Phosphene Journal feels like being lost during a torrential rainstorm in the city. At least, that was my experience as I listened to the new album from multi-instrumentalist Tamir Barzilay. Over a wash of synths, drum machines, silver-tinged piano and synths, and thick, smooth bass, Barzilay creates an unexpected pastiche journey you could throw under the genre of experimental ambient jazz. Known primarily as a drummer, Barzilay moves well beyond the kit here, crafting a genre-fluid album that blurs the lines. It’s a bold and quietly captivating effort that rewards deep listening.
The album takes a bit to take shape, with the two opening tracks “Fika” and “Najma,” feeling a bit aimless, but finds its groovy atmospheric footing with the third song, “Cage The Escape,” especially during the smoky, jazz-inflected lounge saxophone (Daniel Rotem) outro. We get this vibe again later during the playful “Sailing.”
There is also quite a bit of analog bleed or tape fuzz mixed throughout the album, purposefully so to perhaps give it a nostalgic and dusty quality. Some tracks hover in a kind of ambient limbo, beautiful but static, while others flirt with grooves that never fully land, only making way for the next track. “The Hungry Moon,” featuring Sharada Shashidhar, floats in with breathy vocals and patient instrumentation.
There’s a sense that Barzilay is chasing a cinematic cohesion on a track like “Heavy Stepper,” but there’s also a feeling of restraint. Each element is placed with intention. Nothing feels rushed or forced. It can be easy to get lost in the improvising jazz sauce, but Barzilay only flirts with this notion.
That said, Phosphene Journal doesn’t aim to overwhelm the listener with hooks or bombast. It’s more about sensation than structure — about the space between the notes, the residue of sound. Phosphene Journal is more about impressions than clarity—flashes of light behind the eyelids, a diary written in fragments. While not all of it sticks, there are enough moments of resonance to warrant a return listen.