INTERVIEW WITH TIM KASHER OF CURSIVE: APRIL 20, 2004

WSUM DJ, Promo Director and avid Saddle Creek fan Ashley Habelt and I sat down
with singer/guitarist/keyboardist Tim Kasher before Cursive headlined the Plea
for Peace Tour at the Majestic. Turns out beneath all that angry music is an
extremely nice and soft-spoken frontman. Who knew?
Nicole: How did you get hooked up as the headliner for the Plea for Peace
tour, and why did you want to get involved?
Tim: Last year we were invited on the Plea for Peace tour through Thursday, and
as a result got to know Mike Park pretty well, who runs Asian Man Records and
Plea for Peace. So when he started setting this tour up he contact us,
specifically Matt, our bass player/manager, and they started coordinating it
together.
Nicole: Since this isn’t a tour for a specific album, what can we expect from
your playlists? Will we hear a lot of older stuff, or still primarily songs from
The Ugly Organ since it’s most recent?
Tim: We’re still doing like, six Ugly Organ songs, which is close to half the
set. The amount of people who are familiar with Ugly Organ compared to the rest
of our catalog is astronomical. But despite that, we’ll be playing stuff off of
every record. It’s great for us because we’re frankly a little tired of
promoting the album. But we wanted to come out and do this with Mike and push
people to vote. I don’t really have much time that I’m in Nebraska, but if I can
find the time I think it would be great to campaign for Kerry after this
registration tour. Nebraska’s a very heavily Republican state. So much so that
it’s impossible to be able to switch the vote. But you never know, it’s gonna be
a weird election.
Ashley: How are your political views going to influence this tour?
Tim: Well, the intent of the tour is supposed to be an objective slant to
registering, kind of stressing the importance of voting. But as far as our
personal politics go, I’m probably less inclined to say that I’m Democrat
because I’m leery of an institution like that, but this year its really
important that everybody at least rally and vote for Kerry. I think it’s
important at least.
Nicole: Do you have plans for a new album, or is your focus touring right
now?
Tim: Yeah, we do have plans for a new album, but we’ve been touring so much that
the writing is going kind of slow. But it will come around. It’s something that
we want to release like, September of 2005. It’s such a slow process that even
if we had the songs written, which we don’t, it would still probably come out
September of 2005. We’ve written like, six songs, and we have time off here and
there.
Nicole: Do you think the new material will be much different than what you’ve
done so far, and lyrically do you think the subject matter will continue to
change?
Tim: Yeah, I hope so on both fronts. That’s just something that is important to
us to not keep putting out the same records. We just have to hope that people
who have gotten into Cursive in the past and presently with Ugly Organ are the
type that won’t want to hear, you know, Ugly Organ again, they’d be curious to
hear a different album each time. But who knows, sometimes people are just
merely pissed and they just want to hear the same crap over and over again.
Ashley: You brought a cello into your last album. Do you have any plans to
expand the band instrumentally in the future?
Tim: We’ve been talking a lot about bringing horns into the new songs. In a
non-traditional way though. We never really know how the songs are going to turn
out, but we have an idea of having things become more perverse and raunchy, and
we kind of feel like horns really blaring- that’s kind of what we’re hearing
right now. We’re not really sure what will actually come out though.
Nicole: The video for “Art Is Hard” has gotten airplay on Fuse and MTV2. Can
you explain what’s going on in that video? I thought I had it down until the
transvestite entered the picture.
Tim: Sure. That song and a lot of the first half of that record is so
self-reflecting that we wanted to do a video that symbolizes going and watching
Cursive and how they’re always singing about themselves. The beginning of the
video with the two people on stage pointing cameras at each other, its like
they’re filming themselves and how unusually dull that can be. As far as the
transvestite getting ready in the back, the idea is that when she actually walks
out on stage as a real woman it’s the appearance that the public sees as opposed
to what’s really going on, which are incredibly different things. Not saying
that we’re rotten miserable people of course. We have a new video for
“Reclusive” that’s hopefully coming out next month.
Ashley: What’s the concept for that video?
Tim: It came out really nice; we used this production company that just blew us
away. It’s a really far out, far-fetched video like a horror movie. This guy
wakes up, who’s actually Todd from the Faint, in a castle and basically this
spider vampire woman attacks him at the end. The whole time we were doing it I
was like, this is really fucked up, but it turned out really nice. I was
impressed.
Nicole: If the opportunity arose, would you ever consider switching to a
major label or do you think Saddle Creek is where you’re going to stay?
Tim: We’re just trying to continue growing with Saddle Creek, and if we can
continue to do that, that’s great. I just don’t see any reason why you’d ask for
a boss. If you’re running your own business and you’re your own boss, why would
you go, “well, I’d really like to have a boss telling me what to do?” It just
doesn’t make sense. I guess you might make more money in the long run, but we’re
all really hesitant about it. I’d feel like I was going in the wrong direction
if I was on like, the side of busses or on billboards. It’s media glitter that
I’m leery of.
Nicole: Can you all support yourself on your music now, or do any of you
still need day jobs?
Tim: It’s a decent living now. Matt works for Saddle Creek and Clint still works
with his dad. It’s more just helping loved ones out at home though.
Nicole: What’s an interview question you hate? And hopefully we haven’t asked
it.
Tim: I don’t answer “what do you sound like?” anymore.
Nicole: People ask you that?
Tim: Well, it’s pretty standard, or “how do you define your sound?” I just
stopped answering it. I never had a good answer. It’s pretty weird to have a
pre-set answer to that. It’s probably one of the most common questions. Probably
more as you’re growing up as a band and people are kind of figuring out who you
are, that’s when you get that question a lot. But you still get it now when
you’re doing like, the Santa Fe Weekly and they have no idea who you are.
Ashley: Finally, do you have any feelings about the Emo Game?
Tim: I probably should, but I just kind of let it lie. I’ve looked at it, but
it’s like a . . . it was funny at points, but there’s some weird sodomy crap and
stuff like that, I have no interest in being PC or anything like that, but that
just seemed a little weird. Not even that funny really, just kind of like, potty
humor.