Seether is a rock band from Pretoria, South Africa, founded in May 1999 by vocalist and guitarist Shaun Morgan (born Shaun Welgemoed) under the name Saron Gas. Morgan — who grew up in Pietermaritzburg and spent most of his early life in South Africa — formed the band as a three-piece after the planned original singer and guitarist failed to show up to the first practice. Bassist Dale Stewart joined in 2000 after the original bassist departed, and the pair recorded Fragile that year, an album that earned enough attention to attract Wind-up Records in New York. In January 2002 the band relocated to the United States to sign with Wind-up, at which point the original drummer returned to South Africa. Morgan and Stewart renamed the band Seether — after a Veruca Salt song — to avoid confusion with sarin gas, the chemical warfare agent whose name their previous band name too closely resembled.
Disclaimer (2002), their US major-label debut, established the band's commercial foothold with the Active Rock number one single Fine Again, which was also featured in Madden NFL 2003. The extended touring that followed connected the band with Evanescence, who selected Seether as their worldwide support act — a tour that delayed the planned second album by nearly a year and produced an unexpected creative development: a romance between Morgan and Evanescence vocalist Amy Lee. Seether reworked their acoustic ballad Broken into an electric version with Lee's guest vocals, placing it on the soundtrack to the 2004 film The Punisher. The track became a major hit in the US, UK, and Australia and is among the band's most-streamed songs. Disclaimer II (2004) repackaged the debut with remixed tracks and new material as a holdover for fans.
Karma and Effect (2005) was their full commercial breakthrough, debuting at number eight on the Billboard 200 and going gold in the US and Canada. The album produced the hit Remedy and continued the band's run of Active Rock radio success. Finding Beauty in Negative Spaces (2007), produced by Howard Benson, yielded Fake It — the band's most-streamed song — along with Breakdown. Subsequent albums including Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray (2011, produced by Brendan O'Brien) and Isolate and Medicate (2014) maintained their chart presence. Shaun Morgan's brother Eugene died by suicide in 2007, a loss that profoundly shaped his songwriting across subsequent albums. Morgan has spoken openly about his own struggles with addiction and mental health, themes that run throughout the band's catalog in terms that connect directly with listeners navigating similar experiences. Seether's 2021 compilation Vicennial: 2 Decades of Seether documented a career that by then included 17 number one singles, 21 top five hits, three platinum and two gold albums, single sales surpassing 17 million, and over 2 billion streams worldwide. Their ninth album The Surface Seems So Far (2024) produced Judas Mind, which reached number one on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay chart — their tenth career number one on that chart since 2005.
Wayne Dennon photographed Seether as part of an archive that documents rock bands whose emotional directness cuts through genre categories. Seether are one of the rare acts that crossed an ocean, built an audience from scratch in a foreign market, and sustained that audience for over two decades through the kind of unadorned, emotionally honest songwriting that does not depend on any particular trend to remain relevant.