-
Cursive - I Couldn't Love You (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing I Couldn't Love You live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school ...
published: 19 Feb 2013
-
Cursive - Sink To The Beat (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Sink To The Beat live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and...
published: 19 Feb 2013
-
Cursive - Art Is Hard (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Art Is Hard live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and late...
published: 19 Feb 2013
-
Cursive - The Sun And Moon (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing The Sun And Moon live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and...
published: 19 Feb 2013
-
Everending
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Everending · Cursive
Vitriola
℗ 2018 15 Passenger
Released on: 2018-10-05
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer, Writer: Matt Maginn
Composer, Writer: Ted Stevens
Composer, Writer: Patrick Newbery
Composer, Writer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 08 Aug 2018
-
Cursive - A Birthday Bash (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing A Birthday Bash live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and ...
published: 19 Feb 2013
-
Penance
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Penance · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 08 Sep 2022
-
Hot City
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Hot City · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 08 Sep 2022
-
Deep Beneath A Blanket Of Snow
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Deep Beneath A Blanket Of Snow · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 08 Sep 2022
-
The Making of Cursive's DOMESTICA - featuring Tim Kasher
In celebration of the deluxe edition of Cursive’s DOMESTICA, we take an in-depth look at how the record was made. Following the breakup of the Omaha band, Slowdown Virginia, Tim Kasher reunited with his former bandmates, Matt Maginn and Stephen Pedersen, to start a new project called Cursive. They brought in drummer Clint Schnase and released their first 7 inch on their friends’ label, Lumberjack Records, which later became Saddle Creek. Two full-length records followed, but when THE STORMS OF EARLY SUMMER was released in 1998, the band had already called it quits. Kasher had gotten married and moved to Portland, Oregon for a fresh start. As his marriage fell apart, he returned to Omaha and decided to reform Cursive. Pedersen had left for college at this point so Ted Stevens of Lullaby for...
published: 23 Jan 2024
3:38
Cursive - I Couldn't Love You (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing I ...
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing I Couldn't Love You live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
https://wn.com/Cursive_I_Couldn't_Love_You_(Live_In_Pomona)_|_Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing I Couldn't Love You live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
- published: 19 Feb 2013
- views: 4175
4:24
Cursive - Sink To The Beat (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Si...
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Sink To The Beat live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
https://wn.com/Cursive_Sink_To_The_Beat_(Live_In_Pomona)_|_Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Sink To The Beat live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
- published: 19 Feb 2013
- views: 13195
3:06
Cursive - Art Is Hard (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Ar...
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Art Is Hard live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
https://wn.com/Cursive_Art_Is_Hard_(Live_In_Pomona)_|_Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Art Is Hard live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
- published: 19 Feb 2013
- views: 34589
3:26
Cursive - The Sun And Moon (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing Th...
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing The Sun And Moon live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
https://wn.com/Cursive_The_Sun_And_Moon_(Live_In_Pomona)_|_Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing The Sun And Moon live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
- published: 19 Feb 2013
- views: 5815
4:12
Everending
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Everending · Cursive
Vitriola
℗ 2018 15 Passenger
Released on: 2018-10-05
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer, ...
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Everending · Cursive
Vitriola
℗ 2018 15 Passenger
Released on: 2018-10-05
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer, Writer: Matt Maginn
Composer, Writer: Ted Stevens
Composer, Writer: Patrick Newbery
Composer, Writer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
https://wn.com/Everending
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Everending · Cursive
Vitriola
℗ 2018 15 Passenger
Released on: 2018-10-05
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer, Writer: Matt Maginn
Composer, Writer: Ted Stevens
Composer, Writer: Patrick Newbery
Composer, Writer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
- published: 08 Aug 2018
- views: 13032
4:06
Cursive - A Birthday Bash (Live in Pomona) | Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing A ...
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing A Birthday Bash live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
https://wn.com/Cursive_A_Birthday_Bash_(Live_In_Pomona)_|_Moshcam
Start the Cursive concert playlist here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DF8Q35uVDk&feature=share&list=SP4h2XGENb6qivVwKm9pt2nv_9XizutI2r
Cursive performing A Birthday Bash live at The Glass House in Pomona on 25 February 2012
Love live music? SUBSCRIBE for thousands more live videos and new gigs uploaded weekly: http://www.youtube.com/moshcam
The band was formed in 1995 by Tim Kasher, Matt Maginn, Steve Pedersen (all formerly of Slowdown Virginia), and drummer Clint Schnase. In 1997, they released Such Blinding Stars for Starving Eyes. After a couple years of touring, the band broke up in 1998. They "posthumously" released The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song in the fall of that year. A year later, in the summer of 1999, the band re-formed. Pedersen had started law school and later formed The White Octave, so Ted Stevens (formerly of Lullaby for the Working Class) stepped in and joined the band. In 2000, their album Domestica, a concept album, gained them much attention from fans and critics.
Cursive added Gretta Cohn (on cello) in 2001; the strings added complementary sounds to that summer's Burst and Bloom. In 2002, the band toured on the Take Action! Tour.
Saddle Creek Records released The Ugly Organ in 2003. Music magazine Rolling Stone gave the album a 4-star rating, while alternative music magazine Alternative Press rated the album a perfect 5 out of 5. In 2004, The Cure selected Cursive to tour with them on their Curiosa tour, alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Scarling., and The Cooper Temple Clause. Afterwards, the band went on hiatus, with no specified return date.
The label put out a compilation album of unreleased songs and B-sides, The Difference Between Houses and Homes, on August 9, 2005. In mid-2005, Gretta left the band to pursue other musical opportunities, and has since formed the Brooklyn, NY-based band Twin Thousands. Instead of replacing her, the band remained four-piece.
- published: 19 Feb 2013
- views: 2867
3:43
Penance
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Penance · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Compos...
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Penance · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
https://wn.com/Penance
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Penance · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
- published: 08 Sep 2022
- views: 201
3:35
Hot City
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Hot City · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Compo...
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Hot City · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
https://wn.com/Hot_City
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Hot City · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
- published: 08 Sep 2022
- views: 193
2:46
Deep Beneath A Blanket Of Snow
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Deep Beneath A Blanket Of Snow · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Wr...
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Deep Beneath A Blanket Of Snow · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
https://wn.com/Deep_Beneath_A_Blanket_Of_Snow
Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music Group
Deep Beneath A Blanket Of Snow · Braces · Cursive
Braces
℗ 2022 15 Passenger
Released on: 2022-09-09
Composer, Writer: Tim Kasher
Composer: Clint Schnase
Auto-generated by YouTube.
- published: 08 Sep 2022
- views: 295
1:20:35
The Making of Cursive's DOMESTICA - featuring Tim Kasher
In celebration of the deluxe edition of Cursive’s DOMESTICA, we take an in-depth look at how the record was made. Following the breakup of the Omaha band, Slowd...
In celebration of the deluxe edition of Cursive’s DOMESTICA, we take an in-depth look at how the record was made. Following the breakup of the Omaha band, Slowdown Virginia, Tim Kasher reunited with his former bandmates, Matt Maginn and Stephen Pedersen, to start a new project called Cursive. They brought in drummer Clint Schnase and released their first 7 inch on their friends’ label, Lumberjack Records, which later became Saddle Creek. Two full-length records followed, but when THE STORMS OF EARLY SUMMER was released in 1998, the band had already called it quits. Kasher had gotten married and moved to Portland, Oregon for a fresh start. As his marriage fell apart, he returned to Omaha and decided to reform Cursive. Pedersen had left for college at this point so Ted Stevens of Lullaby for the Working Class took over on guitar. Feeling like they had to make up for lost time, Cursive quickly put together an album’s worth of songs and entered the home studio of A.J. and Mike Mogis to record the album over nine days.
In this episode, Tim Kasher describes his vision of a concept album about a failed relationship that took inspiration from his recent divorce. With songs written from the perspective of both the male and female characters in the relationship, Kasher was writing in a fictional style but couldn’t help but include elements from his own life. When the album was released in 2000, Saddle Creek wrote a bio mentioning Kasher’s divorce that impacted the overall perception of the album, which Kasher still maintains is not a “divorce record.” From an attempt at being evenhanded in the storytelling to the Mogis brothers production skills to taking inspiration from the films, Eraserhead and Rosemary’s Baby, to a lifelong journey of understanding metal to fans asking Kasher for relationship advice, we’ll hear the stories around how the album came together.
https://wn.com/The_Making_Of_Cursive's_Domestica_Featuring_Tim_Kasher
In celebration of the deluxe edition of Cursive’s DOMESTICA, we take an in-depth look at how the record was made. Following the breakup of the Omaha band, Slowdown Virginia, Tim Kasher reunited with his former bandmates, Matt Maginn and Stephen Pedersen, to start a new project called Cursive. They brought in drummer Clint Schnase and released their first 7 inch on their friends’ label, Lumberjack Records, which later became Saddle Creek. Two full-length records followed, but when THE STORMS OF EARLY SUMMER was released in 1998, the band had already called it quits. Kasher had gotten married and moved to Portland, Oregon for a fresh start. As his marriage fell apart, he returned to Omaha and decided to reform Cursive. Pedersen had left for college at this point so Ted Stevens of Lullaby for the Working Class took over on guitar. Feeling like they had to make up for lost time, Cursive quickly put together an album’s worth of songs and entered the home studio of A.J. and Mike Mogis to record the album over nine days.
In this episode, Tim Kasher describes his vision of a concept album about a failed relationship that took inspiration from his recent divorce. With songs written from the perspective of both the male and female characters in the relationship, Kasher was writing in a fictional style but couldn’t help but include elements from his own life. When the album was released in 2000, Saddle Creek wrote a bio mentioning Kasher’s divorce that impacted the overall perception of the album, which Kasher still maintains is not a “divorce record.” From an attempt at being evenhanded in the storytelling to the Mogis brothers production skills to taking inspiration from the films, Eraserhead and Rosemary’s Baby, to a lifelong journey of understanding metal to fans asking Kasher for relationship advice, we’ll hear the stories around how the album came together.
- published: 23 Jan 2024
- views: 28