the bats: C/D

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Ah lovely Christchurch

Good Dog (Good Dog), Monday, 7 November 2005 11:47 (twenty years ago)

And those whose who say that this stuff doesn't matter - that it's "good music" - is to act as if music exists in a vacuum. No, one does not listen to first-wave UK punk without thinking of 1977 London. And one shouldn't listen to the Bats without thinking of 1989 South Island: woollen socks, boredom, a a band whose best chorus goes : "it doesn't look good / I'm feeling like a block of wood."

-- paulhw (pppso...), November 6th, 2005 11:51 PM. (paulhw) (later)

What a load of bollocks.

Apart from the bit about Block of Wood being their best song, it probably is my favourite.

Colonel Poo (Colonel Poo), Monday, 7 November 2005 12:42 (twenty years ago)

Jim I meant I've met many many people who like the Bats and bands like the Bats and they're miserable little fucks and they SADDEN MY ASS (YES YES NOT ALL OF THEM MANY ARE STUDLY STUDS), and Donut a better query really would've been: how much do you like the Wedding Present? Also as brought up many times, the idea of separating the Bats from Nz/Chch in the 80s blah is a funny one. Oh and I'm not rejecting shit, I love a lot of FN, it's just a good 75% of it was fucking shit. I am twenty-seven. I wasn't posing that as a refutation (the Bats as I've suggested could've indeed been formed in England, in fact they were! Ask D Gedge!).

Schwip Schwap (schwip schwap), Monday, 7 November 2005 15:46 (twenty years ago)

Superchunk, man.

Schwip Schwap (schwip schwap), Monday, 7 November 2005 15:49 (twenty years ago)

What a fascinating thread. I would have figured these guys were, like, the least controversial band on earth or something! Anyway..I figured out that the '90s album that bored me after I bought a used copy of it a couple years ago was *Fear of God* Still don't know what the early EP I liked was called, since I can't find photos on line of the covers of any of those early EPs to jog my memory. As I recall, the cover was blue. And like I said, parts of it reminded me of Eno (when he used to have songs), though maybe that was just the guitars.

xhuxk, Monday, 7 November 2005 15:59 (twenty years ago)

I definitely do prefer Mi-Sex, though. And I have also enjoyed certain records I heard before by the Verlaines, 3Ds, Look Blue Go Purple, and a couple other bands with kiwis in them, not to mention that 7-inch Xpressway Records sampler from a zillion years ago that had the Dead C on it and other people whose names slip my mind. My favorite New Zealand album ever: *How Bizarre* by OMC, no contest.

xhuxk, Monday, 7 November 2005 16:04 (twenty years ago)

Why I oughta

Schwip Schwap (schwip schwap), Monday, 7 November 2005 16:06 (twenty years ago)

I enjoy certain American music too. I have records By Leadbelly, Donna Summer, Miles Davis, Johnny Thunders, Blake Baxter, and a have a number of other records with Americans playing on them, too. But my favorite record from America ever is definitely Rumours by Fleetwood Mac. It's a classic.

Good Dog (Good Dog), Monday, 7 November 2005 17:13 (twenty years ago)

I don't fly the flag for all Flying Nun bands, even the older stuff... I have the "In Love With These Times" video tape, and do plan to get the two DVDs which collect these videos but unfortunately put on a lot of more recent boring Flying Nun stuff like Superette or Garageland or what have you...

So what's the deal with the Wedding Present/Bats thing, and why should it matter as far as one liking/disliking their music? I don't see the Bats as a Wedding Present rip-off by any means, if that's what you were aiming for.

iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Monday, 7 November 2005 17:46 (twenty years ago)

That said, The Strokes completely stole the Garageland singer's voice, through and through (for better or worse.)

iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Monday, 7 November 2005 17:46 (twenty years ago)

Actually, some of Fleetwood Mac were British (and I always thought Mi-Sex were Australians. Oh well. You learn something new every day!)

xhuxk, Monday, 7 November 2005 17:47 (twenty years ago)

BUTT WOT OV SPLITT ENZZ??!!!

iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Monday, 7 November 2005 17:50 (twenty years ago)

I liked Garageland's *Do What You Want* when I heard it a few years ago, too! It was pretty! But I got it mixed up with lots of other pretty records like Metropolitan's *Down For You Is Up* and, um, some other ones, and it sadly did not stay in my collection for long.

xhuxk, Monday, 7 November 2005 17:52 (twenty years ago)

I remember years ago when NZ music quotas came in for radio and TV the media kicked up a big stink and The Bats came up as THE iconic name of a local band which was "great of course" but would make people "turn off the radio" or "was made for love not money" and they "didn't care about success", etc. In short: in NZ "The Bats" used to be a byword for "indie". Thus the defensiveness in this thread?

I heard the Bats on National Radio yesterday.

Good Dog (Good Dog), Monday, 7 November 2005 18:04 (twenty years ago)

i never understood the anemic, conservative opinion people have of christchurch - its just like any mid-level city in the world!

chris andrews (fraew), Monday, 7 November 2005 21:52 (twenty years ago)

http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:3d_uw3YhduMJ:www.peterellis.org.nz/index_files/image002.jpg

Good Dog (Good Dog), Tuesday, 8 November 2005 00:03 (twenty years ago)

Chuck, the reason the Bats remind you of Eno is a combination of Robert Scott's just-like-Eno voice and the sort of VU-inspired jangle heard on Eno songs such as "Big Day" (from Manzanera's "Diamond Head" album and later covered by the Feelies spin-off Yung Wu). Minus Eno's playful anarchy, of course.

I think the new album is great, and perfect for clearing my mind and relaxing. Like a warm blanket indeed.

Josh in Chicago (Josh in Chicago), Tuesday, 8 November 2005 03:52 (twenty years ago)

four months pass...
Have tickets to see them in a week, not sure what to expect - I'm excited though. Caught their video for 'Made Up In Blue' last night and loved it. At the same time I've been listening to Compilitely a ton, after not hearing it for ages, and love all the songs as much as I did when I first heard them. I was surprised to learn that the line-up has never changed in 20+ years. Too bad Malcolm Grant can't drag Bill Direen along and have the Bilders open.

TRG (TRG), Wednesday, 8 March 2006 17:20 (twenty years ago)

They're playing SXSW.

Josh in Chicago (Josh in Chicago), Wednesday, 8 March 2006 17:32 (twenty years ago)

three years pass...

robert scott has some new tracks up, including some co-written, weirdly, with adalita from magic dirt

http://www.myspace.com/robertscottx

pale spector (electricsound), Thursday, 16 April 2009 06:28 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

this new album is really good!

is it ok to oscarbait 'million dollar baby'? (k3vin k.), Tuesday, 2 June 2009 03:20 (seventeen years ago)

I understand why people dismiss the Bats as NZ milquetoast indie. Their sound is generic jangle pop, not nearly as interesting as some other Flying Nun Bands. However, I do love the first two EPs; Bats by Night and Here Is Music by the Fireside because they sound more off and askew. Maybe that's attributable to Alastair Galbraith's violin work which pushes the music into more drone and less jangle. The only song on "Daddy's Highway" that recaptures that sound is "North By North." The rest of the album is not nearly as strong.

I'd be interested to hear which FN bands Paul likes, if any.

leavethecapital, Tuesday, 2 June 2009 22:44 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah, I like quite a lot. The idea of the Bats still leaves me feeling like I'm drying my pajama bottoms by a two-bar heater in a boring wintry smoggy Chch smog suburb, but stuff I adore (and listen to a lot) includes:

Bailter Space - all albums, but Thermos and Vortura-era especially. Robot World is also great.
Verlaines - from Hallelujah through to Way out where. Five of my most cherished albums right there. Is their new stuff any good?
Chills - a little bit. Parts of Brave Words and Kaleidoscope World are terrific, but parts veer into Bats / Abel Tasmans / Look Blue Go Purple type awfulness.
Straitjacket Fits - Hail. The rest is a bit shit. Shayne Carter was never as verge-of-world-domination as the NZ press liked to suggest, but he was OK. Shit like Cat inna can was bad.
3Ds - all their stuff is so much fun.
Some Skeptics. Some Gordons. Some Tall Dwarfs, but getting past Chris Knox's dickish personality is hard. Yeah actually he's awful.

So Bailter Space, Verlaines. Also a band called This will kill that, but they weren't FN.

I didn't keep up much after I left NZ in 1996...it seems that they moved more towards a Garageland / American-Australian indie direction by the mid 90s?

paulhw, Tuesday, 2 June 2009 23:18 (seventeen years ago)

Oh yeah meant to add that The Clean's "Compilation" is probably 2nd only to Buzzcock's "Going Steady" as the most essential band comp ever. For some reason I never bothered with their albums and eps, and Kilgour's stuff is boring as hell.

paulhw, Tuesday, 2 June 2009 23:20 (seventeen years ago)

and Kilgour's stuff is boring as hell

this is preposterous. i'd say most of the three members' best work has been done outside of the clean, which i suppose is more a function of comparable volume. 'here come the cars' is one of the most classic records ever.

keythkeythkeyth, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 00:46 (seventeen years ago)

yeah Kilgour's solo records (at least the ones I've heard) are actually brilliant, in a low key way.

tylerw, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 00:52 (seventeen years ago)

and Kilgour's stuff is boring as hell.

Yeah, a really stupid comment. I'd reckon Here Come The Cars to be one of the top 5 all-time classic rock albums to have never been released in America. It's a nearly perfect record, sublime in every way. It's got a little bit of that low-key charm that Love's Forever Changes does, in that it seems pretty mellow at first, but really gets under your skin until you just imagine it being any other way. Most of the rest of his albums are pretty good, but the Ajax one is utterly disposable, aside from a moment or two.

deedeedeextrovert, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 01:04 (seventeen years ago)

The Far Now (his last one) was great, though the songs might've been even better live.

tylerw, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 01:21 (seventeen years ago)

i'll have to get Here Come the Cars -- never heard it!

tylerw, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 01:21 (seventeen years ago)

Opinions etc. But if you like Forever Changes...yeah, nuff...

paulhw, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 01:22 (seventeen years ago)

the bats: C/D

is it ok to oscarbait 'million dollar baby'? (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 3 June 2009 03:38 (seventeen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X1faAqRrCs

Plunge Protection Team, Wednesday, 3 June 2009 17:23 (seventeen years ago)

two months pass...

this new album is really good!

it really is. probably my favourite since law of things.

mince lice (electricsound), Monday, 31 August 2009 04:51 (sixteen years ago)

Really? I find it just sort of there. "Couchmaster" was the last thing they did that knocked my socks off.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 31 August 2009 12:42 (sixteen years ago)

I realize that the influence runs the other way, but The Guilty Office reminds me a lot of Yung Wu, much moreso than older Bats stuff. I agree with those who say this is a really good album. I always like their stuff, but this one grabbed me more than recent ones have.

dlp9001, Monday, 31 August 2009 15:38 (sixteen years ago)

nine months pass...

Magicks Heads "Before We Go Under" better than almost anything the Bats did. Well, at least today it seems that way...

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 31 May 2010 00:23 (sixteen years ago)

daddy's highway > before we go under > other bats records

lemon lime & butters (electricsound), Monday, 31 May 2010 00:24 (sixteen years ago)

imo

lemon lime & butters (electricsound), Monday, 31 May 2010 00:24 (sixteen years ago)

but yes it's a really great record, and the female singer (whose name i can't recall) suits the songs well

lemon lime & butters (electricsound), Monday, 31 May 2010 00:25 (sixteen years ago)

Ok, I'm down with that ranking.

Magick Heads is sort of like bured treasure in my collection - I forget about them and when I dig them out it's fantastic.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 31 May 2010 00:39 (sixteen years ago)

god 'Daddy's Highway' rules so hard. have to dig that one out now

I've been looking for a vinyl copy of 'Couchmaster' for like three years

Stormy Davis, Monday, 31 May 2010 00:41 (sixteen years ago)

Upthread somebody asked if the recent Verlaines records are good or not. The most recent one that I'm aware of is 'Pot Boiler,' and it is the only thing they've done that I dislike.

Daddy's Highway remains one of the great understated quirky pop records. Severe classic.

ImprovSpirit, Monday, 31 May 2010 04:35 (sixteen years ago)

daddy's highway > before we go under > other bats records

I think I'd agree in terms of proper longplayers, although Compiletely might even have had most spins here. This is pleasantly surprising though; I've don't recall ever reading anything (praise or otherwise) about the Magick Heads. Did anyone hear their 2nd and 3rd records?

Nag! Nag! Nag!, Monday, 31 May 2010 11:02 (sixteen years ago)

the 2nd Magick Heads record 'woody' is great. it starts off slow but around the fourth song it turns terrific. it seems as if it is more of a jane sinnott record as i think she took on more of the songwriting. i could be wrong. the 3rd record is a compilation though they left off their most famous song but it is rather good too and it has a few more of the songs they did with the dave's from the 3ds. i am not much for the most recent bats record. it is a bit dull. new minisnap ep is out. i think.

keythhtyek, Monday, 31 May 2010 15:50 (sixteen years ago)

i came in with low expectations for the guilty office but i feel it's a pretty good record, if not especially mind blowing..

lemon lime & butters (electricsound), Monday, 31 May 2010 22:33 (sixteen years ago)

four months pass...

nned 'Couchmaster' on vinyl ... very much seeking, will pay reasonable price, thx

Stormy Davis, Saturday, 9 October 2010 11:41 (fifteen years ago)

also, I didn't need to say it , but of course this band rules all time!!!!

(now about that 'Couchmaster' vinyl ... :-) )

Stormy Davis, Saturday, 9 October 2010 11:42 (fifteen years ago)

Seems that there's about tot be a bunch of reissuing and remastering of the early stuff. Hope that Daddy doesn't get transformed from a sleepy gem to a monster of rock in the process. And it'd also be a treat if they found a way to get the "North by North" 12" and its amazing b-sides into the light of day. It was left of Compiletley, but it's some of their best stuff, especially "Get Fat," which has all the hooks and a little more muscle than the other early material. And I'll put in a vote for "Passed By" off the "Smoking her Wings" 7"; it's the loveliest thing I've heard by them, or pretty much anyone.

Michael Train, Saturday, 9 October 2010 12:55 (fifteen years ago)

The "North by North" 12" is actually called the Four Songs EP, if anyone out there starts searching for it....

Michael Train, Saturday, 9 October 2010 12:56 (fifteen years ago)

Good news, I've been looking to get Daddy's Highway for years, think it's been reissued a few times but they always seem to be gone by the time I notice. Or perhaps I keep reading it's going to be reissued and it never actually comes out?

a fucking stove just fell on my foot. (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 9 October 2010 14:15 (fifteen years ago)


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