What a special eTown we have for you this week! From Nashville, comes veteran singer-songwriter, Darrell Scott, whose songs have literally traveled out of this world. And, from the Netherlands comes a newcomer to the Nashville song factory, Jana Mila. Both artists share their unique takes on classics as well as original songs. Also, Nick chats with Allison Neswood about her social justice work with the Native American Rights Fund.
Visit our YouTube channel to see artist interviews, live recordings, studio sessions, and more!
Be a part of the audience at our next recording: https://www.etown.org/etown-hall/all-events/
If you’d like to support eTown’s mission, please consider a donation: https://www.etown.org/get-involved/donate-orig/.
Darrell Scott
Acclaimed multi-instrumentalist, singer-songwriter, producer and Nashville Songwriter Hall of Fame nominee Darrell Scott released The New Modern Hymns on October 11, a reimagined and reissued version of his recently out-of-print, 2007 album, Modern Hymns. Recorded at George Massenburg’s room at Blackbird Studios in Nashville by Gary Paczosa, The New Modern Hymns is a covers record of the hero singer-songwriters of Scott’s early days, featuring songs by Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Cat Stevens, Gordon Lightfoot, John Hartford, Guy Clark, Hoyt Axton and many more. Guest vocalists Del McCoury, Allison Krauss, The Fisk Jubilee Singers, Tim O’Brien, Mary Gauthier, John Cowan, Odessa Settles, Jonelle Mosser and Kathy Chiavola all contribute to the album as well.
The New Modern Hymns is a recording I am very proud of for the great songs, the great singers and musicians who helped make it so,” Scott says of the project. “Where the sum is greater than the parts and the parts are acoustic music’s best.” Additionally, Darrell Scott recently launched his brand new monthly music series titled New Moon New Music, a discussion airing every new moon (28 days) that features the roots music icon presenting in-depth musical ideas, new music, recordings (studio & live) and much more. With decades of sessions and live solo/band performances, Scott has much to inform in his insights, experiences, and stories from a wealth of knowledge. New Moon New Music is Scott’s way of announcing new music (his and others’), old music and stories you may not know, and historical perspectives that may be buried, untold or nearly forgotten. The monthly online series is his way of sharing what he has seen, felt and heard, or as Scott only half jokingly says: “I have suffered for my art, now it’s your turn.”
A former ASCAP and NSAI Songwriter of the Year and four-time Grammy Award-nominee, Darrell Scott has garnered many accolades over this fruitful career, including these rich words from environmentalist, writer and musician Nathaniel Riverhorse Nakadate, who wrote, “Darrell Scott mines and cultivates the everyday moment, taking the rote, menial, mundane, and allowing it to be surreal, ever poignant, and candidly honest.”
The New Modern Hymns comes on the heels of Old Cane Back Rocker, Darrell Scott’s 2023 release and first studio offering of original music since 2016’s Couchville Sessions. A showcase crafted by The Darrell Scott String Band that features originals and fully reformed covers (“Southern Cross,” “Banjo In The Holler”), the album pays homage to Scott’s cherished
Kentucky upbringing along with showcasing the immense working relationship he maintains with the talented musicians who graced these songs. “I am proud of this band, this recording and these stories of real people in this unreal time,” Scott says. “Love and hope and goodness and simplicity still exists, folks. We are still here.”
Jana Mila
When the Amsterdam singer-songwriter Jana Mila (pronounced Yah-nuh MEE-lah) began writing a song called “Chameleon,” she thought she was writing about someone else—a friend who seemed to be changing her colors to please other people. “But the more I lived with the song, the more I felt like I was writing about myself,” she admits. “Doesn’t everybody try to reflect other people? Don’t I change my own colors in order to be accepted? Especially when you’re young, you can lose yourself in other people if you don’t know who you are.”
That is the central idea behind her debut album, also titled Chameleon, which introduces Mila as an artist deeply committed to self-reckoning and self-possession. Writing songs is her means of finding and sustaining her identity. “The album is a conversation with myself, a way of getting to know myself better. There are little fears woven into every lyric, but there’s also advice to myself. I’m writing to find a part of myself that has some wisdom.”
Musically, Mila is the best kind of chameleon. The album draws from a wild array of sources, entertaining new ideas on every song: dusty Laurel Canyon folk on “It’s True,” catchy Nashville country on “Let Me In,” driving ‘70s rock on “I Wasn’t Gonna.” She puts her stamp on every note, turning those fears into an album of remarkable confidence, eloquence, and power. Chameleon is a self-portrait rendered in vibrant detail.
Mila comes by her eclecticism honestly. She grew up in a household devoted to playing and teaching all kinds of music: her mother sings Brazilian music, her father plays saxophone in big bands, and her brother studies Indian music. “It’s a lot of different styles in one family,” she says with a laugh, but notes that she initially rebelled and pursued a more literary form of expression. She wanted to be a novelist. “I loved reading and I wrote a lot of stories. I had all these ideas for books I wanted to write, but I was never patient enough to pursue them beyond just writing them down in my notebook.”
Even as she taught herself a few basic chords on guitar and even as she switched from prose to verse, Mila never abandoned that interest in storytelling. “Writing a verse felt like writing a chapter in a book. It felt like a safe little space for me. I felt free, because I never had in my mind that I was making music or writing songs for an audience or that I was pursuing a career. That would have been far too scary for me.”
When she was 17, she entered a local contest for young songwriters, where she debuted a new song called “Rosie.” At the time she never could have dreamed it would hit as hard as it did—or that it would anchor her debut album. Ostensibly it’s the story of a girl who goes missing and the family she leaves behind, but it reveals layers as it proceeds, becoming a remarkably nuanced and generous examination of loneliness and grief. Then as now, she performed it solo, just her voice and her guitar, with nothing else to cut that stark sense of loss and confusion. “When I first played it, I noticed a lot of people were getting emotional. They would ask me who Rosie was, but I didn’t base her on anyone in particular and I certainly couldn’t tell people I was having my own experiences with loneliness. I wasn’t ready to recognize that I was writing about myself. I wasn’t ready to make myself vulnerable. But it was the start of this very introspective journey.”
As she played more shows around Holland, Mila caught the attention of Dutch country superstar Ilse DeLange, who took her under her wings and arranged a songwriting trip to Nashville in June 2022. They spent two weeks hanging out and swapping ideas while making new friends, including veteran producer/songwriter/musician Todd Lombardo (who has worked with Kacey Musgraves, Morgan Wallen, Kelsea Ballerini, and more). “I already had some themes and stories in mind, and they were all very considerate of the ideas that I brought with me and the way I wrote. It was like a group therapy session. You can find out things about yourself just by talking with people and working with them. You have to be very open to new ideas, but you also have to be confident enough to protect your ideas and tell the stories you want to tell.”
One of the songs that took shape during those sessions was “In Between,” which features Mila’s wrenching vocals and anguished lyrics about not growing numb in response to pain and alienation. “When I wrote it, I never would have thought it would turn out so dramatic. But I immediately felt a connection with Todd as a person, and he picked up on the feeling for this song and his arrangement and production helped me turn it into something bigger. It sounds heavy because the story is heavy. And if it fits the story, why should I hold back?”
Just a few months later, she was back in Nashville recording Chameleon with Lombardo at his home studio. Together they devised arrangements and recorded quickly, the better to capture the ideas at their most volatile. A few days into the sessions, however, Mila caught Covid and had to quarantine away from the crew. “I was in bed with my headphones on, listening in on the sessions. It was weird, because it made me feel even freer to say whatever I wanted. I was just there alone in my room and typing into WhatsApp. Yeah, that sounds good, or You should do a little more of this or that.”
Now that she is taking these songs to even larger audiences, Mila has realized how much songwriting has changed her as a person and how it has made her feel more at home in the world. “Sometimes when I sing those songs I wrote years ago, I feel like an older sister talking to my younger self. Oh, did you really think that back then? Did you really have to be so dramatic? But songs are very organic things. They’re not static. Every time I play a song or even talk about a song, my perspective on it changes, and therefore the song changes. There are infinite ways to hear it and interpret it. I used to be so scared to ask questions about myself, but now I have more courage and I want to have people understand me through my songs.”
Allison Neswood
Allison Neswood is an experienced advocate for social justice and equitable policy. At NARF, Allison is a member of the voting rights practice group, which engages in nationwide litigation, advocates for Native American voting rights legislation, supports civic engagement, and assists tribes in advocating for greater voter access for their communities.In her role, Allison was the lead attorney in successful federal litigation challenging an Arizona state law that would have disproportionately denied Native Americans the right to vote. She also focuses on the enforcement of Native voters’ language access under section 203 of the Voting Rights Act.
Allison believes that we as a nation have made policy choices that continue to negatively impact the health and well-being of Native communities for generations. Her work is dedicated to changing that reality.
Prior to joining the NARF team, Allison established herself as an expert in the field of health policy and healthcare justice. She led the passage of several pieces of legislation to improve equity in health care and was recognized with the Health Equity Advocate of the Year Award (Colorado Cross Disability Center), the Consumer Champion Award (Colorado Consumer Health Initiative), and Consumer Health Advocate Award (FamiliesUSA).