By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.

Nicolas Jaar

Pomegranates

Nicolas Jaar - Pomegranates | Other People (OP031) - main
Nicolas Jaar - Pomegranates | Other People (OP031) - 1Nicolas Jaar - Pomegranates | Other People (OP031) - 2Nicolas Jaar - Pomegranates | Other People (OP031) - 3Nicolas Jaar - Pomegranates | Other People (OP031) - 4

A1

Garden Of Eden

A2

Construction

A3

Pass The Time

A4

Survival

B1

The Fool and His Harem

B2

Nothingness

B3

Near Death

B4

Beasts of this Earth

C1

Fall Into Time

C2

Folie à Deux

C3

Screams at the Edge of Dawn

C4

Divorce

C5

Three Windows

C6

Tourists

D1

Shame

D2

Tower Of Sin

D3

Club Kapital

D4

Volver

D5

Spirit

D6

Muse

40€
Add to basket

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

Add to wantlist

Other People (OP031)

2x Vinyl LP Bioplastic Stereo

Release date: Dec 5, 2025, US

It's been 10 years since Pomegranates - Nicolás Jaar's unofficial/alternative soundtrack to Sergei Parajanov's 1969 film The Color of Pomegranates - was first released, and to highlight this occasion we are reissuing the album on vinyl, with the first edition (a collaboration with the label Mana) having long been out of print.

Longer and slower-releasing than his other albums, Pomegranates often parallels the cinematic epic on which it’s based, with ideas pursued over long timelines and across dark landscapes, assembling elements and moods from the aesthetic and folkloric landscapes of Armenia. Jaar’s identity is perceived within this, folding in his heritage as Palestinian and Chilean as he attempts to build a musical architecture outwards that frames as much of the mess and sprawl of life as possible; using a language that investigates the movement and fluctuation of his own artistic career and character similarly to the film’s tracing of the coming of age of the young poet, Sayat-Nova.

At times, Pomegranates feels profoundly intimate, as though looking through the archive of a friend’s music and discovering the accent and common currency that lives within each of these tracks. Much of Jaar’s most elegant and touching melodic work is nestled here, its power residing in its simplicity and willingness to speak to the heart and not the mind of the listener.

In the text document included in the first freely distributed version of the album in 2015, Jaar writes that the album was conceived during a moment of change, and that the pomegranate became an icon that heralded that passage of time. The physical publication of Pomegranates closes one door whilst opening another, keeping promises and marking a significant point in the career of an artist who restlessly reinvents himself, with a document that illustrates a common language of lyricism, freedom, and emotional resonance linking his many paths and projects