Cursive Share Gory Video for New Song “Imposturing” Directed by the Band’s Tim Kasher | Under the Radar | Music Blog for the Indie Music Magazine
Thursday, December 12th, 2024  

Cursive Share Gory Video for New Song “Imposturing” Directed by the Band’s Tim Kasher

Devourer Due Out September 13 via Run For Cover

Aug 08, 2024 Photography by Bill Sitzmann

Omaha’s Cursive are releasing a new album, Devourer, on September 13 via Run For Cover, their first for the label. Now they have shared its third single,“Imposturing,” via a gory music video directed by the band’s frontman Tim Kasher. Watch it below.

“The overall conceit of ‘Imposturing’ is, ‘make it up as you go along,’ so I concocted a story of a monster seemingly made up from the insecurities of this main singer guy (me). Once fully formed, the monster goes on a rampage,” Kasher explains in a press release. “We shot the video over a few days in Omaha, NE, in and around O’Leaver’s and The Admiral. Our practical effects were the product of various DIY Youtube tutorials.”

Cursive previously shared the album’s first single, “Up and Away.” Then they shared its second single, “Botch Job,” via a music video.

Cursive’s core trio is Kasher, bassist Matt Maginn, and guitarist/vocalist Ted Stevens. The band also includes keyboardist and multi-instrumentalist Patrick Newbery, cellist Megan Siebe, recording/touring drummer Pat Oakes, and founding drummer Clint Schnase. “We seem to be collecting band members over the years,” says Kasher.

Of the album’s title and how it relates to its themes, Kasher said in a previous press release: “I am obsessive about consuming the arts. Music, film, literature. I’ve come to recognize that I devour all of these art forms then, in turn, create my own versions of these things and spew them out onto the world. It’s positive; you’re part of an ecosystem. But I quickly recognized that the term, ‘Devourer,’ may also embody something gnarly, sinister…. Maybe a better word for it is imperialism. But it’s in many different forms. It’s not just the political. It’s personal imperialism and the imperialism of relationships, the way we imperialize one another, even ourselves.”

Cursive’s last album, Get Fixed, came out in 2019 via 15 Passenger.

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