The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
16
new
SPILL NEW MUSIC: HAIR CONTROL – “TV IN THE AFTERLIFE”
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PAT TRAVERS – HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED – LIVE IN HOUSTON, TX – MARCH 20, 2004
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CATE KENNAN – SHADOWS
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: KNITTING – SOUVENIR
SPILL ALBUM PREMIERE: JULES IS DEAD – DIGITAL DEATH
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PROUN – MAYBE LUCK
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MISSOULA – DEATH DOULA
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – DIGGING YOUR SCENE – NEW POP & ALL THAT JAZZ 1982-1987
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – REMIX/REMODEL – THE VINCE CLARKE REMIXES
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MINYO CRUSADERS – FROM JAPAN WITH LOVE
SPILL NEW MUSIC: EDITORS ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM ‘SURFACE, ECHO & SOUND’ OUT OCTOBER 30 | SHARE NEW SINGLE/VIDEO “THE RUSH” VIA PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
SPILL NEWS: THE JAYHAWKS ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM, SANCTUARY PARK, OUT AUGUST 28TH VIA THIRTY TIGERS
SPILL LIVE REVIEW: YOUNG THE GIANT w/ COLD WAR KIDS & ALMOST MONDAY @ HISTORY, TORONTO
SPILL FEATURE: LET’S JUST START AGAIN – A CONVERSATION WITH NICK HEYWARD & LES NEMES OF HAIRCUT 100
SPILL FEATURE: AFTER THE ASTRONAUT – A CONVERSATION WITH KING COFFEY OF BUTTHOLE SURFERS
SPILL VIDEO PREMIERE: SHAMUS – “SORCERESS”
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
  • Spill Menu
    • Reviews
      • Album Reviews
      • Features
      • Live Reviews
      • Festivals
    • Portraits
    • Headlines
      • News
      • Contests
      • Events
      • Entertainment Headlines
      • Concert Listings
      • Toronto Concert Venues
    • New Music
      • Premieres
      • Track Of The Day
    • Track Of The Month
    • Books + Movies
    • About
Album Reviews
498
Editor Pick
previous article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BOB DYLAN - TRAVELIN’ THRU, 1967-1969: THE BOOTLEG SERIES VOL. 15
next article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: AGS CONNOLLY - WRONG AGAIN

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VETIVER – UP ON HIGH

Vetiver

Vetiver
Up On High
Mama Bird Recordings

Four years since his last album Complete Strangers, Vetiver returns with Up on High, a groovy, chilled-out acoustic-driven collection of songs that feature poetic, imagistic lyrics and a hopeful tone from song-to-song that reflects a certain kind of weathered contentedness with life that is refreshing and, dare I say, relatable.

First, the lyricism here provides much to ponder and much to relate to, and is already calling me back for further listening. From the opening track “The Living End” all the way through the title track “Up on High” at the back end of the album, Andy Cabic’s soft, soulful, scratchy voice is front and center and reveals a thematic concern with his own current circumstances in life, what’s coming and what’s already gone, how to feel about it all, and where to go next. That being said, he doesn’t seem to be in a rush, choosing instead to enjoy the moment he is in.

The end result here seems to be a set of songs by someone who is equal parts world-weary and experienced, but also aware enough of his own weariness to have developed a gratitude for the understanding and insight that has been gained by it all. To be world-weary, the premise goes, you must have some life experience to be world-weary of, and Cabic has made an album that manages to rise triumphantly above it all, at least temporarily, like someone sticking their head out the car window to feel the wind on their face for the first time in a while. Here, he has taken an old life, breathed it all in, and breathed it back out again in a long satisfied exhale.

Lyrics like “For now we have all we could want,”, “what’s past is past, wanted, never asked,” and

“I’m on the outside looking in/
Tell me where do I begin?/
Tomorrow waits for you and I/
Up on high,”

from the title track suggest someone pausing to look around before deciding where to go next, a thematic concern that arises in virtually every song.

Musically, I kept thinking of the early Brushfire Records days of Jack Johnson and Donavon Frankenreiter—especially Frankenreiter’s self-titled album—mostly for their similar chillness and ease with the world, with one difference being that Vetiver’s sound is more awash in a hazy twang with crystalline guitar-picking at times in which you can often hear fingers sliding up and down the strings. I can also hear tinges of Tom Petty, Paul Simon, and R.E.M. here as well depending on the track.

Overall, this is a consistently beautiful and poetic album whose lyricism and chill optimism offers a replayability and relatability that is highly enjoyable from the start and whose overall sound places it squarely amongst some truly great, chilled out albums of yore.



Artist Links

website_flat_2016 facebook_flat_2016 twitter_flat_2016 instagram_flat_2016

Editor Pick
Item Reviewed

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VETIVER – UP ON HIGH

Author

Dan Kennard

Here's what we think...
Spill Rating
Fan Rating
Rate Here
New Criteria
10
10
9.0
Total Spill Rating
10
Total Fan Rating
2 ratings
You have rated this
Album Reviews
album reviewalbum reviewsmama bird recordingsup on highvetiver
album review, album reviews, mama bird recordings, up on high, vetiver
About the Author
Dan Kennard
Dan Kennard is an English teacher and fiction writer living outside Kansas City, Kansas where he lives with his wife and children. More about his work can be found at amazon.com/author/dankennard. You can also follow him on Twitter and Instagram @kennardistry or contact him at [email protected].
RELATED ARTICLES
album reviewalbum reviews
 
7.0
Pat Travers

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PAT TRAVERS – HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED – LIVE IN HOUSTON, TX – MARCH 20, 2004

by Aaron Badgley on June 26, 2026
PAT TRAVERS HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED – LIVE IN HOUSTON, TX – MARCH 20, 2004 CLEOPATRA RECORDS Pat Travers continues to mine his live archive for never-before-released concerts for fans to enjoy. And it’s great that he does it too. This [...]
 
8.0
Cate Kennan

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CATE KENNAN – SHADOWS

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on June 26, 2026
CATE KENNAN SHADOWS KRANKY Working in that not so defined musical ground between ethereal and dream pop can be a tricky affair, as it is currently populated by quite a few artists, and any relative newcomer is bound to be compared to somebody [...]
 
8.0
knitting

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: KNITTING – SOUVENIR

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on June 26, 2026
KNITTING SOUVENIR MINT RECORDS Montreal’s knitting does love the sound of their guitars (quite evident on their debut Some Kind of Heaven from 2024), but simply labelling them as a slacker band, particularly listening to Souvenir, their [...]
 
8.0
proun

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PROUN – MAYBE LUCK

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on June 26, 2026
PROUN MAYBE LUCK GOOD ENGLISH RECORDS We can keep guessing (or not) at what Austin, TX trio proun had in mind when they named its debut album Maybe Luck, but it is hard to hear that the luck is involved in its music, as it can go from a whisper [...]
 
8.0
Missoula

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MISSOULA – DEATH DOULA

by Aaron Badgley on June 26, 2026
MISSOULA DEATH DOULA ORG MUSIC Missoula is an instrumental superstar project from drummer Brooks Wackerman (Avenged Sevenfold, Bad Religion) and guitarist John Konesky (Tenacious D). This is not surf or ambient or meditative instrumental music. [...]

Latest Album Reviews
View All
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PAT TRAVERS – HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED –...
7.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CATE KENNAN – SHADOWS
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: KNITTING – SOUVENIR
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PROUN – MAYBE LUCK
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MISSOULA – DEATH DOULA
8.0

STAY UP-TO-DATE
WITH OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER!

SPILL MAGAZINE MENU
  • Home | The Spill Magazine
  • Newsletter
  • Premieres
  • Track Of The Month
  • Album Reviews
  • Books + Movies
  • Features
  • Live Reviews
  • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • News
  • Events
  • Entertainment Headlines
  • Concert Listings
  • Toronto Concert Venues
  • About Us
  • Contests
  • New Music
  • Contributors
  • TOTD
  • Privacy Policy
  • The Scene Unseen
  • Newsletter

Copyright © 2026 | The Spill Magazine
All Rights Reserved.

TRENDING RIGHT NOW
   
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SOCIAL DISTORTION – BORN TO KILL
1233
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BRIAN WILSON – ON TOUR 1999-2007
807
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: TORI AMOS – IN TIMES OF DRAGONS
756
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JOE JACKSON – HOPE AND FURY
666
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CODEFENDANTS – LIFERS
609
 
SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: IAMX – “INFINITE FEAR JETS {MIMETIC HEXES REWORK}”
592
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: NOAH KAHAN – THE GREAT DIVIDE
592
 
SPILL FEATURE: WE ARE TRYING TO KEEP THINGS INTERESTING FOR OURSELVES – A CONVERSATION WITH JOHN LINNELL OF THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
548
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER – I’M PEOPLE
491
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MODEST MOUSE – AN ERASER AND A MAZE
449
 
SPILL NEW MUSIC: NEW RELEASE FROM THE TRAGICALLY HIP, CITY AND COLOUR, RUBY WATERS, BOI-1DA & CANADA SOCCER “AHEAD BY A CENTURY”
436
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: DOUBLESPEAK – DOUBLESPEAK
431
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE LEMON TWIGS – LOOK FOR YOUR MIND!
415
ENTERTAINMENT HEADLINES