Bat for Lashes
Bat for Lashes is the stage name of Natasha Khan, a British-Pakistani singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, visual artist, and director born on 25 October 1979 in Wembley, London, to an English mother and a Pakistani father who was a professional squash player.[1][2] Raised in Hertfordshire and influenced early on by performers like Michael Jackson, Kate Bush, and David Bowie for their theatricality and visual artistry, Khan studied music and visual arts at the University of Brighton before working as a nursery school teacher for four years.[2] She adopted the Bat for Lashes moniker for her solo project, debuting with the album Fur and Gold in 2007, which earned a Mercury Prize nomination and established her sound blending indie folk, electronic elements, and mythic themes of love, death, and spirituality.[3][2] Over her nearly two-decade career, Khan has released six studio albums, including Two Suns (2009), The Haunted Man (2012), The Bride (2016), Lost Girls (2019), and The Dream of Delphi (2024), with four reaching the UK Top 15 and three nominated for the Mercury Prize.[3] She has contributed soundtracks to films like The Twilight Saga and The Hunger Games, won two Ivor Novello Awards (for Song of the Year in 2010 and Best Soundtrack in 2019), and received three Brit Award nominations.[3] In addition to music, Khan has directed music videos, premiered short films at festivals like Tribeca, and pursued side projects such as the folk supergroup Sexwitch (2015).[3] Now based in California and a mother to daughter Delphi—born during the COVID-19 pandemic—her latest work, The Dream of Delphi, explores motherhood, ancestry, and mysticism through retro synthesizers, ancient instruments, and multimedia elements like a visual score and tarot deck.[4] Khan has performed at major festivals including Coachella, Glastonbury, and Latitude, solidifying her reputation as a multidisciplinary artist pushing boundaries in sound and visuals.[3]Early years
Childhood and family
Natasha Khan, known professionally as Bat for Lashes, was born on 25 October 1979 in Wembley, north-west London, England.[5] She is the daughter of an English mother, Josie, and a Pakistani father, Rahmat Khan, a former professional squash player from Peshawar who later became a renowned coach, including training his nephew Jahangir Khan.[6][7] Khan's mixed Anglo-Pakistani heritage shaped her early sense of identity, positioning her as a cultural bridge between her parents' worlds, though she experienced racial abuse during her childhood.[8] When Khan was five years old, her family relocated from London to Hertfordshire, where she spent much of her childhood in a rural, green environment reminiscent of the Chiltern Hills near Great Missenden.[9] Summers were often spent visiting her father's family in Pakistan, exposing her to Pashtun culture and landscapes that later influenced her artistic imagery.[10] At age 11, her father left the family, leaving her mother, who was just 21 at Khan's birth, to raise Khan and her two siblings as a single parent in Hertfordshire.[11][12] This period marked a shift in family dynamics, with Khan attending a Christian school and turning to imaginative escapes amid the upheaval.[13] Her mixed heritage and the blending of English domestic life with Pakistani traditions fostered a rich, if complex, home environment that informed her later explorations of identity and folklore in her work.[14]Education
Natasha Khan settled in Brighton in 2000 to pursue studies in music and visual arts at the University of Brighton, where she graduated with a degree in 2003.[5] The program emphasized punk and experimental approaches, incorporating interdisciplinary elements such as theatre, dance, and multimedia production.[5] Following her graduation, Khan completed training to become a nursery school teacher and worked in that role in Brighton for four years, balancing her day job with artistic development.[2][15] During her university years, Khan experimented with creative projects outside the formal curriculum, including sound installations, animations, and avant-garde performances in local Brighton clubs that blended art, theatre, and dance techniques.[16][5] These efforts helped her hone songwriting and performance skills, leading to early demos and local shows that laid the groundwork for her musical persona as Bat for Lashes.[5]Musical career
2006–2008: Fur and Gold
In 2006, Natasha Khan, a Brighton-based songwriter, adopted the stage name Bat for Lashes for her musical project and signed a recording deal with The Echo Label, a subsidiary of Chrysalis Music. This marked her entry into the professional music industry following independent releases and live performances.[17] Fur and Gold, her debut album, was recorded over the course of one month in studios in London and Brighton. Khan co-produced the record with David Kosten (of Faultline), contributing multi-instrumental performances on harp, piano, autoharp, and percussion, while Kosten handled additional keyboards and programming. The album was released on 11 September 2006 through The Echo Label, blending folk, psychedelic, and electronic elements with Khan's ethereal vocals and themes of nature, mythology, and personal transformation. A reissue with bonus tracks followed in 2007 via Parlophone Records.[18][19] The album spawned several singles, including "Trophy" (released October 2006), and "What's a Girl to Do?" (released October 2007), accompanied by a visually striking video directed by Dougal Wilson showing Khan dancing in a confined space with masked men. These tracks highlighted the album's atmospheric sound but achieved modest chart success, with "What's a Girl to Do?" peaking at number 78 on the UK Singles Chart. Another single, "The Wizard," preceded the album in May 2006 on the independent She Bear label. "Horse and I" featured a music video directed by Khan herself, depicting a mystical journey on horseback.[20][18][21] Promotion for Fur and Gold included extensive UK touring, with Bat for Lashes supporting Roots Manuva on his autumn 2006 headline dates and performing at festivals like Reading and Leeds. The album earned a nomination for the 2007 Mercury Prize, where Khan performed "Horse and I" at the ceremony, boosting her profile among critics and industry figures.[22] Critically, Fur and Gold received widespread acclaim for its imaginative songcraft and evocative production. NME awarded it 8 out of 10, praising its "gorgeous, spine-tingling" blend of mysticism and pop. The Guardian described it as a "never-ending story of fantastic dreams and heartbreaking reality," commending Khan's Kate Bush-like vocals and the album's organic, gothic-tinged soundscapes. Commercially, it debuted and peaked at number 48 on the UK Albums Chart, spending five weeks in the top 100 and establishing Bat for Lashes as a rising force in indie music.[23][20]2009–2011: Two Suns
Following the success of her debut album, Natasha Khan, performing as Bat for Lashes, drew inspiration for Two Suns from a tumultuous transatlantic romance that ended in heartbreak, infusing the project with personal introspection.[24] The album was co-produced by Khan and David Kosten, who had collaborated on her previous work, with recording sessions spanning diverse locations including Big Sur and Joshua Tree in California, as well as studios in Wales, London, and Brighton in the UK.[25] This global approach contributed to the album's expansive sound, blending electronic elements with folk influences. Two Suns was released on 6 April 2009 by Parlophone in the UK, debuting at number five on the UK Albums Chart and later certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry for sales exceeding 100,000 copies.[20] Key tracks included the lead single "Daniel," a poignant ballad evoking lost innocence, and "Pearl's Dream," which explored introspective journeys. Other singles were "Pearl's Dream" in June 2009 and "Sleep Alone" in September 2009, with "Daniel" receiving a visually striking music video directed by Johan Renck, featuring Khan in a desert landscape that amplified the song's emotional resonance. Promotional efforts included a special edition release later that year with bonus tracks and a documentary film, Two + Two, highlighting the album's creation.[26] To support the album, Bat for Lashes embarked on an extensive tour across Europe and North America, performing at major festivals such as Glastonbury in 2009, where she delivered a set drawing from Two Suns material on the Other Stage.[27] The tour elevated her international profile, with appearances at events like Electric Picnic alongside acts including MGMT.[28] The album garnered widespread critical acclaim for its emotional depth and sonic innovation, earning a nomination for the 2009 Mercury Prize.[29] Additionally, the single "Daniel" received an Ivor Novello Award for Best Contemporary Song in 2010, underscoring Khan's songwriting prowess.[30]2012–2014: The Haunted Man
Following the release and extensive touring for her 2009 album Two Suns, Natasha Khan, performing as Bat for Lashes, took a deliberate break to process personal experiences and return to her roots in Brighton, England. This period of introspection led to the creation of her third studio album, The Haunted Man, which she began recording in her Brighton flat, emphasizing a more stripped-back and emotionally raw sound compared to the cinematic scope of her previous work. Co-produced by Khan alongside longtime collaborator David Kosten and Dan Carey, the album was released on 15 October 2012 through Parlophone Records.[31][32][19][33] The Haunted Man featured standout tracks such as the poignant ballad "Laura," inspired by a close friendship, and the upbeat "All Your Gold," which explored themes of love and sacrifice. The album's artwork and accompanying videos embraced a bold, vulnerable aesthetic, with Khan posing nude in a black-and-white photograph shot by artist Ryan McGinley, symbolizing the shedding of emotional burdens; this concept extended to promotional visuals, including a short film documenting the album's creation. "Laura" was released as the lead single on 24 July 2012, followed by "All Your Gold" in September, with promotion including a performance at the iTunes Festival in London that September, where Khan debuted several new songs live.[34][35][36][37] The album received widespread critical acclaim for its emotional depth and Khan's maturation as a songwriter, with reviewers praising its vulnerability and minimalistic production that allowed her vocals to shine. Pitchfork awarded it a 7.8 out of 10, highlighting its "spacious, boldly orchestrated" qualities and Khan's ability to convey raw introspection. The Haunted Man earned Khan a nomination for British Female Solo Artist at the 2013 BRIT Awards, marking further recognition of her artistry. To support the release, she embarked on a world tour featuring headline shows across Europe and North America, along with festival appearances such as Sziget in Hungary and Lowlands in the Netherlands, where she delivered captivating live renditions of the new material. It debuted at number 6 on the UK Albums Chart.[38][39][31][40][20]2015–2016: Sexwitch and The Bride
In 2015, Natasha Khan of Bat for Lashes formed the collaborative side project Sexwitch with the English rock band TOY and producer Dan Carey, who had previously worked with her on her 2012 album The Haunted Man.[41] The project's self-titled debut album reinterpreted six covers of 1970s psychedelic and folk songs sourced from global traditions, including tracks originally from Iran, Morocco, Thailand, and Brazil, transforming them into brooding, atmospheric pieces with Khan's haunting vocals at the forefront.[42] Released on September 25, 2015, through Echo and BMG, the album marked a brief detour into experimental folk-psych revivalism during a transitional phase in Khan's career.[42] Transitioning back to her primary alias, Khan released her fourth studio album, The Bride, on July 1, 2016, via Parlophone, presenting a narrative-driven concept record that unfolds like a desolate road movie.[43] Inspired by a short film Khan scripted titled I Do, the album chronicles the emotional journey of a bride abandoned by fate when her fiancé dies in a car crash en route to their wedding, forcing her to confront grief and self-discovery on a solitary honeymoon across vast, empty landscapes.[44] Recorded primarily in London and upstate New York with a stripped-back approach emphasizing piano, strings, and intimate vocals, the sessions featured drummer Leo Taylor on tracks like "Sunday Love" and producer Dan Carey handling synths and programming, creating a cinematic soundscape that blends torch songs with subtle dissonance. It debuted at number 9 on the UK Albums Chart.[45][20] The album's promotion highlighted its theatrical elements, with Khan adopting a veiled "bride" persona for live performances that evoked wedding rituals twisted by tragedy, including a notable set at Manchester Cathedral in May 2016 where she previewed material amid gothic staging.[46] Singles released included the cryptic promotional track "I Do" in February 2016, followed by "In God's House" in March—accompanied by a desert-set video directed by Khan herself—and "Sunday Love" in May, which captured the protagonist's raw heartbreak.[47] Supporting short tours across the UK and Europe, the rollout culminated in a mesmerizing Glastonbury Festival appearance on June 26, 2016, on the John Peel Stage, blending new songs like "Honeymooning Alone" with earlier hits.[48] The Bride earned a nomination for the 2016 Mercury Prize, with critics praising its bold storytelling; The Guardian awarded it four out of five stars, lauding the "darkly intriguing torch songs" that marry vulnerability with sonic innovation.[49][50]2019: Lost Girls
Following a creative hiatus, Natasha Khan, known as Bat for Lashes, drew inspiration for her fifth studio album from the sun-drenched landscapes and nocturnal vibes of Los Angeles, where she had relocated, as well as classic 1980s vampire films like The Lost Boys and children's movies evoking a sense of nostalgic fantasy.[51][2] The album's concept revolves around a fictional girl gang of vampires roaming a surreal version of LA, blending synth-pop with cinematic storytelling to capture themes of romance and otherworldliness.[52] Khan composed the material during late-night studio sessions in the US, approaching the project as a pleasurable, unpressured endeavor rather than a commercial obligation, marking her first independent release after parting with major labels.[53] Lost Girls was released on 6 September 2019 through AWAL, featuring ten tracks that immerse listeners in an 1980s-inspired sonic palette of shimmering synths, echoing drums, and dreamy vocals.[52] Standout songs include the opener "Kids in the Dark," which sets a hazy, romantic tone, and the instrumental "Vampires," evoking a nocturnal drive through the desert with its pulsating bass and atmospheric layers.[53] Other highlights like "The Hunger" and "So Good" showcase Khan's playful fusion of disco-inflected grooves and ethereal melodies, creating a cohesive narrative arc that feels like the soundtrack to an imaginary horror film.[52] The lead single "Kids in the Dark" premiered in June 2019, followed by its official video in July, directed by Khan herself and featuring hazy, neon-lit visuals of a young woman wandering LA streets, channeling 1980s aesthetics with soft-focus cinematography and retro synth visuals.[54] "Feel for You," released as the second single in July, arrived with an audio track emphasizing lush, yearning production, while its accompanying promotions reinforced the album's vintage video vibe through social media teasers and stylized imagery.[55] These releases built anticipation by teasing the album's fictional universe, with Khan portraying alter-ego Nikki Pink in promotional materials.[56] To promote Lost Girls, Khan embarked on a UK tour in November 2019, including headline shows at London's EartH and Brighton's Concorde 2, where she performed tracks from the album alongside fan favorites, delivering high-energy sets infused with the record's synth-driven energy.[57] She also announced select North American dates for late 2019 and early 2020, such as performances in New York and Los Angeles, allowing fans to experience the album's immersive live translation.[58] Critics praised Lost Girls for its nostalgic yet fresh synth sound, with NME awarding it 4/5 stars and lauding it as a "widescreen reimagining" of Khan's style that retains an underlying menace amid the glamour.[59] The Guardian highlighted its "playful" and "surreal" qualities, calling it unadulterated pop born from sheer pleasure, while Pitchfork noted its vivid, comforting nostalgia rooted in human emotion.[53][52] Commercially, the album debuted and peaked at number 13 on the UK Albums Chart, spending one week in the top 40, reflecting solid indie-level success without major label backing.[20] It received no major award nominations in 2019, though Khan's broader catalog continued to earn acclaim, including an Ivor Novello for her television work that year.[60]2024–present: The Dream of Delphi and recent activities
In 2024, Bat for Lashes, the stage name of Natasha Khan, released her sixth studio album, The Dream of Delphi, on 31 May via Mercury KX. It debuted and peaked at number 73 on the UK Albums Chart.[20] The album draws inspiration from Khan's experiences of motherhood during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly the birth of her daughter Delphi in 2020, and evokes the mythic resonance of the ancient Greek oracle at Delphi as a symbol of prophetic intuition and altered states.[4][61] Khan described the record as a "cosmic, raw, maternal energy," exploring themes of conception, birth, and the emotional bonds of early parenthood through minimalist compositions improvised on synths, piano, flutes, and strings.[62][63] Khan self-produced the album, with additional production contributions from Ben Christophers and TJ Allen on select tracks, and features harp arrangements by Mary Lattimore on songs like "Night Song."[64][65] Key tracks include the title song "The Dream of Delphi," which opens the album with ethereal vocals and ambient textures, and "Blue Baby," a tender reflection on postpartum vulnerability amid swelling strings and cooing infant sounds.[66][63] Promotion for The Dream of Delphi began with the release of the title track as the lead single on 22 February 2024, accompanied by a video directed by Freddie Leyden in collaboration with choreographer Alexandra Green, depicting Khan in a dreamlike, maternal ritual.[66][67] Subsequent singles included "Home" on 25 April and "At Your Feet," the latter featuring another Leyden-directed video emphasizing atmospheric intimacy.[68] To support the album, Khan embarked on her first UK headline tour in five years in June 2024, performing at venues such as O2 Academy 2 in Oxford on 12 June, Birmingham Town Hall on 18 June, Bristol Beacon on 19 June, and London's Barbican on 24 and 25 June, alongside festival appearances like Sideways in Helsinki.[62][69] The album received positive critical reception for its intimate portrayal of motherhood and sparse, transportive soundscapes, with Pitchfork awarding it a 7.0 and praising its "ambient-adjacent experiments" that capture tenderness without sentimentality.[70] Reviews in outlets like The Line of Best Fit (7/10) highlighted its vulnerability and harmonic production, while Slant Magazine (3.5/5) called it a "humble, meditative tribute" to parent-child bonds.[63][61] In 2025, Khan announced a 20th anniversary reissue of her 2006 debut album Fur and Gold, remastered at Abbey Road Studios and released digitally in November via BMG, with physical editions on 180g vinyl and expanded double CD following on 6 February 2026.[71] The edition includes nine bonus tracks, such as previously unreleased demos and remastered originals like "Sarah" and "I Saw a Light."[72] Additionally, on 8 November 2024, she revealed the EP The Dream of Delphi (Harp Visions), featuring reimagined tracks with harp emphases, led by the single "Christmas Day (Harp Visions)."[73] To mark the album's one-year anniversary, Khan released the accompanying film The Dream of Delphi – A New Transmission on YouTube on 31 May 2025, a visual narrative exploring creation and birth directed in tandem with the record's themes.[74] No further tours were confirmed as of late 2025, though Khan continued to engage fans through social media updates on her creative process.[75]Artistry
Musical style
Natasha Khan, performing as Bat for Lashes, is a multi-instrumentalist whose work prominently features harp, piano, autoharp, harmonium, Hammond organ, and various percussion elements, allowing her to craft layered, organic soundscapes that blend acoustic intimacy with rhythmic drive.[76][77][78] Her early recordings emphasize these instruments in a folk-psychedelic framework, evoking mystical and tribal atmospheres through percussive harp plucks and piano-driven melodies.[79] Khan's production style has evolved significantly across her discography, beginning with a psych-folk and baroque pop orientation on her debut and shifting toward electronic and synth-heavy textures in subsequent releases.[80] She frequently collaborates with producer David Kosten, who integrates synth drones, drum programming, and looped percussion to enhance the ethereal quality of her tracks, often employing reverb to create expansive, dreamlike spaces.[19][81] This progression is evident in the transition from the acoustic-forward arrangements of Fur and Gold to the synth-pop and ambient electronics of Lost Girls and The Dream of Delphi, where field recordings and looped motifs add subtle environmental depth.[38][82] Her genre fusions draw from dream pop, art pop, and trip-hop, resulting in intricate arrangements that echo the dramatic orchestration of Kate Bush and the raw intensity of PJ Harvey.[38][79][83] These elements converge in folktronica explorations, where electronic loops underpin baroque flourishes and psych-inflected percussion.[84] In live performances, Bat for Lashes employs theatrical setups, incorporating elaborate costumes—such as feathered headdresses and animal motifs—and immersive visuals to transform concerts into ritualistic, narrative-driven experiences that mirror the cinematic quality of her recordings.[85][86][87]Themes and influences
Bat for Lashes' work, under the artistic persona of Natasha Khan, frequently explores themes of femininity through archetypal figures and personal introspection. Central motifs include the multifaceted nature of womanhood, often depicted via personas such as the ethereal bride or the seductive vampire, which embody vulnerability and empowerment. In The Bride (2016), the narrative centers on a woman's journey through grief and self-discovery following her groom's death, drawing on mythological structures like the hero's journey to examine love's transformative power. Similarly, Lost Girls (2019) reimagines 1980s Los Angeles cinema through vampiric alter egos, blending nostalgia with themes of desire and otherworldliness.[88][89] Mythology and spirituality permeate Khan's lyrics, influenced by Jungian psychology and ancient tales that probe duality and the soul's quest. Albums like Two Suns (2009) delve into opposites—such as night and day, or the self's yin and yang—through the alter ego Pearl, a femme fatale contrasting Khan's more introspective voice, to explore emotional binaries in relationships. Love and loss emerge as recurring threads, often intertwined with spiritual awakening; for instance, The Bride was inspired by the ritualistic aspects of marriage, recapturing its sacred essence amid heartbreak. Spirituality extends to ancestral connections and incantatory rituals, as seen in Khan's portrayal of liminal spaces where personal rituals become devotional acts.[77][90] Khan's influences draw from mystical forebears like Kate Bush and Stevie Nicks, whose ethereal vocals and thematic depth in exploring femininity and the supernatural shaped her approach to emotional conviction in songwriting. Childhood imagination and dreamlike narratives also inform her work, evolving from the pastoral folklore and witchy tales of her debut Fur and Gold (2006), which evoked fairy-tale landscapes, to the maternal introspection of The Dream of Delphi (2024). This latest album transforms experiences of motherhood into a "language of movement," reflecting daily intimacies like caregiving as portals to spiritual and ancestral realms. Additionally, cinematic elements, particularly 1980s films, infuse her concepts, as in Lost Girls' Reagan-era synth-pop evoking a hazy, filmic escapism.[91][4][89] Khan integrates these themes visually and narratively, treating albums as cohesive short films or stories that extend beyond music. The Bride, for example, unfolds like a linear novel with accompanying imagery of desolate weddings and rebirth, emphasizing conceptual depth over isolated tracks. This evolution underscores a shift from external mythic explorations to internalized, relational spirituality, prioritizing human connection and hope amid loss.[88][4]Other projects
Collaborations
One of Bat for Lashes' most notable collaborations is the psych-folk project Sexwitch, formed with the British rock band TOY and producer Dan Carey in 2015. The self-titled album consists of six covers of traditional folk songs sourced from Iran, Morocco, Thailand, and the United States, with lyrics and arrangements adapted by Natasha Khan. The tracks include "Ghoroobaa Ghashangan" and "Helelyos" from Iran, "Ha Howa Ha Howa" and "Kassidat El Hakka" from Morocco, "Lam Plearn Kiew Bao" from Thailand, and "War In Peace" from the USA. The recording took place in a single day at Carey's South London studio, where TOY learned each song and performed it in one take to capture a raw, spontaneous energy described by Carey as a "voodoo exorcism." The album was released on September 25, 2015, via The Echo Label.[92][93] Khan has also partnered with Beck on several tracks outside her solo work. In 2010, she provided vocals for "Let's Get Lost," a duet co-written and produced by Beck for the soundtrack to The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, blending ethereal pop with introspective lyrics about desire and loss.[94] Four years later, the pair collaborated again on "Under the Indigo Moon," which Khan co-wrote and sang lead on, serving as the soundtrack to a surreal short film directed by Neil Krug for the fashion brand YMC.[95] Additional guest appearances include Khan's vocals on "Garden's Heart," a haunting electronic track composed with producer Jon Hopkins for the 2013 film How I Live Now, evoking themes of isolation and resilience.[96] In 2023, she featured on "Near," an ambient collaboration with The Album Leaf (Jimmy LaValle), exploring introspective soundscapes through layered vocals and minimal instrumentation.[97] In late 2024, Khan collaborated with harpist Lara Somogyi on the EP The Dream of Delphi (Harp Visions), reimagining tracks from her album The Dream of Delphi with harp arrangements to create ethereal soundscapes.[98] More recently, Khan's work "Home" from The Dream of Delphi received a synthwave remix by Johnny Jewel of Chromatics in 2024, infusing the original with 1980s-inspired dark romance and electronic pulses, released as a single on October 4.[99]Film and visual arts
Natasha Khan, known professionally as Bat for Lashes, has directed several music videos, showcasing her visual storytelling skills early in her career. The 2007 video for "What's a Girl to Do?" from her debut album Fur and Gold, directed by Dougal Wilson, blends dreamlike imagery with choreographed bicycle sequences to evoke themes of longing and surrealism.[100] In 2019, Khan self-directed the video for "Kids in the Dark" from Lost Girls, featuring intimate, shadowy cinematography that highlights emotional vulnerability through her performance alongside actor Sammy Watkins.[54] Khan extended her directorial work into short films, often incorporating original scores. In 2014, Film4 commissioned her to write and direct Gotcha, a narrative exploring a father-son hide-and-seek game as a metaphor for familial bonds and loss.[101] She also produced the 2015 short I Do, a fashion-oriented piece that delves into romantic rituals. In 2018, Khan wrote, directed, and scored Light Beings, a three-minute ethereal film for the DITA eyewear campaign, starring Margaret Qualley and model Jamie Strachan, which portrays magnetic attraction in an ancient landscape through hypnotic visuals and her composed soundtrack.[102] More recently, in 2024, she served as creative lead on The Dream of Delphi – A New Transmission, a performance film accompanying her album of the same name, directed by Freddie Leyden with choreography by Alexandra Green, blending live elements of movement and mysticism.[103] In visual arts, Khan has created installations drawing from horror and personal motifs. In a 2012 exhibition, she presented a multimedia show inspired by films like Carrie and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, featuring ‘70s-era TVs displaying monoprints, a wall-mounted light box with hallucinogenic drawings, and comic-strip-style elements to immerse viewers in a psychedelic narrative.[104] She has also engaged in tactile crafts, such as embroidering a custom cushion for friends' wedding depicting a cliffside house with symbolic birds, and crafting five silk pillowcases adorned with her mother's wedding photo and embroidered song titles from her debut album, each requiring hours of meticulous stitching as a therapeutic ritual.[104] Khan's contributions to album artwork emphasize raw, conceptual imagery. For The Haunted Man (2012), she posed nude in a photograph by Ryan McGinley, carrying a similarly nude male figure across her shoulders to symbolize emotional burdens and feminine strength, a deliberate choice to convey the album's themes of vulnerability and release.[36] Her live performances integrate elaborate stage designs, such as the immersive setups for The Bride tour in 2016, where visual narratives through costumes, projections, and choreography extended the album's wedding storyline into theatrical experiences blending music and performance art.[88]Personal life
Relationships and family
Natasha Khan, known professionally as Bat for Lashes, has historically maintained a high degree of privacy regarding her romantic life, with limited public details about relationships prior to the late 2010s.[105] In the early 2010s, media outlets occasionally speculated on brief romantic links to musicians within her artistic circle, but Khan has never publicly confirmed or elaborated on these, emphasizing her preference for keeping personal matters out of the spotlight.[106] In 2018, Khan began a long-term relationship with Australian actor and model Samuel Watkins, whom she met while working on her 2019 album Lost Girls, where he appeared in the music video for "Kids in the Dark."[107] The couple welcomed their first child, a daughter named Delphi, in August 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 lockdown.[4] However, Khan and Watkins separated shortly after Delphi's birth, though they continue to co-parent amicably, with Khan describing the arrangement as supportive and focused on their daughter's well-being.[108] The arrival of motherhood profoundly impacted Khan's life and career, leading her to take an extended hiatus from music production and touring following the release of Lost Girls in 2019.[109] From 2020 to 2023, she prioritized family, navigating the challenges of early parenthood amid global isolation, which she later described as a transformative period of emotional rawness and reconnection.[110] This focus on Delphi and personal growth marked a deliberate pause in her professional output, allowing Khan to explore themes of ancestry, spirituality, and parental love that would inform her subsequent work.[107]Privacy and residences
Natasha Khan, known professionally as Bat for Lashes, relocated from London to Los Angeles in 2017, settling in the Highland Park neighborhood, where the city's landscapes and optimistic vibe influenced her album Lost Girls (2019).[111][112] She expressed a growing awareness of cultural differences during her time there, noting in 2019 that while she appreciated LA's light and scenery, her English roots made long-term residence challenging.[2] Khan returned to London in January 2024 amid concerns over US political instability and gun violence, prioritizing a safer environment for her family. As of 2024, she resides in London.[110] Khan has consistently advocated for boundaries between her personal life and public persona, emphasizing the importance of separating artistic expression from private matters. In a 2019 interview, she highlighted her desire to maintain this divide, particularly as a mother seeking to shield her daughter from excessive scrutiny.[2] She has critiqued media intrusion at live events, urging audiences in 2016 to disconnect from phones and social media to foster genuine immersion rather than performative documentation.[113] To avoid the "anxious" and saturated nature of platforms like Instagram, Khan launched a Patreon in 2021 as a controlled space for sharing intimate content, such as recipes and mood boards, while preserving her privacy.[114] Khan identifies with feminist principles but prefers subtle integration over explicit statements, describing herself in 2016 as not drawn to overt "feminist statement" gestures in her work.[115] Her views on industry dynamics surfaced in discussions of gender roles, such as her decision to pursue a home birth for the birth of her daughter, which she has framed as an empowering, feminist choice reclaiming bodily autonomy.[116] This aligns with her broader avoidance of oversharing on social media, opting instead for platforms that allow selective engagement without commodifying personal experiences. Post-motherhood, Khan has embraced wellness practices centered on spiritual and domestic rituals to navigate her routines. Following the birth of her daughter Delphi in 2020, she described a "spiritual awakening" during lockdown, transforming everyday activities like cooking and breastfeeding into meditative "devotional moving mantras" while spending time in nature.[4] In 2019, she advocated for meditation as a compulsory school practice to promote mental health and creativity, reflecting her commitment to mindful living amid a demanding career.[117] These choices underscore her focus on holistic well-being, particularly in fostering a nurturing home environment that supports both family privacy and artistic output.Discography
Studio albums
Bat for Lashes has released six studio albums, each showcasing Natasha Khan's evolving artistry through distinct sonic landscapes and thematic explorations. Fur and Gold is the debut studio album, released on 11 September 2006 by Echo in the United Kingdom (reissued by Parlophone in 2007). Issued in formats including CD, LP, and digital, it runs for 45 minutes and peaked at number 48 on the UK Albums Chart. It has been certified gold by the BPI for sales exceeding 100,000 copies in the UK. A 2025 digital remaster was released on 31 October 2025 via BMG, with the physical edition (including bonus content such as the track "Carrie") scheduled for 6 February 2026. The standard track listing is:- "Horse and I" – 3:04
- "Trophy" – 4:00
- "Tahiti" – 3:38
- "What's a Girl to Do?" – 2:58
- "Sad Eyes" – 4:16
- "The Wizard" – 4:16
- "Prescilla" – 3:34
- "Bat's Mouth" – 4:25
- "Seal Jubilee" – 4:44
- "Sarah" – 3:56
- "I Saw a Light" – 6:24
- "Glass" – 4:32
- "Sleep Alone" – 4:04
- "Moon and Moon" – 3:09
- "Daniel" – 4:11
- "Peace of Mind" – 3:29
- "Siren Song" – 4:58
- "Pearl's Dream" – 4:45
- "Good Love" – 4:30
- "Two Planets" – 4:48
- "Travelling Woman" – 3:48
- "The Big Sleep" – 4:07
- "Lilies" – 4:45
- "All Your Gold" – 4:31
- "Horses of the Sun" – 4:59
- "Oh Yeah" – 4:54
- "Laura" – 4:25
- "Winter Fields" – 3:41
- "The Haunted Man" – 5:16
- "Marilyn" – 4:35
- "A Wall" – 4:00
- "Rest Your Head" – 4:03
- "Deep Sea Diver" – 6:19
- "I Do" – 2:16
- "Joe's Dream" – 5:25
- "In God's House" – 3:31
- "Honeymooning Alone" – 3:30
- "Sunday Love" – 4:43
- "Never Forgive the Angels" – 4:41
- "Close Encounters" – 4:46
- "Widow's Peak" – 4:39
- "Land's End" – 4:26
- "If I Knew" – 4:12
- "I Will Love Again" – 3:35
- "In Your Bed" – 4:16
- "Kill the Atonement" – 3:59
- "Kids in the Dark" – 3:28
- "The Hunger" – 4:59
- "Feel for You" – 3:39
- "Desert Man" – 4:22
- "Jasmine" – 3:24
- "Vampires" – 4:04
- "So Good" – 3:09
- "Safe Tonight" – 4:41
- "Peach Sky" – 2:49
- "Mountains" – 4:53
- "The Dream of Delphi" – 4:43
- "Christmas Day" – 1:53
- "Letter to My Daughter" – 2:37
- "At Your Feet" – 3:46
- "The Midwives Have Left" – 2:35
- "Home" – 3:10
- "Breaking Up" – 3:40
- "This Woman" – 3:42
- "Delphi Juno" – 3:00
- "Into the Ether" – 3:56
Singles and EPs
Bat for Lashes has released a number of standalone singles, often serving as lead or promotional tracks from her studio albums, alongside limited-edition EPs and remix packages. Her early releases emphasized atmospheric indie pop, with subsequent singles exploring more electronic and synth-driven sounds. Chart performance has been modest in the UK, with most entries appearing on the Official Singles Chart but rarely cracking the top 40. The debut single "The Wizard" was issued as a limited 7-inch vinyl and digital EP in 2006 via the Echo label, featuring the title track alongside "Echo" and receiving early radio play on BBC stations. From her debut album Fur and Gold, "Horse and I" was released in October 2007 as a double A-side with "Prescilla" on Parlophone Records, garnering critical praise for its mystical lyrics but not entering the UK Singles Chart.| Single | Year | Album | UK Peak Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Daniel" | 2009 | Two Suns | 36 |
| "Laura" | 2012 | The Haunted Man | — |
| "I Do" | 2016 | The Bride | — |
| "Kids in the Dark" | 2019 | Lost Girls | — |
| "The Dream of Delphi" | 2024 | The Dream of Delphi | — |