Keeping Connected
With Cursive
With Happy Hollow,
Tim Kasher’s Angst Returns To Its Roots
>>INTERVIEW
BY Ryan Brosmer >>PICS
by bill sitzmann
Tim Kasher — singer/songwriter/guitarist
for Saddle Creek groups Slowdown Virginia, The
Good Life, and Cursive — has been with Saddle
Creek since the beginning. During a mid-summer
tour stop in Norfolk, Virginia, I met with Kasher
to discuss the past, present, and the future of
the band — a hectic but exciting time, considering
the short tour concluded with a set at Lollapalooza
and the release of their highly-anticipated fifth
full-length, Happy Hollow.
Arriving three years after Cursive's first commercial
success, The Ugly Organ, and following
the departure of cellist Gretta Cohn, Happy
Hollow is a complex album that tackles new
concepts and struggles with old ideologies, all
the while reflecting the evolution of a band in
flux. Upon hearing Happy Hollow, listeners
will first be comforted by the familiar, ever-present
intensity and sincerity that has defined Cursive
since the start. After a good once-through, an
omnipresent theme will become obvious: Tim Kasher
possesses an abundance of pent up angst towards
religion, and he's letting it all loose.
“It's actually nothing new — it's
kind of old material,” Kasher admits, referring
to the overt religious references. “I sang
about it like crazy when I was a teenager —
but back then it was immature, more accusatory,”
he explains. His 13 years of Catholic School (spent
alongside Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes) and childhood
in the conservative hollow of the Midwest fuel
Kasher's personal crusade against organized religion.
His frame of mind is best represented in the track
“Rise Up! Rise Up!” where he writes,
“Please forgive me, for questioning divinity/it's
an ugly job, but I think I'm up for it/I'm not
saying who's right, I'm just saying there's more
than one way to skin a religion/There's more than
one way to explain our existence.”
From intelligent design, to a priest's repressions
of homosexual urges, to the non-existent American
Dream, nothing is sacred on Happy Hollow.
The first single from the album, “Dorothy
at Forty,” takes a look at a post-Wizard
of Oz Dorothy who has to come to grips with
reality and the fact that “dreamers never
live, they just dream of it.” Throughout
his career, Kasher has been forced to take a look
at his own dreams, and often, they seem to only
clash with his reality — he finds himself
asking, “am I a writer or just an entertainer?”
and while he admits that “we're really not
rock stars at all — I'd rather be behind
a typewriter,” Kasher is always at work
on his music.
“Even when we're not on tour, I'm always
working. I'll be on vacation and be like, ‘oh,
it's really pretty,’ then grab my computer
and start working on something.”
Cursive worked on the new album collectively,
as a four-piece, and the band made a concentrated
effort to build a “bigger” sound orchestrally
while creating Happy Hollow. There are many instances
of big band horn sections, piano and even a little
flamenco. Kasher simply sees it to be just “another
new fusion of music.”
Saddle Creek’s profile has reached an all-time
high since the release of the last two Bright
Eyes albums. Despite the recent growth spurt,
Kasher still feels right at home.
“It's a comfort. You're your own boss, and
it's cool getting to be a role-model for younger
capitalists,” he says with a chuckle. The
recent success for the label and Bright Eyes “was
a big deal,” Kasher realizes, but he urges
the fact that Saddle Creek needs a new band to
keep things going. Saddle Creek is well aware
of this as well, and Kulbel adds, “We are
slowly branching out more than we have in the
past — we have added Two Gallants, Eric
Bachmann, and Ladyfinger to the roster in the
past year, [but we] don’t approach any new
band as the 'next Bright Eyes' or anything like
that.”
A year before the release of Happy Hollow,
Cursive satisfied many of their hardcore fans
and collectors with a compilation of B-sides,
The Difference Between Houses and Homes.
“It was something that we got a lot of requests
for,” explains Kulbel. “It's frustrating
to have someone ask about an old 7-inch and have
to tell them their best option is eBay.”
Kasher says the album “wasn't very important,”
to him; however, being able to write the included
mini-storybook was — as is the importance
of the old tracks to everyone back home in Omaha.
Cursive always makes it a point to release all
of their material on vinyl alongside the more
mainstream media, and they plan to hold onto that
tradition in the future — though Kasher
realizes vinyl may one day not be a very viable
market, and simply states, “I guess we would
have to stop. It wouldn't be smart if we print
1,000 vinyl copies, sell only three, and the rest
only sit around as decoration.”
When asked if the band would ever release an album
that could only be downloaded, Kasher says, “I
don't think that'll happen.” So while there
may never be an exclusive Cursive album on iTunes,
it's a safe bet that like most other artists,
their music is out there somewhere, available
for download illegally. Kasher isn't too worried
about people pirating their music, but he states,
understandably, that “it would be a bummer
if we only Soundscan 3,000 copies and there are
1,500 people at a single show who all know all
the lyrics.”
Though Cursive have been all across the country
and on two other continents to tour, Kasher is
not ashamed to say that touring “is not
really my thing. There are so many hours in the
day, [and] there's more to be done than just entertaining.”
In fact, when asked what the hardest part about
touring is, Kasher replies, “Finding myself
questioning what I'm doing. [There are plenty
of times] that we don't wanna do this anymore.”
Despite a genuinely enjoyable experience opening
for The Cure on a stint of the 2004 Curiosa Tour,
Kasher’s indifferent and oftentimes disdainful
attitude toward touring and the recording industry
cast a light of doubt over how much longer the
band will remain in existence. It is only when
one reflects on his extreme, almost obsessive
work ethic and artistic devotion to his craft
that it becomes obvious why Cursive has endured
for such a long period of time. Kasher is an energetic
man who, like the music of his band, is still
growing, and still evolving.
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