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Kingdom of Rust

Doves

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Album Review

Four years after retreating to the English countryside to record 2005's Some Cities, Doves return to a more urban state of mind with Kingdom of Rust. "My god," Jimi Goodwin sings during the title track, "it takes an ocean of trust in the kingdom of rust." Guitars chime throughout the chorus, where Goodwin's baritone searches of a lost love amidst a town's landscape. A string section makes an appearance toward the song's conclusion, bringing with it the same sweeping, Brit-pop uplift that fueled the band's debut album. Doves are still indebted to that scene — the same one that spawned dozens of guitar-fueled, new-millennial rock bands — but their songs have become broader in scope, often reaching an elated, emotional peak before spending a good amount of time on that emotion's melancholic comedown. As the album title suggests, Kingdom of Rust gives time to both sides of the band's personality, from the sweeping, cathedral-esque anthems ("The Outsiders," "Winter Hill") to dark, tarnished brooders ("Jetstream") that help level the spectrum. Songs like "10:03" and "Birds Flew Backwards" strike a balance between those two camps, with the latter track featuring a stately cello and some dazzling moments of atmospheric, reverb-heavy harmonies. This is still a bright record, though, one that finds catharsis in the gloomier songs and strength in the tracks that resemble Lost Souls' anthems.

Customer Reviews

Give it a try

I'm amazed hardly anyones reviewed this yet. I love Doves, but was bitterly disappointed with Some Cities so this one passed me by until I figured I should give it a try. One year on, I still regularly play and love this. 10:03 and Winter Hill are two great songs that sound even better loud, and Kingdom of Rust will have you nodding your head. Blast out The Last Son and I think you'll agree: albums like The Last Broadcast come once a lifetime, but this is pretty darn close.

First review of this awesome album?????

It's the Doves. Come on how can it not be good. The best atmospheric, melodic rock band in the world. They haven't had a bad album yet. This Manchester trio should be one of the biggest bands in the world and yet the United States hasn't even heard of them. It's a shame. Lost Souls is probably still my favorite album of theirs but this is creeping up there.

Highlights here are "Jetstream", "Kingdom of Rust" (probably the best song of 2009), "Winter Hill", "10:03", "The Greatest Denier", and the awesome beat of "Compulsion."

An immaculate album... nothing but good things.

Buy the whole album!!!

This is the sound of Doves perfected. The previous three albums were very impressive and unique but at times sounded pretentious. The Cedar Room is one of the band's best songs from their debut album but it was a bit overblown. The same could be said for many of the songs from Last Broadcast. Somehow, Kingdom sounds like the perfect synthesis of the band's qualities and influences. Elements of The Clash, The Stone Roses, New Order and Phil Spector come together to create something that's not just intriguing but soulful. It's an album that will be in my collection for decades.

Biography

Formed: 1998 in Manchester, England

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Before embracing Brit-pop in the late '90s, Doves' three members — vocalist/bassist Jimi Goodwin, guitarist Jez Williams, and drummer Andy Williams — figured prominently in the Madchester scene, where they scored a Top Five single as part of the dance combo Sub Sub. "Ain't No Love (Ain't No Use)" peaked at number three in the U.K., but Sub Sub failed to produce any significant follow-up hits, and a fire destroyed their recording studio in February 1995. After taking several years to restructure...
Full Bio

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