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Doves - 'Kingdom Of Rust'

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Fraser McAlpine | 10:58 UK time, Wednesday, 25 March 2009

DovesLast November, I was interviewing Elbow in a pub in Truro, and made a crack about their underdog status, which had recently been dealt a severe blow by the winning of the Mercury Award. I asked if they now had to hand it on to Doves, and Guy Garvey told me he'd heard their new material, and they really wouldn't need it.

What he said was "Doves have been busy reinventing the wheel", which doesn't actually mean what he thought it meant, unless he was trying to say they're wasting their time, but you get the idea.

"Hold your fire!", shouts Field-Marshall Garvey, "this bird is made of far tougher stuff than we could ever have dreamed of. Look at her fly, by Jove!"

So, here it is, the reinvented wheel. The question is, does it work?

(. Life On Mars, anyone?)

And the answer is...it depends. For starters, this isn't a massive leap forward in sound. It's the same basic bass-heavy, tinkly, orchestrated folk-pop the band made their name with. It's got the basic backbeat of 'There Goes The Fear', the tinkling melodies of 'Words' and the doomy, dark romance of 'The Cedar Room'. Or, for our younger readers, picture the Last Shadow Puppets having uncles who spend a lot of time in the library reading heavy Russian novels. That's Doves.

On the other hand, there's a swooping romance to their sound, a skip to their step and each chord change will hit you like a punch in the feelings if you're in the right frame of mind. Jimi Goodwin has a strange voice, a kind of mellow moo which can either sound downbeat and broken or downbeat and defiant. Either way, there's more emotion there than you'd think, and Doves songs (when they're good) do have a way of sweeping you up in their wake.

And this is a good one, even though it sounds like a lot of their other ones.

Maybe Guy was bang on the money with that reinvented wheel thing after all...

Four starsDownload: Out now
CD Released: March 30th

(Fraser McAlpine)

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