
Phosphenes
A phosphene is âthe phenomenon of seeing light without light entering the eye.â The title of the heart-rending and resolute new album by composer/violinist Jessica Moss could not be better chosen. Moss is by now a seasoned practitioner of immersive isolation music; across three previously acclaimed solo records of minimal and maximal post-classicism, her acoustic, amplified, and electronically-shifted violin is the raw material for deeply expressive, palpably haunted, wholly committed compositions.
But Phosphenes inscribes fleeting halos of refracted ghostly light out of a prevailing darkness with especially plangent determination and intensity. This is the most overtly searching, mournful and inexorable music Moss has made to date. The pieces on Phosphenes exquisitely navigate consonance and dissonance, building patiently from single notes to multiple voicings, harmonic stacks and clusters.
These compositions channel themselves like slow-moving water in a dark cave, finding small eddies and catching glints of luminescence from within. Signal processing is kept to a minimum in the three-movement âContemplationâ suite on Side One, where Moss deploys amplification chiefly in the service of activating overtones and pitch-shifts, thickening and widening the sonics, carving out her unique timbral space.
Based on a four-note sequence that sets whole tones against one another, âContemplationâ is a bona fide requiem that finds Moss at her most instrumentally naturalistic, measured, and modern. Side Two unfolds in a more foreboding vein: âLet Downâ is marked by cavernous octave-dropped arco and pizzicato, providing a gothically-inflected substratum upon which hauntingly wordless vocal invocations and cumulative gyres of violin melody unfurl.
âDistortion Harbourâ grinds with noisier grit and a more harrowing complexion, highlighting Mossâs ambient-metal sensibility and her distinctive palette of industrial-inflected power electronics a reminder of why sheâs also been a go-to player on albums by the likes of Big Brave, Oiseaux-TempĂȘte and Zu in recent years. These two songs also feature upright bass from old friend and former bandmate Thierry Amar (Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Thee Silver Mt. Zion, Black Ox Orkestar).
Album closer âMemorizing & Forgettingâ is inarguably the most tender and beautiful song in Jessicaâs oeuvre: a keening lullabye of sorts, on which she plays piano, violin and guitar, joined by her partner Julius Levy in a lustrous ambient vocal duet. Everyone has been trying to find a way through and out of pandemic, lockdown, social isolation and often darkened hope and for many musicians, the absence of touring, of live performance, live sound, live audiences, and a living.
For Moss, itâs also been âlike when you press your fists hard against your eyes and eventually there is fireworks.â The light gets in where it can, even or maybe especially as imaginative sensory simulacra (if/when we shut down our screens and are left to our own devices). Phosphenes is a stoic, acutely sensitive, superlative musical statement from Moss.Â
Tracklist
01 Contemplation I
02 Contemplation II
03 Contemplation III
04 Let Down
05 Distortion Harbour
06 Memorizing & ForgettingÂ
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Description
A phosphene is âthe phenomenon of seeing light without light entering the eye.â The title of the heart-rending and resolute new album by composer/violinist Jessica Moss could not be better chosen. Moss is by now a seasoned practitioner of immersive isolation music; across three previously acclaimed solo records of minimal and maximal post-classicism, her acoustic, amplified, and electronically-shifted violin is the raw material for deeply expressive, palpably haunted, wholly committed compositions.
But Phosphenes inscribes fleeting halos of refracted ghostly light out of a prevailing darkness with especially plangent determination and intensity. This is the most overtly searching, mournful and inexorable music Moss has made to date. The pieces on Phosphenes exquisitely navigate consonance and dissonance, building patiently from single notes to multiple voicings, harmonic stacks and clusters.
These compositions channel themselves like slow-moving water in a dark cave, finding small eddies and catching glints of luminescence from within. Signal processing is kept to a minimum in the three-movement âContemplationâ suite on Side One, where Moss deploys amplification chiefly in the service of activating overtones and pitch-shifts, thickening and widening the sonics, carving out her unique timbral space.
Based on a four-note sequence that sets whole tones against one another, âContemplationâ is a bona fide requiem that finds Moss at her most instrumentally naturalistic, measured, and modern. Side Two unfolds in a more foreboding vein: âLet Downâ is marked by cavernous octave-dropped arco and pizzicato, providing a gothically-inflected substratum upon which hauntingly wordless vocal invocations and cumulative gyres of violin melody unfurl.
âDistortion Harbourâ grinds with noisier grit and a more harrowing complexion, highlighting Mossâs ambient-metal sensibility and her distinctive palette of industrial-inflected power electronics a reminder of why sheâs also been a go-to player on albums by the likes of Big Brave, Oiseaux-TempĂȘte and Zu in recent years. These two songs also feature upright bass from old friend and former bandmate Thierry Amar (Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Thee Silver Mt. Zion, Black Ox Orkestar).
Album closer âMemorizing & Forgettingâ is inarguably the most tender and beautiful song in Jessicaâs oeuvre: a keening lullabye of sorts, on which she plays piano, violin and guitar, joined by her partner Julius Levy in a lustrous ambient vocal duet. Everyone has been trying to find a way through and out of pandemic, lockdown, social isolation and often darkened hope and for many musicians, the absence of touring, of live performance, live sound, live audiences, and a living.
For Moss, itâs also been âlike when you press your fists hard against your eyes and eventually there is fireworks.â The light gets in where it can, even or maybe especially as imaginative sensory simulacra (if/when we shut down our screens and are left to our own devices). Phosphenes is a stoic, acutely sensitive, superlative musical statement from Moss.Â
Tracklist
01 Contemplation I
02 Contemplation II
03 Contemplation III
04 Let Down
05 Distortion Harbour
06 Memorizing & ForgettingÂ














