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Based around the rootsy and searching songwriting of bandleader
Andy Cabic,
Vetiver was included in the earliest waves of the freak folk movement due to their strong ties to fellow Bay Area artists like
Devendra Banhart and
Joanna Newsom. The group slowly established a solid lineup as
Cabic's songwriting continually evolved, moving from more traditional folky beginnings to include more electronic and rock elements by the time of 2015's
Complete Strangers.
Cabic got his start in the D.I.Y. indie rock scene forming his band Raymond Brake in his native Greensboro, North Carolina, in the early '90s. The Raymond Brake's noisy,
Sonic Youth-influenced take on indie rock was a natural fit with both the Chapel Hill art-punk scene and the influential Washington, D.C.-based indie label Simple Machines, which released the band's debut album, Piles of Dirty Winters, in 1995. After a handful of EPs and one more album, 1996's Never Work Ever, the Raymond Brake broke up and
Cabic migrated westward, eventually settling in San Francisco.
While studying at the San Francisco Art Institute,
Cabic met fellow student
Banhart and instantly established a close working relationship with him. Playing shows with
Banhart,
Joanna Newsom,
Six Organs of Admittance, and others,
Cabic started writing songs for his new project,
Vetiver, named for a relative of lemongrass that's used in perfume making. He added
Banhart on guitar and backing vocals, Jim Gaylord on violin, and Alissa Anderson on cello, and the band -- with
Cabic's vocals, banjo, and acoustic guitar -- released its self-titled debut on the DiCristina label in 2004. (The album, produced by
Thom Monahan of
the Pernice Brothers, also included guest spots by
Newsom,
Mazzy Star's
Hope Sandoval, and former
My Bloody Valentine drummer
Colm O'Ciosoig.) As the freak folk movement gained steam and
Banhart's worldwide acclaim grew,
Vetiver's association with him would bring them new fans as well. In addition to
Banhart's musical contributions to
Vetiver's albums,
Cabic co-wrote
Banhart's breakout song "At the Hop," and
Banhart paid tribute to his friend's band in the song "When the Sun Shone on Vetiver."
Vetiver was followed in 2005 by an odds-and-sods collection called
Between, which included two live tracks, a new version of a song from Vetiver, and a cover of
Fleetwood Mac's "Save Me a Place." For
Vetiver's second full-length album, 2006's
To Find Me Gone,
Cabic finally added a drummer,
Otto Hauser, and bassist
Kevin Barker to the core trio of himself,
Banhart, and Anderson. After the album was released,
Cabic introduced a stable, full-time recording and touring lineup of himself, Anderson,
Hauser, new guitarist
Sanders Trippe, and new bassist
Brent Dunn. In 2008, the band released A Thing of the Past, a collection of covers of songs by artists who had influenced the group's music, including
Michael Hurley,
Ronnie Lane, and
Townes Van Zandt.
The band's next album,
Tight Knit, was released by Sub Pop in 2009, and
Vetiver remained with that label for 2011's
The Errant Charm, whose breezy, casual sound was inspired by
Cabic's frequent walks around San Francisco's Richmond District. He returned in 2015 with sixth album
Complete Strangers, again produced by sole
Vetiver producer
Thom Monahan. The album found
Cabic integrating more electronic sounds into his laid-back folksy songwriting. After touring extensively with the full band in support of the album,
Cabic embarked on several stripped-down tours with longtime friend
Eric D. Johnson of
Fruit Bats. These intimate shows would find both songwriters on stage, trading songs and backing each other up with just two acoustic guitars and supportive harmonies. The chemistry between the two was warm and captivating, and the shows were a big enough hit with fans that during a morning off on one of these tours, the duo took to a studio and tracked six songs in this minimal style. The session resulted in an EP entitled In Real Life (Live at Spacebomb Studios), which was released jointly under the name of both bands in early 2019. Before the year was up, the seventh
Vetiver album,
Up on High, materialized. Informed by several moves, the album returned to the more folksy and organic tones of earlier
Vetiver material. ~ Stewart Mason