Hayden Pedigo has always wandered the intersection of surrealism and sincerity, but I’ll Be Waving as You Drive Away feels like the moment he stops wandering and simply arrives. It’s a sparse, contemplative, and deeply human instrumental record — easily the most emotionally resonant of his so-called “Motor Trilogy,” and arguably the finest work of his career.
Across seven tracks (plus a haunting bonus piece), Pedigo abandons his ironic, internet-poisoned alter ego in favour of pure feeling. There are no vocal narratives here, but the stories are clearly etched in the reverb-heavy textures of “Smoked,” the shimmering layers of “Hermes,” and the mournful fiddle and nylon-string interplay of “Houndstooth.” Each track unfolds like a postcard from a place you’ve been but can’t quite name — maybe West Texas during golden hour, or maybe a dream you forgot upon waking.
What’s striking is how full and cinematic this record feels despite its minimalism. Pedigo’s fingerpicking remains nimble and lyrical, but he surrounds it with subtle ambience: synth swells, tape hiss, the occasional Mellotron sigh. It’s American Primitive reimagined not as a historical reenactment but as a living, breathing art form — unafraid to drift into ambient, psychedelic, or even chamber-folk territory.
The title track closes the album with unexpected brightness — a kind of graceful acceptance, the sound of someone waving not just to another person, but maybe to an older version of themselves. It’s simple, unguarded, and stunning.