Maps’ one-man-band James Chapman recorded his debut album, We Can Create, in his Northamptonshire bedroom in retreat from his university studies, splicing epic, lush sounds together on a bashed-up analogue recorder with no computer gizmos in a union of shoegazing and Spiritualized euphoria.

For his follow-up to that Nationwide Mercury Music Prize-nominated wonder, Chapman has crystalised his focus to explore themes related to the human mind and “the way certain stimuli, particularly chemical, can affect the mind in different ways”.

His recurring theme is the journey of extremes from “abyss to bliss”, one taken before by Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce on Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space, but here based on the cognitive therapy practice of one Professor Marsha M Linehan, who taught Chapman that he should take negative thoughts and turn then to positive ones by accepting reality as it is, however bad it may be.

Turning The Mind has much the same effect, its woozy electronica being ultimately uplifting: the perfect remedy for our troubled times.