For over 20 years,
Plone's small body of work was a fleeting glimpse into a magical world. In particular, the spooky and sweet moods of their 1999 album
For Beginner Piano conjured childhood mischief and wonder effortlessly. Compared to the more complicated, self-consciously mature sounds of most of
Plone's Warp labelmates, it was an outlier, but it became a cult classic that foreshadowed the hauntology movement and other whimsical electronic acts that popped up in the decades to follow. Aside from some bootlegs of mid-2000s recordings that floated around online, that seemed to be that. Until it wasn't. That
Puzzlewood arrives on Ghost Box makes sense, since
Plone's aesthetic was a significant influence on the label and its artists. However, anyone expecting
Michael Johnston and
Mike "Billy" Bainbridge to pick up where
For Beginner Piano left off might be surprised. While
Puzzlewood bubbles over with innocent synth tones and warm, absorbing atmospheres,
Plone's first officially released music in 20 years is livelier and somehow even more playful. Sometimes, it resembles
Piano's bouncy melodies with the brightness turned way up, as on "Miniature Magic," which throws in some sunny surf, lounge, and dub elements in for good measure, and "Sunvale Run," a zippy track full of whooshes and zaps that suggest especially stylish video game music. On the title track, they distill their music into the purest form of ear candy, complete with synths that sparkle like grains of sugar. Here and on the whizz-bang sound effects of "Just a Shadow," they come closer than ever to the vintage children's television music that influenced their early work so profoundly. It's interesting to note that
Puzzlewood spans tracks that
Bainbridge and
Johnston worked on during all the years between this album and
For Beginner Piano. Though these songs are undeniably cohesive,
Plone also give themselves room to grow. They begin the album with "Words and Elements," a spacious and futuristic take on their style, then revisit
For Beginner Piano's lullabies with "Circler" and "Red Kite," a sunny spring day of a song that should have a storybook to accompany it.
Puzzlewood gets even more interesting when it recalls the work of other playful electronic-inclined acts. "Day Trip"'s taut disco riffs and strutting beat could be the work of a toy model
Daft Punk; with its clippity clop percussion and posh strings and trumpets, "Watson's Telescope" recalls
the High Llamas' neatly turned out pop. On the sample-fests "Sarcelle" and "Sweet Factory," they call to mind the vibrant shibuya-kei of
Takako Minekawa and
Cornelius, artists who explored similar moods and themes at the time of
Plone's first heyday, albeit in very different ways. While
Puzzlewood lacks some of the mystery that made
For Beginner Piano so singular, it's to
Bainbridge and
Johnston's credit that they didn't try too hard to recapture their debut's magic. On its own terms, this is an engaging, welcome return, and its sonic sweets are hard to resist.