.
Silverbeet was recorded at the tail-end of The Bats' 1992 world tour in the small-town
isolation of Stoughton, Massachusetts, USA. The two week recording session with producer
Lou Giordano (responsible for recent recordings by Sugar and Pere Ubu, and older stuff
like King Missile and Husker Du) took place at the Outpost Studio in Stoughton, and the
album was then mixed at Carriage House in nearby Stamford, Connecticut (where Lou had also
mixed the Pixies' Doolittle and Sugar's Copper Blue, and Barry White was booked in for a
session after the Bats!).
Rather than record each instrument individually and piece the album together as they
had done on their previous album, Fear Of God, the Bats and Lou chose to record Silverbeet
song by song. The result is a set of outstanding performances by the group -- with real,
uncontrived strength from ever-solid rhythm section, Malcolm Grant and Paul Kean,
lung-bursting vocals from Robert and Kaye Woodward, and the first evidence of Kaye's
guitar truly cutting loose on record!
Outstanding was also the adjective applied to The Bats' live performance at the New
Music Seminar in New York in July. There, they sufficiently impressed the management of
Belly (the alternative to MTV crossover success story of the year in America, with 400,000
copies of their Star album sold there) and Radiohead (the English band who broke into the
American Top 20 in August with the single "Creep") that they were invited to
join the groups on a two week tour of big American cities that followed the completion of
Noisyland in September.
The Bats' live shows throughout New Zealand, Australia, North America,
the UK and Europe this year have served to show the immense popularity
of their music. Crowds have danced and cheered (in Boston, they
even called out for The Chills'
'Pink Frost', but you can forgive an enthusiastic fan mixing their
NZ groups in the heat of the excitement!) for The Bats everywhere
they go.
Here's a New Zealand group proving they have what audiences the world over
want--The Bats' immense, ever-expanding repertoire of great songs
has a big chunk of the world at their feet. And in their own unassuming
way, The Bats have earned every piece of that love and respect,
and only deserve even more next year!