This Monday belongs to no one other than Bailey Cogan.
The 26-year-old singer-songwriter's group 26 BATS! is debuting "Portal Party," its third album to be released on the 26th of a month. The cherished numerology is a nod to Cogan's May 26 birthday and a figure that's guided their artistry from the start.
"That's my magic number, that's the number that follows me everywhere. Why not celebrate it?" Cogan said.
Celebrate, indeed. "Portal Party" and its upcoming 7th St. Entry release show Aug. 6 signify a change for Cogan's golden year. Once a quintet, 26 BATS! now comprises just Cogan and longtime bandmate/producer Karl Remus as a collaborative duo who write, record and mix songs together.
The interlocked pair's 16-track album is a departure from the heavy jazz and R&B sounds that once defined the band's music, introducing more experimental song structures, drum machines and synths.
"Our past albums we recorded together as a band. This album is not like that at all," said Remus. "It's like, slowly building layers and overdubbing and shape-shifting the song, and a lot of manipulation of certain parts. And so it's a completely different kind of a live sound."
Cogan and Remus, 29, met on Twitter in 2013, sharing lyrics from the late St. Paul rapper Eyedea. "Portal Party," made largely during the COVID-19 pandemic, is about facing fears — like jumping into unknown "portals" with the support of friends.
"I think of fear as this big, shadowy figure that's really scary on the surface," Cogan said. "But when you punch through it, it's just a shadow, it's actually nothing. So, looking at it like a portal is the same thing where you're like, 'I'm gonna jump into this, look around, see if I can have a good time. If not, hop out.'