No images? Click here FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CASS MCCOMBS SHARES NEW OFFICIAL VIDEO This past May Cass McCombs released the new single “The Wine of Lebanon” in partnership with Universal Audio. Today he has shared a new video for the track. Filmed in January, prior to the current shelter-in-place orders, McCombs visited the resting places of the respected and influential artists Ritchie Valens, Etta James, Merle Haggard, Darby Crash and more. Watch the video HERE. “McCombs conjures an otherworldly in-between realm teetering
on the edge of salvation,” said Rolling Stone, who declared “The Wine of Lebanon” a Song You Need To Know. Below is a statement from the video’s director Aaron Brown about collaborating with McCombs and paying meaningful tribute to the artists featured in the clip. “In this time of cultural and spiritual unrest, we present an offering to the ancestors for guidance. Social protest is a healthy expression of life, but it is also important to nest such actions in a greater context of our ancestor’s work. This step in the practice is in order to fully grow and mature from our shared, current experiences. The ancestors are there to show us what they discovered. For this, honor their wisdom and bring them offerings in order that we may not forget them and become stuck in a cycle of repetitious amnesia. The collective energy and unrest that we are all feeling now is the strength needed in order to truly grow, both as allies, and as subjects. A second note
of warning, more specific to one’s individual practice – It is not enough to dress or play music that sounds like one’s image of inspiration; if we research who these personalities were, what in turn inspired them and what they loved and if we bring them offerings of corresponding value, then the spirits are made happy and bestow their happiness and good fortune on the one who has taken time to pay their respects. The internet is something in which we have become entangled, references abound as if free money. But references are not free money. They are works of art and people’s blood, sweat, and tears that one should honor, and to which one should pay tribute in some personal kind of way or another. We are not saying that one should run to their agents or to the ASCAP offices to pay them their royalties, rather we are saying to take time in private, or at a
location of meaning to them, and pay them their due spiritual tribute.” CASS MCCOMBS
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