Dora Jar Is Floating Through a Whirlwind

Photo by Erica Snyder

How does it feel to be back in London?
Oh man, I love London. It feels like a full circle every time I come back because it’s the first place I ever recorded in a studio. I learned a lot in the first year that I lived here; how to become the captain of my own ship. Right out of high school you’re just following all of these things you’re told to do, and I’d dropped out of music school. When I came to London I was in this in-between phase of my life where I wasn’t making money doing music.

My Dad was like, “what are you doing?” but I knew that I had to be here. And I fell in love with someone. I left to go back to America and really focus on the music, and now every time I’m back it’s like being home again. It’s like a home away from home and I think I’m going to move back at some point.

How does London and its culture compare to other places that you’ve lived in, for instance New York and LA?
It just feels totally different actually, it’s hard to compare. I don’t like LA. I like working there but if I have a day off in LA I am sad. When I lived in New York I always babysat all of the time and that was my focus, and then I would play music in my stairwell and run around all full of electricity. I’d just feel so energetic there and like you’re just a little cog in the machine.

But London is a nice mix. When I land in LA, suddenly I feel like I’m having this big identity crisis. But then I realize that everybody who lives there is. London is just more chill. Also I feel like the London culture is just a little bit more at peace with the negativity of life naturally, which is kind of a relief because you don’t have to hide. You can complain and not be fake positive.

Are you excited for the show tomorrow? 
I keep having to remind myself! Because when you’re in a mode of rehearsal, you’re just so in that headspace. I just feel like wherever I am I’m totally absorbed, and tomorrow I’m going to be shitting my pants.

My first show ever was in September, and people were singing [my songs] and I couldn’t believe it was happening. It’s just crazy. It is terrifying, but that’s why I have to remind myself it’s literally for all of us in a room together. I’m not trying to impress anyone. I’m just giving an offering and they’re giving me an offering, and it’s just this exchange of some mysterious beauty.

Can you remember the first record, or artist, that you really fell in love with and why they resonated?
Yeah, it’s a mix of things. Foo Fighters were the first band that I ever fell in love with. I got the chance to see them live at a benefit concert that was to raise money for my sister’s school for kids with cerebral palsy. She was in a wheelchair and couldn’t walk or talk her whole life. And we both were just obsessed with the Foo Fighters and Dave Grohl in particular. We were in love. When I learned guitar I would just YouTube tutorial Foo Fighters songs and then make up my own songs over the chords that I would learn. Because I would never have the patience to learn someone else’s song, I always wanted to get my own thing out. It felt more personal and also it felt like Dave was teaching me how to play guitar so that was a big one.

Also Outkast with ATLiens! That changed my life. I was a bit cynical when I was young; I was like why is everyone singing love songs all the time? And then Outkast was talking about things that I didn’t understand but using words that were like, “cooler than a polar bear’s toenails, oh hell.” That opened my mind to the possibilities of what words could be and how fun it could be to do poetry.

Can you remember the first song you made?
I’ve always been singing. I remember actually taking my mum’s tape recorder and recording a jingle. I was really young, 5 or 6, and I remember thinking, “This is going to be a jingle for Raisin Brand, the cereal.” 

Was there a moment further down the line where you felt that making music became a more serious possibility?
This year. I was always just frustrated, wondering how is this ever going to happen, what is the industry, who are these people that control these things? And then I realized that it’s not really like that, it’s just human connection and people with passion just intertwining. Meeting my managers really changed the game because I’d had this belief that no one wanted to help me and I was like I can’t do this by myself. All I do is write songs and I don’t know what else to do. 

I know there’s a whole thing where they say that all pop stars are high on the narcissism scale because you know it’s all ego and personality. And I’ve always felt this funny thing about attention. I didn’t want to ask for attention but then I realized that it was a part of myself that I had to accept. Really what wanting attention is is wanting connection, and so finding a way to be at peace with that takes a minute. 

Photo by Neema Sadeghi

I read that you went to that you went to a religious school as well as a boarding school?
Yes I went to an Episcopal school. Every day we went to church for 45 minutes, which was actually amazing. Think about it; you get to school and rather than go straight into have you done your homework or not, you’d get to go to chapel and sing. It’s dark and cozy and smells like incense, the organ is playing. That was always so dramatic and filled me with this otherworldly sense. So I don’t know, I wouldn’t consider myself a Christian now but I respect the stories. I find that there are many truths in the world and we just have to respect each other. But the school was tiny, there were 19 kids in my grade for 10 years.

Would you consider yourself a spiritual person?
Yes. I had a breakthrough with meditation when I was 18 where I realized that if I close my eyes and breathe, my heart stops racing and I feel like I’m more capable of feeling love for myself and other people. I also really believe in being honest with yourself because for a long time I wasn’t. In high school I had a lot of trauma that I hadn’t dealt with and because I had all of that inner trauma to work through I couldn’t write, I couldn’t be real. Maybe I was fun to be around and I had a good time, but that didn’t have any lasting power. So, through meditation.

I didn’t believe in myself for the longest time and it wasn’t that I knew that I didn’t believe in myself but it was like this law of honesty. If you’re not accepting that you’re hurting, you’re lying to yourself. And how can you believe in yourself when you’re not believing in what you’re feeling and owning it. I think it’s what this past EP came from too—being comfortable with the pain, comfortably in pain. Yeah, it has to go there.

I watched this interview where you mentioned seeing life as a performance for angels. I’ve kept thinking about it since. Can you share more about that idea?
Cool, I love that! I think it came from a way I coped with being lonely in my past, in childhood sometimes. At first it started kind of spooky, like are there ghosts around me? Am I being watched? But then I was like wait, I don’t feel like there’s anything menacing watching me, I actually feel like there’s something encouraging… Maybe it’s just space. But then I think with meditation I’ve come to realize there’s just so much mystery and magic works when you believe in it and doesn’t work when you don’t believe in it.

So, if I believe in something that makes me feel comforted, like if I’m alone in my house singing and I know that I’m not just singing for myself, that feels good. And my sister is alive all around me all of the time and I know that she’s laughing at things. Maybe I’ll mess up and I’ll get frustrated and she’ll chuckle, and I know that’s she’s like I see through your bullshit and that’s such a grounding relief for me. So yeah, it always goes back to that and I’m glad that you think about it too. It is motivating! And I always do better work when someone’s watching me so I might as well believe that I am witnessed.

There’s been a frenzy around your music on the label-side, and I’m curious what it’s been like to navigate the music industry as an independent artist?
I think the cute thing about it is you realize the industry is just all of these people that love music, and that’s really sweet. You also hear horror stories about the ones that give you bad deals. With any profession there’s going to be scumbags, but I don’t want to focus on that. But also there are new demands, like now it’s not just the music. Now it’s like photos, promotion, interviews…

Last night was a funny moment. I got this great thing where I had to say “thank you BBC for playing my song” and I had to send in a voice note and video so they could play it on the radio and it took me like half an hour to say it. [Laughs] At first I was in the craziest voice and it was never going to work. I just kept going back to when I was in middle school listening to the radio and it was like, “Hey I’m Lady Gaga.” And that’s what I mean about the ego thing—I find it so hard to take myself seriously. It just makes me overthink shit, I’m like okay whatever I’ve just got to say it and sound stupid.

You mentioned the new demands and I feel like a lot is expected of artist in 2022. What has your experience been like?
It is. I used to post things on Instagram just because I felt like it. If you go way back on my Instagram, you’ll see. I’m very pun oriented. One time I put an onion on my ring and it was like, onion ring. Dad jokes forever. I am a dad at heart. But now I have to post because I have a show coming up and I need to remind people. It’s this practical thing, it’s a tool now, which is cool and I like how it’s useful but I also want to maintain the realness and… Whatever it is.

Did you ever imagine you’d be in this position?
I always knew I wanted to be a singer. I even wrote in my journal when I was seven: I want to be a famous singer, but my Mom says fame isn’t good. So that was an idea that I had in my head, that I don’t need to be famous as long as I’m a singer. And then I realized that was my deep want for attention when I was young.

There are a lot of layers to your sound and various influences which come through. How would you describe it?
My sound is like a house with a lot of different rooms in it which are decorated totally differently. One room is wood, one room is metal, one room is glass, one is marble. It’s everything I love in a collage, and I find it really hard to define. I just feel like it’s all truly my imagination having fun. 

Actually I was really energized by this one critique of me before I had released anything. This guy who’s a big manager came to listen to some of the songs I had and he said, “Well you’re still trying to find your sound.” And I was like, “Huh, b*tch?!” I have my sound and you don’t get it so. I kind of went even further into the nothing is the same after that.

My sound is like a house with a lot of different rooms in it which are decorated totally differently. One room is wood, one room is metal, one room is glass, one is marble.

Going into the new EP comfortably in pain, what was the core idea that you wanted to get across?
I think that idea of pain and accepting it and finding comfort that we’re all in our own different kinds of pain. We don’t always have to try to relate to each other through how we’re similar, but be interested in the differences in what causes our pain and connective vulnerability.

Your writing style is very vivid. Where do you find inspiration? 
Disney films are major. Me and my sister would watch one film for a month straight, over and over again. So I’ve downloaded all of the Disney movies and so many strange things happen in those, like Pinocchio is a puppet who comes to life who gets eaten by a whale who builds a fire inside of the whale which is impossible but they make it happen to make the whale sneeze and come out. And then there’s the cricket who’s his conscience. So crazy. Anyway I find a lot of inspiration from that and literally just melody itself and how much emotion I feel from listening to beautiful melodies. I’ll work on a melody for like an hour in a hallway—six notes—and I’ll rearrange them as many times as I can just so that it feels perfect. And usually it’s the simplest thing that’s the most perfect so that’s the lesson I’m learning.

Do you have a dream in particular that’s always stuck with you? 
Oh so many, so many. But one in the past year really stuck with me. It was a koi fish and it was hugging me really tight. And I was looking down and thinking, wait this fish is going to stop breathing because it’s not in the water, and so I was worried and trying to pry it off so it could live. But then I saw the boots of this fisherman wading in the water, and he said, ‘don’t worry, they like to hold on’. And then in the moment he said that I felt so much love for the fish, I was like what is going on. And I woke up so happy and then I made “Polly” that day. So, some nice blessings.

What are you excited for next?
I’m excited to make the lyric booklet and I really want to spend time on making it personal and sending it to the people who really want it. Excited for more shows and getting more theatrical with them. I love the circus, like Cirque Du Soleil, and I want to make my shows feel like you’re in a Leonora Carrington painting. She’s very dream come to life type artist.

Do you have ideas for how you’d bring that into your live shows?
For example in the ”Multiply” video I was really inspired by a dance performance where there’s a woman with rope tied around her waist and she’s attached to a boulder and she’s continuously running away from it and getting stuck. And so I used that concept in the “Multiply” video where I tied myself to a tree and kind of did that. I’ll tie myself to something during a show, and I want to hang upside down in a trapeze and play guitar. I don’t want to just walk around, I want to do things with height.

I’m an air sign, I’m double Libra with a bunch of air, and I have no water in my chart which is really weird. I think it’s my overcompensation, I need aquatic themes and I think about the ocean a lot but I’m not made of it I guess. I want to just float all of the time. 

Photo by Neema Sadeghi

Here Are the 2022 Grammy Award Winners

Image via Getty/VALERIE MACON/AFP
  • Album of the Year

  • Record of the Year

  • Song of the Year

  • Best New Artist

  • Best Rap Album

  • Best Rap Song

  • Best Rap Performance

  • Best Melodic Rap Performance

  • Best Pop Vocal Album

  • Best Pop Solo Performance

  • Best Pop Duo/Group Performance

  • Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album

  • Best R&B Album

  • Best R&B Performance

  • Best R&B Song

  • Best Progressive R&B Album

  • Best Traditional R&B Performance

  • Best Música Urbana Album

  • Best Latin Pop Album

  • Best Tropical Latin Album

  • Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album

  • Best Music Video

  • Best Music Film

  • Best Dance/Electronic Album

  • Best Dance/Electronic Recording

  • Best Alternative Music Album

  • Best Rock Album

  • Best Rock Song

  • Best Rock Performance

  • Best Metal Performance

  • Best Country Album

  • Best Country Song

  • Best Country Solo Performance

  • Best Country Duo/Group Performance

  • Producer of The Year, Non-Classical

  • Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical

  • Best Global Music Album

  • Best Global Music Performance

  • Best Spoken Word Album

  • Best Comedy Album

  • Best New Age Album

  • Best Jazz Vocal Album

  • Best Improvised Jazz Solo

  • Best Jazz Instrumental Album

  • Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album

  • Best Latin Jazz Album

  • Best Contemporary Instrumental Album

  • Best Gospel Album

  • Best Gospel Performance/Song

  • Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song

  • Best Contemporary Christian Music Album

  • Best Roots Gospel Album

  • Best American Roots Performance

  • Best American Roots Song

  • Best Americana Album

  • Best Bluegrass Album

  • Best Traditional Blues Album

  • Best Contemporary Blues Album

  • Best Folk Album

  • Best Regional Roots Music Album

  • Best Reggae Album

  • Best Regional Mexican Music Album (Including Tejano)

  • Best Children’s Album

  • Best Musical Theater Album

  • Best Compilation Soundtrack For Visual Media

  • Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media

  • Best Song Written For Visual Media

  • Best Instrumental Composition

  • Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella

  • Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals

  • Best Recording Package

  • Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package

  • Best Album Notes

  • Best Historical Album

  • Best Remixed Recording

  • Best Immersive Audio Album

  • Best Engineered Album, Classical

  • Producer of the Year, Classical

  • Best Orchestral Performance

  • Best Opera Recording

  • Best Choral Performance

  • Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance

  • Best Classical Instrumental Solo

  • Best Classical Solo Vocal Album

  • Best Classical Compendium

  • Best Contemporary Classical Composition

The Singular Voice and Universal Sound of Nilüfer Yanya

Photo by Molly Daniel

Across your ever-evolving discography, guitar has always remained at the core. When did you first pick up a guitar and what keeps pulling you back to the instrument?
I started when I was 12 and that was how I began writing music. Playing guitar is my real personal connection with music and how I make songs. I don’t think that’s ever going to change.

Is there a specific artist or album that inspired you to pick up the guitar?
Nothing specific, just pop rock and pop punk. Nothing I would listen to now, but I really liked it when I was younger.

What are you listening to now?
I’ve been listening to Big Thief’s new album a lot, Kate Tempest’s new stuff, and Dorothy Ashby—a harpist from the ‘60s.

If you could pick any instrument to bring on tour with you, what would that be? 
Well, there’s a couple… I’d bring someone to play the acoustic because it would be sick to add another guitarist to the band. Or someone to play saz because it has a little feature on my record and it would be good to do that properly. I’d like to find a person who can play both instruments. Maybe some strings and more vocalists. That would be cool.

I love how you involve family in your creative process, from recording at your uncle’s studio to working with your sister on music videos. What draws you towards working with your family?
It feels like a shame not to work with them when I can. They’re really good at what they do so why wouldn’t I ask them to help? Family is quite a precious thing and it doesn’t last forever—nothing does. Why not work together when you can?

How is working with your family different from other collaborators? 
It’s the things you don’t have to say, the things you don’t have to talk about, and the things that just develop naturally.

I read that you can’t help but to feel like co-writing is less admirable than sitting down to write a song by yourself. Where do you think this idea comes from? Is it something you’ve learned to embrace or something you’re trying to shake?
When I started out, I was really proud of the fact that I was writing songs by myself. You kind of use it as a selling point. People are like, “oh, you write your own songs?” They seem more impressed when you’re a solo writer. In my head, I started to think that if I was just a singer, I wouldn’t be able to do what I was doing. 

For me, the writing is even more important than the fact that my name’s attached to it. That’s where my ego is. Admitting that sometimes I need to share that with other people can be quite difficult. I wish I could do this all myself, but I can’t. I love the idea of being totally absorbed in something and focusing on making the exact thing that’s in your head. 

I think co-writing is just as special as writing by yourself, it’s just different. I wasn’t seeing it the right way before because I hadn’t written with people that I was close to. Now that I have, I see it as a really special thing, it’s just not something that can happen all the time.

I wish I could do this all myself, but I can’t. I love the idea of being totally absorbed in something and focusing on making the exact thing that’s in your head.

Are there any songs on PAINLESS that wouldn’t have come together without a co-writer or collaborator? 
I worked with my friend Will Archer on like seven songs, so most of the record wouldn’t have happened without collaboration. I think that’s the main reason why this album is different.

You have some great remixes across your discography. If you could pick any artist to remix a song off PAINLESS, who would it be? 
Frank Ocean on “Chase Me” or “Trouble.”

I’d love to hear that.
Manifest. 

Photo by Molly Daniel

Can you tell me what the album name PAINLESS means to you?
It’s talking about the lack of feeling, a kind of numbness. Sometimes that can be good and sometimes that can be bad. It especially doesn’t feel great the longer it goes on. But even within not feeling, you’re already feeling so many things. There’s a whole kaleidoscope of non-feelings. Whenever you say painless, you’re talking about pain at the same time. 

I notice a lot of intense physical imagery in your lyrics—blood and bones and bruises. Was that intentional or did it just come out naturally as your album took shape?
I think it just came out—the desire to get out of your own head and to move to the more physical things like nature and your body. I think the physical aspect is quite important.

Pink angel wings have become a recurring image across your visualizers, music videos and live performances. What draws you to them?
They symbolize the free-spirited, lighthearted side of the record. It’s the fantasy, the escapism, and the beauty amongst rough things. The wings were on the artwork that I made so I asked my friends Joviale and Jenna to make them. Joviale makes music too so check it out—you’ll like it.

The sonics of PAINLESS are entrancing. I hear a lot of double tracked vocals and layered instruments like the saz in “L/R.” What makes you gravitate toward that wide, layered sound?
It’s for functional reasons with the vocals. I’m singing softly for most of this record, but I don’t have a very big voice so I layer my vocals to get that strong effect. I’ve double tracked vocals forever—that layering always sounds better. It’s a rich, chorused sound and you feel like you can like sit in it.

I’ve heard you express frustration about people labeling your music as R&B. What does it feel like to be mislabeled as an artist? 
More than anything, it takes away from other people’s work who are actually in that genre. I think a lot of people probably get mislabeled because genres are opinion-based. But my music’s just not R&B. [Laughs]

A lot of younger listeners grew up in a world where genres blend together and new genre names are made up every few months. What do you think that means for terms like rock and R&B?
I don’t think they’re going anywhere because they’re already so solidified. But I think it’s useful to have new genre names because it opens your mind to what’s possible.

Your debut album Miss Universe was tied together through a series of skits. On the other hand, PAINLESS doesn’t have any skits, finding cohesion though its sonics and lyricism. Was this something that you set out to do when you started the project?
I knew I wanted to let the music speak for itself, but I didn’t plan to do it this way. At the time, I second guessed if it was finished because it didn’t have all these additional touches. The other day, I read that “nothing is finished until you show it to someone.” Nothing is finished until someone else hears it or until someone else reads it—art is cooperative. It’s not just made for you, it’s made for other people as well, so that’s probably why it feels unfinished sometimes.

How do you know when a project is finished and it’s time to share with somebody else?
It’s just when you feel like you can’t make it any better. Or you start to make it better and it just gets worse. I don’t think anything’s ever really finished, finished. The question is, how much time do you want to spend on it? [Laughs] When do you want to move on to do something else?

Do you see the pursuit of perfection as a detriment to your creativity?
Yeah. I don’t think it’s very helpful to me. I was being quite harsh on myself because none of my music sounded the way I imagined, but that doesn’t really matter. I mean, it matters in terms of my own personal goals, but as long as I’m still making music, that’s the ultimate goal.

These days, it’s almost essential for artists to overshare and create this world around themselves to keep the attention of fans. Is that draining? Do you enjoy things like social media, photo shoots, interviews or would you rather just focus on music?
It’s a good time when you have interviews and it’s a good time when you are promoting your work on socials—those are good things to be doing. But when it takes up more time than the music, that can be frustrating. I’m a bit more minimalist when it comes to being on socials and all that. I don’t think it’s that healthy for anybody.

I read that you’ve avoided some sketchy music industry situations throughout your come-up. What advice do you have for young artists learning to navigate the industry?
Make friends with people who work in the same field as you. Find people you can trust—where you’re not pretending or having to change yourself. That’s the most valuable thing because you can always go to them for a second opinion on things. And it’s such a cliche, but do your best to stay honest with yourself. I think it’s really hard though. It’s a really hard thing to know when something’s not right.

Who are some of those people you can trust?
My band and my family.

We’re seeing a lot of young artists from the UK break in America, which I’ve heard is a difficult process. How has that experience been for you? 
I’m still working on it. It’s daunting because America is so big. It’s a “big market” as people say. There’s so many American artists that people in the UK have never heard of that have their whole career in the US. It’s kind of harder to do that in the UK because there’s less people to listen to your music.

When you’re touring, do you notice a difference between audiences in the UK and the States?
I don’t notice a big difference between countries, but I do notice a difference between cities. In a bigger city, you get the sense that people are a bit more critical, but in a good way because they’re more used to the whole experience of seeing a show. I get the sense that people in smaller cities are a bit more excited.

We saw you perform years ago and you covered “Hey” by Pixies. Are you working on any new covers?
We’ve been doing a cover of “Rid Of Me” by PJ Harvey. It sounds very good. We’ll probably be doing that in the States as well.

Outside music, what are your plans when you get back from tour?
I have a lot of *sorting out my life* things to do. I’d like to live somewhere else. It’d be kinda cool to have a different life. I’m thinking about Istanbul. It’s a very affordable state to live in.
My dad’s from there so I have family in Istanbul. It’d be nice to live there for a bit and not feel so disconnected. I haven’t been in a while and I’ve never been for more than two weeks at a time, so I don’t really know the place.

Before we wrap up, can you tell me about Artists in Transit?
It’s a collaborative arts project that my sister and I started in 2016. We supply art workshops for people that might not otherwise get that experience. We started off working with refugee communities in Athens and did that until the pandemic hit. Since then, we’ve been working more in London. The project is a way of showing solidarity and connecting with people who we’re told not to connect with and not to try to understand.

What are the next steps for this project?
Just to keep going and find ways to keep it sustainable. The growth is that we keep going, not that we expand.

What can we expect from you throughout the rest of 2022?
This year’s going to be a lot of touring and playing festivals. I’m hoping to go to some places I haven’t been before.We’re looking at South America, which is cool.

Listen to Nilüfer Yanya’s new album ‘PAINLESS’ here.

Photo by Molly Daniel