Maggie Rogers went from an NYU master class to the public eye in 2016, when Pharrell Williams heard her song “Alaska” and the reaction caught fire online. The viral moment did more than make her a name to watch. It secured her a major record deal.
For Rogers, the leap was grounded in years of study and a sound that blended folk, pop and electronic elements. She grew up on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, started harp at age seven and had the support of her parents, Ted and Betsy, before attending New York University’s Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music, where she studied music engineering and production. She later pursued a master’s degree in Religion and Public Life at Harvard University.
That background helps explain why her work has connected so widely. Her emotionally charged lyrics and ethereal vocals built a dedicated global fanbase, and the path to that audience began long before the viral clip. Rogers also had a long-term private relationship with Holden Jaffe of Del Water Gap for about five years, a connection that began in college and included early musical collaborations.
The contrast is striking: the internet discovered her through one brief exchange, but the career that followed was built through training, discipline and a style that never fit neatly into one genre. The viral video made Maggie Rogers famous. It did not make her an accident.



