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AAA Music | 26 November 2024

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Vetiver to release limited vinyl edition of single

| On 24, Sep 2011

As another summer fades away we have a little something on offer to help you cling on to the feeling of those hazy days… On Monday 3rd October Vetiver, whose album ‘The Errant Charm’ was released earlier this year, will be releasing ‘Can’t You Tell’ on a limited 12″ vinyl which will also include two new remixes. These remixes have a real balearic feel, something that inspired Andy originally when writing ‘Can’t You Tell’…
“‘Can’t You Tell’ has a lot of ambience and mood, it’s a very summery track whose length is devised to end quickly enough that you’d want to press play again.  These remixes present an opportunity to expand on the mood of the song and to extend the length and reveal a little more detail in the tracks and the spirit of the summer, just before it’s over.”
‘Can’t You Tell’ will be released on Bella Union on Monday 3rd October.
Side A.
1.  Can’t You Tell (Bing’s Slim For Summer Dub)
2.  Can’t You Tell (Mouth Of Heaven Remix)
Side B.
1.  Can’t You Tell (Instrumental)
2.  Can’t You Tell

“The Errant Charm” is a superb soundtrack for an afternoon idyll. Vetiver bandleader Andy Cabic spent hours wandering the streets around San Francisco’s Richmond District, listening to rough mixes, tinkering with lyrics and arrangements. The album opens with “It’s Beyond Me”, a slow boil of acoustic guitar and vintage keyboards over a roomy beat. Here you’ll encounter almost every sonic idea showcased on “The Errant Charm”, the album’s universe distilled into one vibrant song.

As the summery “Can’t You Tell” unfurls, you’ll begin to pinpoint some of the album’s unifying elements, the integration of drum machines and a washed-out, ambient guitar sound, peppered with jangly flourishes. Then there’s “Hard To Break”, the hazy, layered harmonies and sunlight-dappled guitar evoking fond memories of Fleetwood Mac circa 1982’s“Mirage”.

Cabic and producer Thom Monahan have already made four Vetiver records together and know each other’s aesthetics well. It wastime to experiment more, which was why Cabic didn’t arrive at Monahan’s LosAngeles studio with many completed songs. Instead, they started with lots of loose ideas and fleshed out the best bits. In some instances, they augmented or edited parts by themselves, and at other junctures they waited until the remaining Vetiver players could convene in one place to contribute. Those full band performances figure prominently in the album’s driving midsection… “Right Away”, “Wonder Why”, “Ride, Ride, Ride”… each of these selections is more propulsive and rocking than the one before it. Certainly that was Cabic’s intention for The Errant Charm, to push the dynamic range of Vetiver to previously unheard extremes.

The Errant Charm… Errant as in wayward, elusive. Wandering but not lost. Within that wandering, all manner of treasures waiting to be uncovered, and new ones that surface with each listen.