Imogen Heap Praises Taylor Swift’s ‘Extremely Efficient’ Recording Process

There’s nothing messy about Taylor Swift‘s recording process, according to the superstar’s “Clean” collaborator, Imogen Heap.

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In an interview with People published Monday (April 28), the producer opened up about the day more than a decade ago that Swift visited her home studio to hammer out one of the most beloved tracks on 1989, with Heap revealing that the pop star was “extremely efficient” the entire way through. “She turned up looking immaculate, and we didn’t really know what we were going to do,” Heap explained.

“She had an idea on her phone, she played it to me, and I was like, ‘That’s good. Should we go and record it?'” the “Hide and Seek” songwriter continued. “We went downstairs, we had our cup of tea by the fire, and she wrote the next verse. I started to make music around us. And then by the time she left, which was, like, just after dinner, we had managed to write the song, produce the song, record the song, chat, meet, have tea, sit by the fire, eat lunch, eat dinner, do an entire record all by ourselves.”

Heap specificially praised Swift for having a clear artistic vision for herself from the outset of her career. “She is extremely efficient. I’ve never done that from start to finish with anyone,” she explained. “And I felt very excited. I really appreciated her. There was one moment when I was trying out something a bit different for the middle section, and I was like, ‘What about these chords?’ … She was like, ‘You know what? I think we’re going to lose them here, so let’s just do this.’ I’m like, ‘Okay, that’s fine.’ What I learned, I suppose, [is] just she’s very good in the studio, and she knows what works.”

The interview comes more than 10 years after “Clean” arrived in 2014 on Swift’s critically acclaimed fifth studio album 1989, which spent 11 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. Shortly after the album dropped, Heap gushed in a blogpost that her studio session with the 14-time Grammy winner was a “special one” and clarified, “I’ve also been reading the odd report or tweet here and there that the reason the lyrics to ‘Clean’ are so good is because I wrote the song with her but FOR SURE they are all hers she deserves all the credit!”

In 2023, when Swift re-released 1989 as part of her ongoing Taylor’s Version re-recording project, she once again tapped Heap to produce the updated “Clean.” “This is Taylor playing a bada– card to stay in control of her work in a commercial music industry that largely works against musicians,” Heap wrote on Instagram after the reissue’s release. “Thank you Taylor for inviting me into your world!”

Hannah Dailey

Billboard