Tracy Grammer, raised in Southern California in a musical family, met Carter outside one of his performances in Portland, OR in 1996, and the two quickly started working on material for a potential collaboration. By 1998, the duo recorded When I Go in the kitchen of Grammer's apartment, earning them the Kerrville New Folk Award. As they began playing the contemporary folk circuit, they would add the Wildflower Performing Songwriter and Napa Valley Emerging Songwriter Awards to go with various other accolades. Signing with Signature Sounds in 1999 with the promise of artistic freedom, Carter Grammer recorded Tanglewood Tree in a professional studio with session players and released the album in the spring of 2000 to rave reviews. In what Carter has referred to as the "first Buddhist country album," from the inclusion of a Buddhist mantra in the liner notes and the subtle philosophical undertones, Tanglewood Tree only furthered the duo's reputation for creating masterful narratives and rich aural textures. Drum Hat Buddha appeared in spring 2001. On Friday, July 19, 2002, Carter's life was sadly cut short when he collapsed in his hotel room in Northampton, Massachusetts after a massive heart attack. He was 49. ~ Matt Fink, Rovi