Up until recently Ghost Culture was a bit of a mystery. His biography described him as "emerging from the London fog", while early press pictures showed traces of a human man but were distorted as if submerged in water. Obviously any old fool can keep their identity hidden in the hopes someone will care, but for Ghost Culture people were forced to care by the quality of his debut single, Mouth. Earlier this month, however, he did away with all the smoke and mirrors and sat down with Dummy to have a chat about it all. So we now know he's called James Greenwood, that he's 24-years-old and he got his break as a studio engineer working on Daniel Avery's Drone Logic album (Greenwood now releases his music via the same label as Avery – Erol Alkan's Phantasy Sound). For his second single on the label, Giudecca (named after an island in the Venetian Lagoon, obviously), he's kept Mouth's sense of playfulness, creating an elegantly layered, darkly melodic synth pop jam that somehow feels like it's slowly enveloping you. This sense of being lured into something troubling is represented perfectly by the video – premiered here – which is full of out of focus close-ups, over-saturated colours and the backs of people's heads lit only by what appears to be a torch.