Doveman

Singles & EPs

About Doveman

Doveman is the distinctly subdued art pop project of Thomas Bartlett, a singer, songwriter, and keyboardist also known for his work as a producer and in-demand sideman (David Byrne, the National). While Doveman issued four albums between 2005 and 2009, the alias resurfaced on later releases, including remixes. A native of Brattleboro, Vermont, Bartlett formed the folk group Popcorn Behavior with childhood friend Sam Amidon (fiddle) and his younger brother Stefan Amidon (drums) in 1993. At the time, their ages ranged from ten to 13. The group released three albums through 1999 before Bartlett moved to London, England, where he studied piano with Maria Curcio. After a year, he relocated to New York City to enroll at Columbia University, though he eventually dropped out when he found work playing with bands including Chocolate Genius and Elysian Fields. Along with Dougie Bowne, Jacob Danziger, and Peter Ecklund, Sam Amidon contributed to The Acrobat, Bartlett's first Doveman album. Released by Swim Slowly Records in July of 2005, the debut highlighted Bartlett's hushed vocals and moody mix of folk, jazz, classical, and ambient music influences. The follow-up, With My Left Hand I Raise the Dead, arrived via Brassland in 2007 and featured most of the same lineup, but without Danziger, and with Shahzad Ismaily. A year later, the third Doveman LP, Footloose, reworked select songs from the 1984 film musical in the project's distinctly downcast style. The still intimate The Conformist followed on Brassland in 2009 with nearly two dozen guests, including Glen Hansard, Norah Jones, members of the National, and members of the chamber ensemble yMusic, as well as Amidon, Bowne, and Eckland. In 2010, Bartlett contributed a remix to the Tegan and Sara collection Alligator Remixes under the Doveman moniker. During the span of the four Doveman albums, Bartlett toured and recorded with the National, David Byrne, Hansard's the Swell Season, and Antony and the Johnsons, among others. Known to fellow musicians as a singer/songwriter but also valued as an accompanist, over the next couple of years he performed on recordings by Iron & Wine, Sharon Van Etten, and Rufus Wainwright, to name a few. Appearances on albums by Yoko Ono, Joshua Bell, and the National followed in 2013. By then, he was also producing for the likes of Bell X1 (Chop Chop), the Gloaming (The Gloaming), and Dawn Landes (Bluebird), as well as for solo Hansard (Rhythm and Repose, Drive All Night) and Amidon (Bright Sunny South). In January 2016, Bartlett reacted to the death of David Bowie with a Doveman cover of Bowie's "Lazarus." It was performed by Bartlett with Hansard on vocal harmonies. A year later, a Doveman remix of Sufjan Stevens' song "Futile Devices" was featured on the soundtrack to Oscar winner Call Me by Your Name. Another Doveman remix appeared on Stevens' The Greatest Gift mixtape. In 2018, Nonesuch Records released Peter Pears: Balinese Ceremonial Music, a set of songs by Bartlett and composer Nico Muhly, whom he'd met while at Columbia. Issued under his own name, it featured Bartlett's vocals, with both on keyboard instruments. ~ Marcy Donelson

ORIGIN
New York, NY, United States
GENRE
Alternative

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