The Bride (album)
The Bride is the fourth studio album by English singer-songwriter Natasha Khan, professionally known as Bat for Lashes. It was released on 1 July 2016 by Parlophone. The album was produced by Khan, with co-production from Ben Christophers, Simone Felice, David Baron, Dan Carey, Jacknife Lee and Matt "Aqualung" Hales. The Bride was preceded by the digital promotional release "I Do", then followed by the singles "In God's House", "Sunday Love", "Joe's Dream", and the double A-side release of "If I Knew" and "In Your Bed".
Background
While promoting her side project Sexwitch, which she formed with Dan Carey and the indie rock band Toy, Khan stated that she was working on a new album. She stated that it was linked to a short film she had made about a woman going through a tragedy on her wedding day and that the album would be hopefully released in spring of 2016. In February 2016, Khan started posting preview photos from her collaboration with photographer Neil Krug. On 19 February 2016, she released a promotional single titled "I Do" with cryptic artwork stating "Save the Date, 1st July 2016". The lead single from the album, "In God's House", debuted on Annie Mac's BBC Radio 1 show on 10 March, and was released digitally the following day.Concept, release and artwork
According to The Brides press release, the work is a concept album that follows the story of a woman, whose fiancé dies in a car crash on the way to their wedding. The album follows her as she decides to go on the honeymoon alone and her emotions as she deals with the tragedy. Khan commented that "the trauma and the grief from the death of Joe, the groom,... ... more of a metaphor and it allows me to explore the concept of love in general, which requires a death of sorts."The album was created with past collaborators Simone Felice, Dan Carey, Head and Ben Christophers. Release of the album was preceded by the singles "In God's House" and "Sunday Love", both with music videos directed by Khan herself and John DeMenil. To promote the album, Bat for Lashes embarked on a small tour which consisted of performing in a number of churches to match the wedding theme. Fans and attendees were asked to wear formal attire to the shows. The album's artwork was made in collaboration with photographer Neil Krug and was shot over the course of a year. The CD and vinyl feature a booklet and prints of the photos from this collaboration.
Critical reception
The Bride received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted mean rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 78, based on 30 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews". Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph hailed The Bride as "a beautiful, beguiling, disturbing and rewarding album of love, loss, grief and recovery from one of the most intriguing singer-songwriters currently active in British music, of either gender." Rachel Aroesti of The Guardian stated, "Barring 'Sunday Love' this is a collection of darkly intriguing dirges, a battle for dominance between Khan's intimate, exquisitely beautiful vocal and subtly unnerving sonic dissonance at its heart." Larry Bartleet of the NME viewed the album as Khan's "most ambitious yet" and remarked that she "refuses to yield crossover hits like 2009's 'Daniel' opting instead for a slow style of storytelling that rewards the patient listener." George Garner of Q dubbed it Khan's "boldest album yet" and wrote, "In the moving figure of The Bride, Khan has delivered her defining statement as an artist." Nina Keen of DIY noted that "here's a resistance clichés on this record, and Khan gives a freshness and a sincerity to her otherwise ethereal music", calling the album "a beautiful, complex and often harrowing listening experience."Pitchfork's Cameron Cook said the album "may be Bat for Lashes' most ambitious project yet" and commented, "Its few shortcomings aside, The Bride is further proof that Khan, unlike almost all of her contemporaries, understands how to wade into mystical realms and emerge with big, beguiling pop." Kory Grow of Rolling Stone felt that although "the album lags when the story gets too heavy", "there are many songs on The Bride that transcend its thematic conceit and stand on their own as unique puzzle pieces in Kahn's steadfastly mystifying persona." Heather Phares of AllMusic stated that the album "begins vividly", but was unimpressed with its "slower" second half, concluding that "while Khan used restraint eloquently on The Haunted Man, The Bride is beautifully crafted, but not always thrilling." Katie Rife of The A.V. Club expressed, "Following the lonesome guitar on 'Never Forgive The Angels,' the power of The Brides narrative begins to fade in a series of piano-focused ballads that, while uniformly beautiful aren't distinctive enough songwriting-wise to stand out from one another", adding that "Khan may have prioritized the concept over the listening experience as a whole." Slant Magazine's Sal Cinquemani wrote, "That The Bride works best as a song cycle rather than a collection of pop hooks is a testament to its cohesion and intrinsic intertexuality, but what's missing here is Khan's knack for grafting avant-art-rock concepts onto mainstream forms."
Accolades
Commercial performance
The Bride debuted at number nine on the UK Albums Chart with 8,242 copies sold in its first week, becoming Khan's third consecutive top-10 album.Track listing
Personnel
Credits for adapted from the liner notes of The Bride.- Natasha Khan – vocals, production ; Omnichord ; electric guitar, Rhodes, tambourine ; drum programming ; keyboards, mandolin, pocket piano ; synth ; harp ; drums ; guitar ; string arrangements ; celesta, vibraphone ; bass synth ; drum machine ; handclaps ; art direction, concept
- David Baron – co-production, mixing ; bass ; synth ; Rhodes ; programming ; recording ; string arrangements ; sound effects
- Sandy Bell – backing vocals
- Sarah Brooksbank – A&R, management
- Dan Carey – co-production, programming, recording, synth
- Ben Christophers – co-production ; bowed guitar ; bass ; recording ; sound effects ; piano, vocals
- Tony Cousins – mastering
- Simone Felice – co-production ; recording ; drums
- Matt Hales – co-production, drum programming, recording, synth
- Pete Hanlon – recording ; engineering
- Head – co-production, mixing ; recording
- Neil Krug – photography
- Dawn Landes – backing vocals, guitar
- Jacknife Lee – co-production, programming, recording, sampler, synth
- Alex Reeves – timpani ; drums, percussion
- Lou Rogai – guitar ; backing vocals ; bass
- Davide Rossi – string arrangements, string recording ; strings
- Kevin Salem – guitar
- Leo Taylor – drums
- Dave Wallace – A&R, management
- Richard Welland – design
- Michael Whitham – director of photography
- Rachael Yamagata – backing vocals
Charts