Listen To The Vision: Bat For Lashes Interviewed

Photo: Flora Maclean

Natasha Khan is holding a card up to the camera, peering round the side to gauge my reaction. In the drawing, I see a figure in a witch’s hat standing next to a tree, unkempt and sinuous; an ominous tower looms in the scene just beyond them, dominating the background. It’s a beautiful image, charged with the kind of black-cat mysticism and gnostic energy that permeates so much of her work. “The tangled tower is about competition and comparing yourself with other people,” she explains carefully, “the innate critical voice frittering away your time and energy on what other people are doing, rather than your own process.”

And what does Khan’s process look like these days? The artist is still best known for her work as Bat For Lashes, of course, and a back catalogue that currently takes in five critically-acclaimed solo albums, picking up no fewer than three Mercury Prize nominations along the way. Nonetheless, she’s been dabbling outside of music for a long time now, with varying degrees of privacy: some of her more recent creative endeavours include film scripts, the aforementioned oracle deck, a novella, a new album, and a small human child.

Continue reading at Clash

Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij speak to NME: “We don’t think ‘The OA’ is dead”

Photo: Brit Marling/Instagram

Addressing the new show’s exploration of late-stage capitalism, Batmanglij said both creators felt they had no choice but to address humanity’s biggest crises in their work. “People sort of roll their eyes when you talk about it, but it’s actually just the reality of what we’re living in, and we would be crazy not to talk about it in every single story we make,” he tells me.

“It’s that and the climate crisis. How can anyone tell a story these days without addressing the climate crisis?”

Continue reading at NME