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Pomegranates

Pomegranates

The Scary Abundance Of The Ocean Blues Of All Our Times

Sep 17, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Mike Gentry

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    Beachcomber original version appears on Everybody, Come Outside This is one of our favorite songs off of "Everybody, Come Outside!" We really enjoy the dynamics, and tried to make it a touch more ambient on this version than the version on the record.
  3.  
    The Southern Ocean original version appears on Everybody, Come Outside The song is more or less a song to get folks feeling groovy. It's named after the southernmost waters of the World Ocean south of 60° S latitude. The International Hydrographic Organization has designated the Southern Ocean as an oceanic division encircling Antarctica. Geographers disagree on the Southern Ocean's northern boundary or even its existence, sometimes considering the waters part of the South Pacific, South Atlantic, and Indian Oceans instead. See Wikipedia.
  4.  
    Sleepover unreleased One of our favorites. This was written a bit after the album was finished, and we were still working out some of the kinks at Daytrotter.
  5.  
    Appreciations original version appears on Everything Is Alive One of the songs we still enjoy from our first album, "Everything is Alive." Since the album, we have turned this one into something a bit more ambient and driving.

The fine young gentlemen in the Cincinnati band Pomegranates were already alive with ideas for "Everybody, Come Outside," its sophomore, full-length album, when they visited our studio almost two years ago. They were already buzzed about what it was going to turn into, almost fantasizing about what it would look like, just as an expecting mother or father may imagine the features and the face of the little baby girl who's expanding a womb on the other side of some belly skin. They were already tired of the songs that were on the band's debut, "Everything Is Alive," and these new ideas were already tilling the soil and planting themselves, rushing into the earth and pulling the brown covers over themselves, closing their seedy eyes shut so they could grow faster than time usually allows. The songs that they were dreaming up and starting to pen now make up this scintillating concept record about a man out walking an errand of the evening only to be kidnapped by a time traveler that is all wild particles and generous parts of fantastical interpretation into a journey that is potentially never-ending. Whether it's the abducted man feeling these things or not - it could just be the space that we're all placed in when we listen to this record of a multiple voices and temperatures - we're lifted off this ground, the familiar one, and forced to feel some emptiness and loneliness, all interspersed with something wonderful and inviting. It's a feeling that there is nothing that is alone, as if that's not possible. Somehow, it's as if the abduction that happens - to this protagonist of ours - is also our abduction, and perhaps it's one for the band members as well, this getaway that happens with relatively little struggle and fight, with hollow threats. It's a great adventure that doesn't sound as if it's happening so much throughout all the realms of time and space, but out on a horizon-less ocean of blue, the kind that murders your eyes with its reflective brightness and its scary abundance, just stretching out to the places where there are no ends and only vague beginnings. It's more of a story that these four young men - singers Joey Cook, Isaac Karns, drummer Jacob Merritt and bassist Josh Kufeldt - have started to experience in their own lives, all of the drifting, all of the faint tangles of old lives quickly dissolving into the complete unknown. There are no sails, no maps or Garmins to get them anywhere. It's up to the waters and its up to the milky skies - and this time traveler - to get them to their spots, wherever those may be. Pomegranates is a band that already, over the course of two records, has shown itself to be of the highest ambition and they've already successfully executed some wonderful maneuvers, tightening a sound that is still mostly delightful experimentation. It is a sound that isn't anchored anywhere, but roams through styles and dimensions to create something that really does border on true elegance. It's the other end of a thousand nights that they bring us around to see, showing us the way they feel when the moonlights start their whites and what they do when the dawns start intruding. It's a feeling of getting as much of the good out of all that we/they have control over and yet it all seems to be dreamlike. 

Pomegranates MySpace Page
Pomegranates Debut Daytrotter Session
Lujo Records

Session Comments

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  1. Love this band katrinalmoreno Friday, December 04, 2009 9:33 pm
  2. "appreciations" is really nice! good-feeling songs. Anonymous Tuesday, October 27, 2009 5:15 pm
  3. heard them on NPR a while ago. lovelovelove it :) so glad to finally get them on the ipod! kelseydavis Saturday, October 10, 2009 7:49 pm
  4. little monkey said they were good....she was right Anonymous Friday, September 25, 2009 1:00 pm
  5. the singer Joey has another band, who is also pretty damn good. FIRS, go checkem out! BODY Thursday, September 24, 2009 12:45 pm
  6. Another epic session! Thank you Pomegranates. BODY Thursday, September 24, 2009 12:42 pm
  7. Joey said he would go skateboarding w/me sometime but we never did... Hernandiego Monday, September 21, 2009 1:47 pm
  8. do not like pomogranate juice, but i like the juice this band is squeezing out! alsanz Sunday, September 20, 2009 3:30 pm
  9. Nice sound. If you haven't heard the other Pomegranates session, do so! "The Bellhop" is one of my all-time favorites. Anonymous Saturday, September 19, 2009 5:44 pm
  10. I played with them in Tricities, WA and my wife and I were really excited about them. One of our favorite releases this year. Drew Danburry Friday, September 18, 2009 11:51 am
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