Doves 2020 (c) Jon Shard

Doves are back! The Manchester legends have emerged from the studio after their eleven-year hold on new music with Carousels. A swirling, percussive groove that emphatically unfurls their flag at the peak of British music once more. Tracing memories of childhood innocence and wild nights on the Waltzers! The Manchester three-piece return in experimental mood, releasing the track yesterday on Virgin EMI.

DOVES ARE BACK – WITH NEW MUSIC

Jimi Goodwin (vocals/bass), Andy Williams (drums/vocals) and Jez Williams (guitars/programming/vocals) boldly relay their sustained curiosity in the recording process with Carousels, ‘playing’ the studio as an additional instrument. In a future-facing statement of intent, they largely forfeit guitars in favour of complex, looped drum patterns, twisted, re-worked or replaced vocals and grizzling synthesized sounds.

Opening with dampened instrumentation and indecipherable speech, Doves continue their knack of capturing the sounds of isolation, disquiet and melancholy before shifting course. Built around a sample of the late, great drummer Tony Allen in full stride, Carousels’ beats are dappled with cascading piano lines, growling bass and a disarming vocal performance from Goodwin. It’s everything we’re familiar with but like something you’ve never heard before.

MUSIC VIDEO

A reality-warping accompanying video, meeting the constraints of the UK’s lockdown and evoking a previously unfamiliar air of a human-free built environment comes animated by Yoni Weisberg. “It’s a reminiscence of the times that we’d go places like North Wales on holiday as kids,” says Andy Williams. “Places where you had your first experience of sound systems and music being played really loud.

Doves 2020 (c) Jon Shard

“A BAD-ASS BREAKBEAT”

”Carousels had initially found life far from the North of England, with Jez packing the idea in luggage for a creative trip to Porto, refining it amongst the steep streets and rich culture of the vibrant Portuguese city before returning to Doves’ own, famed Frank Bough Sound III studio. It was amongst the first new ideas that the band shared between each other. When the life-long friends first picked up instruments as a band again, Goodwin was struck by its immediacy. He says: “I was blown away. It’s got a bad-ass breakbeat.”

RUMOURS

Restarting a career that has seen them twice Mercury-nominated (for their 2000 debut, Lost Souls and the follow-up, 2002’s chart-topper, The Last Broadcast) Doves first returned to live performance in March 2019. They appeared at the invitation of Teenage Cancer Trust to play a widely-acclaimed show at The Royal Albert Hall, London. This officially brought to an end their decade-long hiatus. Unofficially The Journalix were there for the warm-up show at Parr Hall (see below) the day before. But in between the headline outdoor shows and festival appearances that followed throughout summer 2019, Doves gently fuelled rumours of new material in rare interviews.

Doves have produced Carousels, engineering by Dan Austin and mixed by Craig Silvey.

DOVES ARE BACK – FOLLOW THE BAND

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Read our exclusive interview with Doves keyboardist MARTIN REBELSKI