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Michal Turtle – Phantoms of Dreamland

Another summer, another impeccable interpretation of the season from the increasingly masterful and ever-more distinct Music from Memory. The auteur this time is Michal Turtle, a Croydon-born musician and producer who spent the heart of the 1980s making subtle, enlightened music. The label unleashed Turtle’s Are you Psychic? earlier this year – I don’t know about you, but the ‘do bright lights bother you?’ whispered in a spooked-out domestic daze on the title has stayed with me ever since. Now here comes a full retrospective of his 1980s tracks which really does sound fresh.

Michal Turtle - Phantoms Of Dreamland
Artist
Michal Turtle
Title
Phantoms Of Dreamland
Label
Music From Memory
Format
2LP
Buy vinyl

Once again, we have an artist who had lived in relative obscurity. After a lovely but ultra-rare mini-album entitled Music from the Living Room, released by Shout (a label responsible for the first Shoc Corridor record) Turtle moved to Switzerland, producing and arranging a myriad artists while apparently neglecting his knack for penning his own impressive improvisational electronics. The array of music presented on Phantoms of Dreamland finds Turtle blending a series of influences to achieve something like a futuristic chill-out: moments of jazz sensibility and loosely funky playfulness, sustained by an almost electroacoustic attention to the detail of sounds dart through a very personal, breezy proto-Balearic.

The tracks featured here pour into one another in an airy, feathery fashion although Turtle moves around in his construction of atmospheres. On the first two sides we’re introduced to a kind of mindful exotica where slap-bass sustains glitzy, televisual synth lines (“Ball of Fire”), looped tribal voices and percussion simmers alongside watery soundscapes (“Village Voice”) and autobahn-meets-favela in sinister post-new age electronic apocalypses (“El Teb”).

Things get more intense on the second half of the retrospective; they get darker at times, heightened, and recede further away from any kind of genre or formula. Highlights are the softly neurotic “Phil #5” which sounds like at least three tracks at once (bubbling voices over strumming guitars, stabbed by a driving bass-synth, mourned by a never-ending silvery drum pattern) and the concave mirror-dancing provided by the relentless pitch-bending of “End of an Era”. This latter track is closer to the Turtle we had previously met on both “Are you Psychic?” and on that highly-applauded “Astral Decoy”. The 8-minute title-track, “Phantoms of Dreamland” is probably the one you should listen to if nothing else – a voyage into downbeat modulations and doomsday meditations, a monologue of tinnily-delivered psycho-spiritual ending on the sentence, “Am I wrong?” feels like it might be dispensing some form of 4AM truth.

Whatever Turtle was up to in his parents’ living room, he was in the throes of a great inspiration. And like other artists featured on the Amsterdam label throughout its brief but bright existence, the music on this double LP – while rather timeless – sounds ostensibly not of its own time. Similarly to collections we’ve previously reviewed here on Juno Plus, such as Vito Ricci’s I Was Crossing a Bridge or Napoleon Cherry’s Walk Alone, this is the retrospective of an outsider, of somebody rarefying a number of trends of his generation and distilling them into something else: a prophetic alchemy, perhaps? It’s music that glitters, flutters, does things its own way.

Flora Pitrolo 

Tracklisting:

1. Loopy Madness II
2. Village Voice
3. Maid Of The Mist
4. Ball Of Fire
5. El Teb
6. Zoote Pointe
7. Spooky Boogie
8. Our Man In
9. Meningreen
10. Rainwater Flijt
11. Phil #5
12. Phantoms Of Dreamland
13. End Of an Era
14. Boxes
15. Underneath The Window