by Stewart Mason
Just under half of the 16 songs on Doveman's second album are untitled instrumentals, with one of them over eight minutes long. As a general rule, that's a strong indicator of screaming pretension, and to be fair With My Left Hand I Raise the Dead (warning sign number two) has a few eye-rollingly po-faced moments. On the other hand, a truly pretentious band wouldn't self-describe their own music as "lamp rock," as Doveman do, and the New York-based five-piece have the chops to keep their amorphous, liquid post-rock from turning into mere abstract noodling. Members of the band have played with everyone from David Byrne, Yoko Ono, and Laurie Anderson to Chris Whitley, Bonnie Raitt, and Iggy Pop, although naturally the spacy, impressionistic tunes and frontman Thomas Bartlett's whispered vocals and opaque lyrics are far closer in spirit to the former group than the latter. Those looking solely for immediacy and hooks will find With My Left Hand I Raise the Dead a slog, but it's a slowly unfolding mood piece that repays both careful headphone listening and middle of the night chillout sessions.