
Turbulence – Twin Flames produced by Ghetto Youths International 2026
Turbulence returns with “Twin Flames, ” a rootsy lovers tune that frames deep connection as something spiritual, stubborn, and a little stormy. The song sits comfortably in the lane he has occupied for years: conscious reggae with a singer’s edge, carrying melody with enough force to keep one foot in dancehall. Turbulence, born Sheldon Campbell, broke through in the early 2000s after his first recordings on Sky High and his work with the late Philip “Fatis” Burrell’s Exterminator circle, and he has stayed one of the more distinctive voices to come out of that era.
“Twin Flames” arrives under Ghetto Youths International, the Marley family imprint that has spent recent years pairing heavyweight veterans with the newer generation and keeping a steady run of reggae singles moving through 2024, 2025 and into 2026. That context matters: this is a label that tends to favor songs with message and melody, and Turbulence fits that brief cleanly.
The track plays like a warm, mid-tempo confession rather than a hard-driving anthem. The vocal is direct and emotional, with Turbulence stretching lines in that sharp, ringing tenor he uses best when the subject is love, longing, and spiritual alignment. It has the kind of arrangement that leaves space for the voice to do the heavy lifting, which suits him. In a year already full of fresh singles from Ghetto Youths International, “Twin Flames” feels like one of the more intimate entries, built for listeners who want romance with a roots backbone.
Tracklist:
- Turbulence – Twin Flames
