Jillette Johnson: The Best of What’s Next
A ghostly connection in the woods was the catalyst for the Nashville singer's new album.
Photo by Anna Webber
Jillette Johnson is already looking ahead. Her sophomore album, All I Ever See In You Is Me is scheduled to come out on July 28 via Rounder Records, but as she sits in the Paste office on a particularly sweaty June day in New York City, the classically-trained pianist and singer/songwriter talks about the next project she wants to record. But to do that, she has to look back.
Last October, Johnson had just moved from Los Angeles to Nashville. A native of the Bay Area who spent her formative years growing up in Westchester, N.Y. (just outside of NYC), Johnson was overwhelmed with the culture shock of The South. She was struggling to adjust to everything from the size of her new city, its oppressive heat, its dating expectations and more, so she fled to Maine for a work retreat.
“I found this cabin in Acadia National Park and it was peak leaf coloring season, right before everything dropped. And this little cabin had this beautiful Bechstein piano, which was the whole reason why I went there,” she begins.
She doesn’t fidget with her turquoise rings—three on one hand and two on the other, some white and some blue—while she talks. She doesn’t spin in the office chair or pluck its bungee cords like strings. Johnson speaks quickly, but boldly and unflinchingly, like she’s narrating a personal audiobook.
“I had this surreal experience where I wrote 13 songs in five days and I went hiking every day and it was just insane! All the songs really fit together. They sound like Maine. They sound like they’re married to each other. They’re not perfect, at all. They’re just sort of moments in time. And then there are some moments that I’m really really proud of and then there are some that if they weren’t all together, I probably would not put that anywhere, but it makes sense that it’s there,” she says.
That’s impressive, even for someone as prolific as Johnson (she claims to have written 70 contenders for the 11-track All I Ever See In You Is Me.) The trope of retreating to the woods to write a record has of course, been romanticized in the past: The Band recorded Music From Big Pink away from much of society and Bon Iver supposedly spent a winter in a snowy cabin to write For Emma Forever Ago. But it worked for Johnson too, and she left with enough songs for an entire album’s worth of material. The tracks represented an emotional outpouring and challenges fulfilled, all united by her mastery of piano-based pop songs, tinged with country inflections. Leaving Maine with tunes in hand and mind, she was ready to resume her day-to-day routines and finalize the roll-out for All I Ever See In You Is Me.
But when Johnson returned to Nashville, she learned that her record label Wind-up Records was folding. She lost her manager, would have to find a new team and label, and delay releasing the album. After connecting with Rounder Records though, she began to reconsider recording those songs in that cabin, on that piano, in Maine.
“As soon as she said that, all the hair on my arms stood up.”
And here’s where the story gets interesting.
“The post wasn’t on Airbnb anymore,” Johnson reveals. “The post was gone. And the woman who rented the cabin to me responded to me and was like, ‘I want to talk to you on the phone and tell you the story about this cottage. Unfortunately, it sold.’