The French electronic oddity Michael (I’m Michael) by Michaël is one of those buried-in-time 7″ singles that collectors obsess over. Pressed in France in 1984, it pairs a sparse, minimalist take on synth electronics with a vocal that’s both detached and oddly earnest — simple, repetitive, and almost hypnotic in its restraint.
While there are a few versions and covers of “Michael” floating around — including some that nod, intentionally or not, to Michael Jackson’s shadow in pop culture this French pressing is nothing like a glossy Jackson-style pop cover. Instead, it leans into stripped-back electronics as sensibilities, letting sparse drum machine pulses and synth lines carry the track rather than big production.
For vinyl hunters, this single has become something of a minor prize: a green-pressed 7″ copy from 1984 can fetch around £130, as evidenced by a Discogs sale after Christmas in 2021.
It’s perfectly suited to those who love oddball early electronics, pure DIY and French underground artifacts, and simple electronic grooves that leave room for imagination.
Comments
Post a Comment