Vetiver
The Errant Charm
[Rating: 3.5 stars]
(Sub Pop)
A lot of artists use a similar formula when it comes to putting out records: write an accessible, likeable debut and develop a solid fan base, then start getting experimental when you know youโve got them hooked and have some artistic leeway. Sub Pop indie act Vetiver did it backwards. Their 2004 self-titled debut pinned Vetiver into the โfreak folkโ genre with artists like Devendra Banhart and Joanna Newsom, both of whom guested on a handful of the recordโs tracks. Later releases, especially 2008โs Tight Knit, showed that songwriter/vocalist Andy Cabic and company had more up their sleeves than whimsical arrangements and trippy lyrics and solidified the band as an understated, underrated precursor to the folk/Americana movement about to take the indie scene by storm (Mumford & Sons, anyone?).
Vetiverโs latest record, The Errant Charm, is certainly more folk than freak. Opener โItโs Beyond Meโ contains its fair share of ambient keys and synth sounds, but is really driven by the acoustic guitar framing Cabicโs vocals, as is much of the rest of the record. โWonder Why,โ the recordโs first single, shows Cabic experimenting with a bit of pop, while throwing in some of the Townes Van Zandt sensibilities Tight Knit began to utilize in earnest– twangy guitar solo, crunchy power chords and all. โFaint Praiseโ and โSoft Glassโ are the closest the record has to Vetiver-era throwbacks, though they still mark the sound of a band long down a new road.
Lyrically, The Errant Charm shows Cabic more than ever to be a storytellerโโHard to Breakโ tells a story of longing many of us know too well, while โWorse for Wear,โ perhaps inspired by the same tumultuous relationship, is a gentle ode to hope within heartbreak. Working within more traditional instrumentation seems to have put Cabic in a more straightforward lyrical mindset, as well, making for the bandโs most cohesive effort to date.
Die-hard fans of the Vetiver of old might be disappointed by The Errant Charmโs affirmation of the bandโs new direction, but the record should also serve as a nice gateway for new listeners. After all, a record as gorgeous as this one deserves to be heard by many.









