Half Waif: Making Space to Create
Half Waif is the sound of a creative mind constantly searching for balance. The music created by New York-based artist Nandi Rose is a painfully sweet push and pull, walking the line between light and dark, analog and digital, and themes of both solitude and community. Her sound comes in flashes of Kate Bush and James Blake, marrying a more traditional songwriting sensibility with playful sonic exploration and fearlessness.
You may have read Pitchforkâs review of Half Waifâs last album Lavender, which they deemed âa woozy dynamic of pushing people away while simultaneously drawing them closeâ, or else seen her Tiny Desk Concert which features the longing pull of her voice and four other multi-instrumentalists. Having toured with the likes of Iron & Wine and Alex G, Half Waif has a lot of miles and three albums already under her belt, but still much more to say.Â
To celebrate the release of her fourth album, The Caretaker, we had a chance to sit down and dive into the depths of Half Waifâs creative process.
Tell us about what The Caretaker means.
As I was writing this album, I was contending with a number of friendships in my life transitioning and falling apart, and I had to really look at why that was happening. It felt like a failure. Itâs really painful when you canât be there for people in your life, for whatever reason. I looked inside and there was a lot of inner collapse, really low self esteem and I hate the term âself loveâ, but there was a real lack of that.Â
What I was working through on this album was recognizing that to be a good caretaker for others and for this land â to be a steward of this beautiful planet that we inhabit â there has to be a real fortitude of spirit and a true love of self. I think in order to take care of the things that we care about and love in our lives, there is a certain amount of innerwork that has to be done too.
What was your process for making The Caretaker?Â
I really wanted to spend a lot of time on this record. My previous work was written while I was on the road, a little bit in snatches here and there, often in cars, in vans, in greenrooms, but this was really a deliberate choice to be home and to give myself a longer stretch of time to be very present with these songs. I wanted to generate a lot of material, knowing that a lot of it would be bad, but it felt like a luxury to have the time and to also have the physical space.Â
Iâm in the room right now where I wrote the album, which is my little music room in our house in Chatham, New York. I have been off the road for a year now and I wasnât even touring that much right before then so this was an attempt to pay a lot of attention to what I was writing and not necessarily have it be in this gush of inspiration. What if it was more methodical? What if it was me being in this room everyday and trying different exercises to jolt myself into inspiration, trying different pathways into what it means to write a song? As a result, the process was really varied.
This record is a lot about finding that balance between isolation and community. Moving here was so great for me in so many ways because it felt like home. I love being surrounded by nature. I have space to write, but it is very isolating to live in a small town and be a solo artist, which is what I am now after years with a band. I kind of returned to this being my solo gig and I donât collaborate with a band at this point in time.Â
Something I was exploring in this album was finding that balance between carving out space for yourself and enjoying your solitude, finding it productive and then recognizing that that can go a little bit too far. Too much of a good thing can be a bad thing, and recognizing that in order to enjoy those spaces of solitude, you have to have the necessary counterpoint and the necessary resistance of interactions with other people. Iâm trying to find that balance now in my life.
What were the easiest songs and what were the hardest songs to write on the record?
Definitely âBraceâ and âGenerationâ, which are the two traditional keyboard or piano songs and those were all in one go. Those were examples of songs that kind of wrote themselves, which was me at a keyboard and the lyrics and chords happened simultaneously. But there were other songs that I approached like a challenge.
The song âSirenâ for me was a tough nut to crack because I had this beat that I really loved and this chorus that came about really naturally. But I thought, âokay, where does this go?â and I really had to work at what felt like a satisfying bridge and conclusion to the song. Ultimately I did my first ever modulation *laughs*. I was like, âhow is this song gonna end?â Why donât we just modulate with no lead in? Not even a, âhow do we get into this?â Weâre just gonna go there.
Itâs a very power ballad move. Very Celine Dion, very Mariah Carey.
It really felt like that. I also think that points to something thatâs nice about getting older and doing this for a while. Iâm less afraid of what sounds cool and more concerned about trying things and having fun with it. I know in the past I would have thought that that was too cheesy or stupid but when I was writing I thought, âthis feels greatâ and I had the confidence to do it. I felt like it was time to do a modulation.Â
Having the time to work on this was a fun exercise in utilizing new songwriting techniques that I hadnât before, and listening to and analysing other artists that I really love. Throughout the process of writing this album, I would ask myself, âWhy do I love that song and what is it about that section that feels really good?â and then put it into practice, trying it out in my own songs.
What were you listening to at the time or what are those influences on the record?
A big one for me then and now and always moving forward is Frank Ocean. Blonde was really influential to me and I think many many many songwriters of our generation because of how fluidly he moves through genre. I think he really displays that confidence of trying something that you wouldnât necessarily think would fit in a song, but it does.Â
I think another person who does that is Alex G, who has become a friend of mine and someone Iâve toured with. Iâm super inspired by his ease with genre and his sonic explorations, which all feel like a part of his world. Itâs not like, âheâs attempting a country songâ. No, itâs, âoh this is Alex G doing a country songâ. It doesnât feel like a stretch and I think that speaks volumes to his playfulness and confidence to try new things and not shy away from what a song needs. I think that if a song needs a fiddle, put a fiddle in it. It doesnât matter if youâve never had a fiddle on your song or if youâre not the kind of artist who would have a fiddle.Â
The songs are everything. What a song needs is priority over what your own preconceptions are for what kind of artist you are. The song, âBlinking Lightâ is an example of that because when I started writing it, it felt like an indie rock/classic rock song. I think in the past, I would have thought, âthatâs not me, thatâs more Pinegroveâ, which is the band I was previously playing with. I would have thought this was a song that they would write but not me. But again, I think by getting older and being more open minded, I decided I wanted to see where it could go. I have this weird guitar sample in there that doesnât totally come to mind immediately, but it felt like it fit, so I left it in there.
The song âLapsingâ was very inspired by Nils Frahm, who I was listening to a lot during this period. His economy of sound and ability to transform one instrument and coax a huge range of sound out of it. âLapsingâ is two of the same synth, the TAL-U-No-LX synth plug-in which emulates the Juno 60. With that song I did an improvisation. Never did a modulation, never did an instrumental, so why not push myself to take that on? Iâm usually very crafted and that comes from my perfectionistic tendencies. I played in the synth part and then I performed the automation. I went back, armed the track and performed with the synth parameters, opening up filters and having that slight pitch warble come in. The filter was affecting the pitch and that emulated the sound of summer insects, which I also layered on as a fun soundtrack. Having that synth kind of fly off the pitch center slightly recreated that sound of insects chirping in the night.Â
Your songs pack a lot of punch emotionally â theyâre short, and thereâs a huge amount of contrast between the various sections. How do you accomplish that?
What Iâve learned about songwriting is that every section should be exciting. If you love the chorus in a song that you wrote but the verse is just okay, rewrite the verse and get the verse to a place where it is just as exciting as the chorus for you. Iâve been challenging myself to have every section feel really great and make sure Iâm not just rushing through the verse because I want to get to the big juicy chorus.Â
In terms of short songs, part of it is this kind of conventional restlessness; I love writing songs, Iâm done with this one, I want to write another one. Also I think there is something to be said about short songs with a lot going on encouraging repeat listens. It makes people wonder, âwhat did I just hear? Let me put it on again.â So hopefully people will come back to listen more.
A new mantra that I picked up is, âthe more you look the more you seeâ. I love the idea of music being that way too. Where you can get something from it the first time but it pulls you in the more that you listen. You start discovering new little gems and thatâs my favorite kind of music to listen to. I hope to be able to create that for other people.Â
Who else has their fingerprints on this record?Â
I brought in David Tolomei who is a producer and engineer/mixer based in California. He mixed Lavender and I had a conversation with him early on in my demoing process of The Caretaker. I said, âI would love to bring you in a little bit earlier in the process this time and get your help in fleshing out this world and sharpening the sounds.âÂ
I wanted to go into a studio to replace some of my MIDI sounds and really build this thing out, so we went to the Clubhouse studio in Rhinebeck, New York and we recorded upright bass, violin, bass clarinet, and flute. Those were all parts that I had just played MIDI parts for, but we brought in players to get the real sounds on there.Â
We also recorded at the Synth Sanctuary in New York City, which is this incredible playhouse of the most beautiful analog synths, and we had a couple days there to flesh out ideas. We used an Oberheim, Juno, Prophet â a lot of the big guns that I donât have access to otherwise. We still have MIDI flute on the record and we still have a ton of soft synths but itâs built out in this way that I think made the album more three-dimensional.Â
Then, David mixed the album in California and I went out there and did a few days with him to figure out what sorts of effects we wanted in general. If you listen to my demos, this album basically sounds like a much shinier and better sounding version, which is to say that Iâm proud of where Iâve gotten as a producer.Â
I have been learning more about the term âproducerâ, in the way that there is creative producing and technical producing. I love playing with sounds. Iâm not super keen to spend my time understanding how all of that works technically. Me saying this is also recognition that Iâm no longer embarrassed to say that. I think, especially as a woman, I used to feel like I had to do everything, otherwise I wouldnât be taken seriously. Now, Iâm really proud of the work that I do writing music and producing. I do rough mixes just to get a sense of the automated details and how I generally want sounds to sit in the mix and Iâm totally fine with bringing someone else in to help me with the technical side. It was wonderful to find someone who complimented me and was able to co-produce it in that way with me.Â
Letâs talk about how youâre using your voice and getting the sounds for your vocal. What did the two of you do?
I borrowed Davidâs gear to record vocals. I record vocals on my own. I donât like people to be here. Iâve tried in the past to record in a studio and it just doesnât work for me mentally. Itâs a lot faster for me to be able to run the DAW while Iâm recording. I can just go, ânope, that didnât work for me. Letâs go back to that pointâ. Instead of, âCan you set me back two measures?â and then they are like, âokayâ... and then count in⊠you totally get out of your headspace. I just need to be in control. Be in the zone. I go to a pretty dark place when I record vocals. Itâs hard to listen to yourself over and over again so I donât want anyone here for that.Â
From David, I had the Neumann U87, which was really nice, and a Hilo interface. And this is the thing, I donât even know all of the gear and this is where traditionally I would be, âIâm so embarrassed, I donât even know what gear I useâ. Now Iâm like, âItâs fine. I still engineered my own vocalsâ.Â
My voice is my primary instrument. Itâs the instrument I have the most control over and I can coax a lot of sounds out of it. Itâs the first instrument I go to if Iâm writing a song and I need a fuzzy pad and maybe I donât want to figure out what soft synth will work, or I donât want to go to my Korg Minilogue, which I use a lot. I record a bunch of vocals and effect them because itâs my most readily available tool.Â
On every song I have one or more tracks that are called âmutantsâ because there are always some weird processed vocals on every track. Whether thatâs pitch shifting or Grain Delay. I put that on a lot of stuff. That spray that happens, I think is so cool and I use that on vocals and synths. There are a lot of affected vocals on all of the songs because I think itâs an expressive instrument and itâs the one I feel most comfortable with.
Through all of your experimentation and evolution over previous records, what are the things that are definitively Half Waif? Do you have sonic signatures and tendencies you always come back to? Â
Itâs in the interplay between major and minor chords which is something that I have always done and probably will always do. Those are the progressions that I most love, that soar and dip through those tonalities. In general, I use more adventurous chord progressions which feel really tied to the emotion. Iâm not just throwing in weird chords to throw in weird chords. If the emotional impulse takes it there then I just follow it, and sometimes that leads to more unconventional chord progressions or movements between sections.Â
Traditionally, Iâve used a lot of layers and combinations of soft synths and electronics with acoustic and more organic textures. I think thatâs something Iâve always done and I will always continue to do. Iâm trying to refine that and be deliberate and careful about the sounds that I use. How much can you say with just a few sounds? Thatâs what Iâm working towards.
The Caretaker was released on 27th March. Keep up with Half Waif on Bandcamp, Instagram and Twitter.
Text and interview: Erin Barra