Kacy Anderson and Clayton Linthicum are cousins who have been friends since childhood. They grew up a few miles from one another in Wood Mountain Uplands, a rural community in Saskatchewan, where their family started a ranch in 1911. When Linthicum was ten years old, his parents went on a trip and left him in the care of his uncle Carl, who taught young Clayton how to play guitar, and he's stayed with the instrument ever since. It was in 2009 that Linthicum and Anderson discovered they had a mutual interest in vintage folk music. Kacy Clayton began learning songs and performing together at a tavern in their hometown. Word spread about the duo, and within a year they were appearing at folk clubs and at music festivals. For a while, Linthicum was also playing in a bar band that specialized in country covers. At a gig in 2011, Linthicum met fellow musician Ryan Boldt, who shared his passion for classic folk and blues music. Boldt was a member of the popular Canadian roots rock band the Deep Dark Woods, and he not only invited Linthicum to join the group but also talked up the Kacy Clayton project in the press.
In 2013, Kacy Clayton released their first album, The Day Is Past and Gone. The disc earned rave reviews, with some critics citing Anderson as the natural heir to iconic folksinger Sandy Denny. In 2015, the duo toured England, where they took the opportunity to spend a day perusing the archives of esteemed folk music historian Cecil Sharp. In 2016, Kacy Clayton released their eagerly awaited second album, Strange Country, produced by musician and songwriter Shuyler Jansen. Like their debut, Strange Country was a major critical success, and spread their name in the United States.
August 2017 saw the release of the third Kacy Clayton album, The Siren's Song, which was produced by Jeff Tweedy of Wilco. After the record arrived, the duo toured extensively, including a string of North American dates with the Decemberists. The pair returned to Wilco's Chicago studio the Loft to cut their fourth full-length project, with Tweedy once again at the helm. Displaying a stronger country accent than their previous efforts, Carrying On was issued by New West in October 2019. Marlon Williams, a celebrated singer/songwriter from New Zealand, heard Kacy Clayton's music and sought the pair out in hopes of recording with them. The Canadian cousins were happy to work with Williams, and in December 2020, they presented a collaborative album, Plastic Bouquet. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi