Constellations For The Lonely (Deluxe Edition) Doves

Album info

Album-Release:
2025

HRA-Release:
04.07.2025

Label: EMI North

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Adult Alternative

Artist: Doves

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • 1 Renegade 05:11
  • 2 Cold Dreaming 05:02
  • 3 In The Butterfly House 04:10
  • 4 Strange Weather 04:41
  • 5 A Drop In The Ocean 04:26
  • 6 Last Year's Man 04:26
  • 7 Stupid Schemes 04:46
  • 8 Saint Teresa 04:56
  • 9 Orlando 03:26
  • 10 Southern Bell 03:46
  • 11 Cally 02:23
  • 12 Lean Into The Wind 03:47
  • 13 Renegade (Instrumental) 05:11
  • 14 Cold Dreaming (Instrumental) 05:02
  • 15 In The Butterfly House (Instrumental) 04:10
  • 16 Strange Weather (Instrumental) 04:41
  • 17 A Drop In The Ocean (Instrumental) 04:26
  • 18 Last Year's Man (Instrumental) 04:26
  • 19 Stupid Schemes (Instrumental) 04:46
  • 20 Saint Teresa (Instrumental) 04:56
  • 21 Orlando (Instrumental) 03:26
  • 22 Southern Bell (Instrumental) 03:46
  • Total Runtime 01:35:50

Info for Constellations For The Lonely (Deluxe Edition)



Constellations For The Lonely, a new, intense, filmic, yet classic Doves album is coming your way. Featuring ten new tracks of enkindled, future-facing, meticulous manipulation of mood from the Manchester trio.

Signing off their last chapter with the release of their third UK chart-peaking album, 2020’s boundary-pushing, The Universal Want, the release of Renegade concludes a patchwork of writing and recording sessions that began in the same year. Reading from the same page on their new single’s sense of dystopian drama, all three Doves own sense of change, uncertainty and determination pervades the intricate, Goodwin-fronted collage of cinematic sound.

The bands drummer, vocalist and co-songwriter, Andy Williams says: “Looking at everyone’s lives over recent years, and considering the news at the moment, ‘Renegade’ feels a lot more loaded in retrospect. We wanted to go for a dystopian feel, thinking about Manchester itself over the next century or so. A totally imaginary thing… ‘Blade Runner’ set in our home city.”

Settling on the collective desire for a new album as soon as they closed the door on The Universal Want’s No.1 success, Renegade was the first to be written for Constellations Of The Lonely and the last to be written in their famed creative rural retreat, Frank Bough Sound III. Physically unanchored, waving off a totem of their shared past and facing personal mountains to climb, a new, intense, filmic, classic Doves album was carefully nurtured.

The album was written, recorded and produced by Doves between locations in Greater Manchester, North Wales and Cheshire with additional production from long-term collaborator, Dan Austin.

Constellations For The Lonely not only follows The Universal Want but, also, the Mercury-nominated albums, Lost Souls (2000) and The Last Broadcast (2002), their second, successive UK Number One album, Some Cities (2005) and Kingdom Of Rust (2009).

Doves



Doves
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 their sound, the musicians reappeared in 1998 as Doves, whose sweeping pop/rock material owed more to the Verve and Radiohead than Sub Sub's club-oriented peers.

Doves debuted in October 1998 with the Cedar EP, which sold out of its limited pressing and paved the way for the musicians' association with Badly Drawn Boy (who employed them as his backing band on several singles). Doves released two additional EPs, Sea and Here It Comes, before signing a European contract with Heavenly Records, the venerable London-based label that had recently scored a hit with Beth Orton. Heavenly issued Doves' full-length debut, Lost Souls, in April 2000, while an American release followed in October via the Astralwerks label. Marrying traces of Sub Sub's danceable past with an emphasis on live pop/rock instrumentation, Lost Souls earned a nomination for the Mercury Prize -- which the band ironically lost to Badly Drawn Boy -- and spawned three Top 40 singles in the U.K. By 2001, the band's American representation had been upgraded to Capitol Records, and Doves returned to the U.K. charts one year later with The Last Broadcast. The sophomore album debuted atop the charts in England and, like its predecessor, climbed to platinum status, propelled in part by the number three single "There Goes the Fear."

While assembling their third album, Some Cities, Doves retreated to the English countryside and took up residence in a number of cottages, churches, and intimate recording studios. Although conceived far away from the band's native Manchester, Some Cities still sported an urban tone, and the album climbed to number one during its first week of release. Doves' audience was further expanded through a number of touring efforts, some of which saw the band opening for the likes of U2, Oasis, and Coldplay. Several years later, Doves once again decamped to more rural surroundings -- this time to the agricultural community of Cheshire, England, where they set up shop in a converted farmhouse -- to record another album. Kingdom of Rust was ultimately released in April 2009, followed by a greatest hits album one year later.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2025 HIGHRESAUDIO