Nicolas Jaar har sluppet et nyt soloalbum ud af det blå, og pladen kan downloades ganske gratis via linket forneden.
Albummet er Jaars eget, alternative soundtrack til filmen ‘The Colour of Pomegranates’ fra 1969, selv om mange af numrene er kommet til verden ud af forskellige situationer – blandt andet er nummeret ‘Shame’ er beat lavet til en rapper, som dog sagde nej til at bruge det.
Læs meget mere om albummet i nedenstående brev fra Jaar, som følger med, når man downloader albummet.
Download ‘Pomegranates’ HER.
Læs anmeldelse: Darkside ‘Psychic’
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I started making most of the music that is found on “pomegranates” before I had seen the movie or was aware of its existence.
The first song, for example, was made on one of the first fall nights of 2014. I had just returned from a year-long Darkside tour and was really happy to be back home. I was making music in my living room when a huge water bug started dancing on top of some cables on the floor. Instead of killing it, I decided to make music for it. I called the song “Garden of Eden” because I slowly started seeing the little creature as my friend and helper, and my studio as a garden (with all the wires!).
The next song was originally made for a TV show that I was asked to score. When it became clear to me that the show was not what I signed up for, I decided to part ways, which left me with hours of soundtrack music. I only used a dozen minutes of it for “pomegranates”, not sure what to do with the rest!
“Survival” was originally meant to be the backing track for “Ghetto”, a track I produced for Dj Slugo where he talks about growing up in Chicago. “Shame” is a beat I made for a rapper, that was declined.
At the end of 2014, I lived with my parents for six months while in between apartments. I didn’t have a studio, just a piano, some microphones and headphones. That’s when I wrote “Muse”. “Volver” is a choir version of an unreleased track called “Revolver” I made in 2011 that will come out this year
hopefully. Anyways, I could go on and on.
A the beginning of 2015 my friend Milo heard some of these songs and told me about the film. I watched it and was dumbfounded. I felt the aesthetic made complete sense with the strange themes I
had been obsessed with over the past couple of years .I was curious to see what my songs sounded like when synced with the images, which turned into a 2-day bender where I soundtracked the entire film, creating a weird collage of the ambient music I had made over the last 2 years.
The film gave me a structure to follow and themes to stick to. It gave clarity to this music that was made mostly out of and through chaos. It also gave me the balls to put it out… I wanted to do some screenings but the guy who owns the rights to the film only wants the original version of the movie out there. I can’t blame him, I’m sure Paradjanov wouldn’t want some kid in NY pissing all over his masterpiece and calling it a soundtrack!
I’ve listened to it a couple of times without watching the movie
and I think it stands on its own. Or at least I hope it can! I was still living at my childhood home when I finished “pomegranates”. On March 1st, I arrived in my new home and it was completely empty except for a baby tree. The owner was there to greet me and he asked me if I wanted to keep the baby tree
because he had nowhere to put it and no one to give it to. I agreed to keep it and take care of it. Before he left I asked him what kind of tree it was. He told me it’s a pomegranate tree. He had no idea I had just put this out!
So there it is, it’s yours now!
Nico«