Beginnings (1994–2002) Vile grew up in
Lansdowne, Pennsylvania, a suburb of
Philadelphia, and is the third oldest of ten children born to Charles and Donna Vile. Although his surname is occasionally assumed to be a pseudonym and a pun on German composer
Kurt Weill, it is his real birth name and the similarity to Weill's name is a coincidence. At the age of fourteen, Kurt Vile was given a
banjo by his father, with Vile noting, "I kind of wished [it] was a guitar. So I'd kind of just play it like a guitar anyway. I was really into writing pretty primitive tunes, and really into recording. I pretty much knew I was going to do music [with my life] then." Vile began writing songs on the banjo, describing his first self-penned track as: "a joke song. It was a good instrumental; I knew all these chords, but then I was quoting a
cartoon as the lyrics on top of it. I had seen this cartoon about
Superman and
Lex Luthor; it was like the back history of why Lex Luthor hated Superman. They used to be friends, and then some giant stone of kryptonite fell and it made Lex Luthor's hair fall out, and he was like, 'You made all my hair fall out!' It was a really stupid cartoon, but that was my song, 'You Made All My Hair Fall Out'." Three years later, Vile created his first "mass-produced" tape at the age of seventeen. Influenced by
Pavement,
Beck,
Smog and the record label
Drag City, Vile noted, "I really thought I could be on Drag City. I really wanted that. I heard these people that made good music but it was still pretty raw, and had this real cult quality." Regarding this time in his life, Vile noted "It was a really fast-paced job, unloading trucks. Though music was my passion, I had a long way to go then and a lot to learn. I got depressed so many times by my
blue-collar life, and self-conscious about the fact that I didn't go to college. I was always working super low-end jobs, being the complete opposite of what I wanted to be. But I just fell into it, and I was also sorta shy. It was definitely a pretty rough time."
The War on Drugs and Constant Hitmaker (2003–2008) In 2003, after staying in
Boston for two years, Vile moved back to
Philadelphia, and began collaborating with musician and songwriter
Adam Granduciel. The duo subsequently formed the
indie rock band
The War on Drugs in 2005. Regarding his friendship with Granduciel, Vile noted, "We're essentially best friends. He was backing me up in my band when he started working on his own music, so I thought I’d return the favor." At this time, Vile's debut solo album,
Constant Hitmaker (2008), was released on
Gulcher Records. Vile subsequently decided to leave The War on Drugs to concentrate on his solo career. The album was compiled from various home recordings and one studio recording of the song "Freeway". In 2009, Vile noted, "The War On Drugs got put out on a bigger label first, so, in the
blogosphere, some claim that The War on Drugs was my first, main band. But that's just the way it looks. I've made more music than Adam has, and have been doing my Kurt Vile thing for a little bit longer. And
Constant Hitmaker came out around that same time. Right when that [War on Drugs] record came out, I went to Europe with them, and also opened as Kurt Vile. That was right when I decided I wanted to concentrate on doing my own thing."
God Is Saying This to You... and Childish Prodigy (2009–2010) In April 2009,
Mexican Summer released
God Is Saying This to You...; a collection of Vile's home recordings dating back to 2003 on vinyl only. Upon its release, Vile had already recorded a studio album,
Childish Prodigy, which Vile described as "definitely not as
lo-fi" as his previous releases.
Smoke Ring for My Halo (2011–2012) Vile released his fourth studio album,
Smoke Ring for My Halo, in 2011. The album peaked at No. 154 on the
Billboard Top 200 and placed highly on many end-of-year lists, and in 2013 was named at number 475 in NME's '500 Greatest Albums of All Time'. Later in 2011, Vile released a companion EP,
So Outta Reach, and appeared on his former band
The War on Drugs' second studio album,
Slave Ambient. Shortly after the release of
Smoke Ring for My Halo, longtime Violators guitarist
Adam Granduciel departed from the band to fully focus on The War on Drugs, with Vile noting, "Adam, he plays in The War on Drugs, his record came out a little after mine did, so at first he toured, and now he's obviously busy with that and now he's working on his new record."
Wakin on a Pretty Daze (2013–2014) Wakin on a Pretty Daze was released on April 9, 2013. Regarding the current line-up of his backing band, Vile noted, "I'm playing with Jesse [Trbovich] and Rob [Laakso]. [...] Rob Laakso is the newest member and Jesse has been a member forever. They're steady members. Our drummer is no longer with us, but other than that, different friends played drums on the record and we're doing rehearsals with that right now. But other than that, the Violators are me, Jesse, and Rob and we'll see how it evolves."
Priestess drummer Vince Nudo subsequently joined the band on drums and percussion, after performing on two of
Wakin on a Pretty Dazes tracks.
Steve Gunn joined the band as an "auxiliary Violator", during the band's May 2013 tour dates, with Vile noting, "It's impossible to just talk about Steve. He's too good! He's so good; just listen to him. What can I even say about him that touches that? I just want to listen to him." On September 24, 2013, Vile announced the release of a new EP, ''
It's a Big World Out There (And I Am Scared), and a deluxe edition of Wakin on a Pretty Daze''.
''B'lieve I'm Goin Down...'' (2015–2017) On March 6, 2015, Vile announced that he was working on his sixth studio album, with recording taking place across different locations in the United States. ''
B'lieve I'm Goin Down...'' was released September 25, 2015, on
Matador Records. Vile has described it as "All over the place. Everything you can imagine I've done... That's where I'm at now, that I can sort of tap into every world and make it cohesive."
Still in Rock ranked this LP as the 2nd best of 2015. Vile is featured on the song "
Let Me Get There" by the band
Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions released in 2016. Vile sings lead vocals on The Sadies song "It's Easy (Like Walking)" on their 2017 album
Northern Passages.
Lotta Sea Lice and Bottle It In (2017–2019) In 2017, Vile and
Courtney Barnett recorded the collaborative album
Lotta Sea Lice, released on October 13. The lead single "Over Everything" was released on August 30, 2017, accompanied by the music video directed by Danny Cohen. In 2018, Vile announced his seventh solo studio album,
Bottle It In, released on October 12, 2018.
(watch my moves), Laakso's death, and Back to Moon Beach (2020–present) Vile produced and appeared on
Sweep It Into Space, the twelfth album by
Dinosaur Jr. which was released on April 23, 2021. On April 20,
Verve Records announced that they had signed Vile after 11 years with Matador. Vile cited
the Velvet Underground as an inspiration for his signing. On April 15, 2022, Verve Records released
(watch my moves), Vile's ninth studio album. The album was mostly recorded during
COVID-19 lockdowns at Vile's new home studio, OKV Central. Upon the album's release, Adam Langellotti, who had previously helped Vile build his home studio, joined the Violators on bass guitar and keyboards. On May 4, 2023, Vile's longtime Violators bandmate and recording partner
Rob Laakso died from
cholangiocarcinoma, a rare and aggressive form of cancer of the bile duct. In a lengthy tribute post, Vile described Laakso as a "Musical genius. Recording whizz. Best husband and father," noting that "Rob and I worked close together on the albums
B’lieve and
Bottle (him co-producing many of the tracks alongside me, engineering often, playing many different instruments, slaying with ease.) But
Wakin' was his first full-time Violator record and you can see the shift to epic proportions from
Smoke Ring to it. I’ve clocked in so many hours on the road and in front of amps with him but so have the Violators, Jesse first and Kyle later." On November 17, 2023, Vile released a 52-minute-long EP,
Back to Moon Beach, which was mostly recorded from September 2019 to May 2023. Upon the EP's release, Vile noted: "[My manager] called this an EP by only my standards, haha (cuz the long length) but really if I got around to it again, I wouldn’t say anything, ya know, just put it out and just see what happens. The first six tracks are brand new to the world and blend so sweet together and span from September 2019 to May 2023. If we wanna get technical, let’s call those songs the EP and the last three songs the extended compilation (but they blend so smooth too, right?!) because, well, life in the studio is an extended compilation." ==Personal life==