Jonell Mosser has been in the music business long enough to know that timing can be everything, so it should come as no surprise that Little Black Dress, her newly released CD, is finding a wide audience now, all songs recorded during a performance by Mosser and John Hall in May 1991 at Bearsville Theater in Woodstock, New York.

The performance took place when Mosser was spending time with Hall, of the band Orleans, and his wife Johanna as they were teaching her how to write songs, Mosser says.
She says, βFor many years I considered myself more of an interpreter of songs because I had friends like John Prine and Townes Van Zandt and Guy Clark. . . . I thought I was wasting my time trying to write when these guys were writing. It was Johanna and John that convinced me otherwise.β
She explains that the Halls had written with Janis Joplin in the late sixties. βAt that point Johanna was a journalist and a literary writer but not a songwriter. John played all these songs for Janis in her apartment in 1968 or β69. John suggested that the first songs he was writing back then were βpretty puerile,β a little immature. But Janis was so taken with Johanna and how smart and wonderful she was. Theyβd been to lunch. She said, βYouβre a woman. Youβre a writer. Write me a song.β And thatβs how they wrote βHalf Moon.β
βJohanna related that story to me when we first met around 1986. The first song she and I wrote together with John was βDance of Lifeβ thatβs on this album. The first time we got together to talk, I walked into their living room and saw the New York Times spread around her where she was reading. Iβm a newspaper reader too. She had the Book Review open in front of her, and I saw a review of the book Dance of Life about the mating rituals of all kinds of critters. I went βOooh, That looks like a good book.β And so we wrote a song about it.β
A tape of the show that became Little Black Dress was rediscovered by Johanna. Mosser said, βJohannaβs the one who had the presence of mind not to just throw it in a machine and listen to it but wait until she could get it digitally recorded.β When listening to the recording, Jonell says, βI hear in my voice a quality, a newness that endears me to the person I was.β
The music from this CD is evidence of Mosserβs strength in collaboration. Describing the energy that comes from songwriting and performing with others who have a similar vision and a complementary set of skills, she said, βIt makes one exponentially better. If youβre on stage with somebody and youβre working in tandem, itβs just better than just about anything.
βMy heart breaks for people who feel the need to compete on stage rather than collaborate because theyβre missing so much. In writing tooβhaving Johannaβs beautiful mind and creative turn of phraseβshe made me feel like I could say something stupid and she could make it smart.β
She talked about the dynamics between her and John Hall, whom she described as a great singer and songwriterβand a great guitar player. βBeing on stage together when that creative things is goingβparticularly with John and meβit is just the joy of my life to play with friends.β
Playing well with othersβwith friendsβcould be a theme for Jonell Mosser. In 2018, she performed songs of the late Townes Van Zandt and Guy Clark with her good friend Maura OβConnell during what they called their βOld Friendsβ series, with the final performance at Nashvilleβs 3rdand Lindsley, a stage Mosser said was βbuilt for me.β She took the same stage again with a full range of performers, including her ex-husband John Cowan, for sold out performance called β1971: The Greatest Year in Music.β
Jonell Mosser can easily command a stage alone but seems at the top of her game in collaboration. Over the last several years, she and Tom Britt have evolved as a duo. Heβs known for his distinctive guitar playing, so when heβs on the road with Vince Gill, she has had other guitarists offer to sub for him.
She says, βI didnβt ask them to imitate Tom or not be themselves because they could hear how strong a guitarist he is.β
She also found that she and Britt could write songs together too. βI didnβt believe I could write songs with Tom at first, but then I evolved from writing with John and Johanna to writing with Tom in a completely different way.β
Mosser expected a different response to the songs she had co-written with the Halls when she first brought them back to Nashville, noting, βI was expecting everybody to go, βWow, Jonell! Arenβt they great!β β She realizes now that she didnβt get the kind of approval at the time because they werenβt like the songs being written then.
One of those songs, βSo Like Joy,β was a kind of catharsis after the death of her mother, the words coming out of her so quickly that Johanna Hall had to write them down:
Itβs good to remember and itβs good to forget,
but itβs best to let go of all the regret.
But when she took βSo Like Joy,β which she felt was very honest and simple, to a friend she considered smart about songs, he listened and asked, βYeah, but whatβs the payoff?β
She says that looking back she sees the same reaction to other peopleβs music as well. A friend she respected listened to Paul Simonβs Graceland when it first came out and didnβt get it. He asked, βWhatβs all this chaos?β
Mosser said, βHe wanted a nice slick Paul Simon record, and he gave us that marvelous Carnivale that is Gracelandβso you never know.β
βWhen youβre younger,β she admitted, βyou live and die by otherβs opinions. Now I certainly do not.β

In 2020, these songs are getting a second lifeβor a long-delayed first lifeβon Little Black Dress.The title came to her first, she says. Around 2010-2011, having come through a divorce, she says, βSeveral producer friendsβsuch as Buddy Miller and Gary Nicholson and John Hallβhad each produced one song for me, like a designer making one outfit for you. And I call it a βlittle black dressβββHereβs your version of that little black dressβ¦and hereβs your version. . . .
βI had told Johanna about that before, but then when we realized we had this tape and we had βOrdinary Splendorβ on there, I said I felt like I had opened the closet and pulled out the perfect black dress. So when I told her what I wanted to call the record, she said, βYou canβt call it that. Weβre going to call it Little Black Dress. Itβs better,β and she talked me into it.β
The songs on this new release may also represent the wardrobe range one might find in the closet. They all spotlight Mosser and Hallβs strength and style, with each song standing alone. βCircle,β the first release promoted from the CD, is particularly timely now not just for the way the lyrics speak to this time, but for Jonell Mosserβs extensive career, addressing the way life keeps circling around:
We live on a circle
All we live comes back again
Got no way of known when it will end.
We all share this circle
We all share a single cell
Dancing spirals parallel
Stories that we tell. . . .
Another track on the CD βI Like That in a Manβ is an upbeat song whose bluesy acoustic guitar licks belie the notion that the lyrics suggest an end to the blues as she sings:
Iβve been gone so long that my blues are indigo. . .
and heβll be waiting when this plane finally lands.
I like that in a man. . ..
The woman, taking a jet back to her man, sings about βhis quiet dignity,β noting:
His actions always speak much louder
than his words do to me.
He doesnβt have to say where he stands.
I like that in a man.
One of the lovely surprises on the album, βOrdinary Splendor,β could easily pass for an old classic torch song. Jonell said, βI have people say, βI love that old forties song,β and I say, βYou mean that song that I wrote?ββ
When putting the CD together, the three agreed that βOrdinary Splendorβ was easily the most pitchable song but they wanted a simple vocal and piano or guitar rendition, which Johanna was able to find.
Mosser says she and John had to work through their vision of that song. βWe had the verse going and then when we got to the bridge, he went into jazzland for a moment and I said, βOh no, John. There are rules about songs like this.ββ She said while she βdidnβt have the theory to explain it to him what [she] meant, [she] went over to the piano and showed him what she had in mind for melody and chord changes in the verse and hook. And he got it.β
Then she had to convince John that Johannaβs beautiful line fit: βYou catch my drift and throw it back to me. Itβs conversation poetry.β
Jonell says, βThat was one of the times I think I couldnβt say exactly what I was trying to do, but once I musically played it for him, he understood, and I think that brought a little more respect because I didnβtβ have the language. I did have the ability.β
Mosserβs Louisville, Kentucky, childhood certainly influenced the writing of songs like βOrdinary Splendor.β After she lost her father when she was three, her mother, whom she describes as βa very beautiful girl,β started dating again when Jonell was six. She explains, βYou could go out with my mother one time by yourself, but the next, time the kids went–my brother and me. That was the real test. Consequently, I got to have a lot of nice meals at supper clubs.β
She says that while her stepfather played music, though not professionally, βhe had a good tone, and he had a lot of musician friends, so Iβm one of those weird kids that remembered the words to things. I knew all the words to βEmbraceable Youβ and βAutumn in New Yorkβ and βSecret Love.ββ
When they went to dinner, she says, βif we had to wait for a table, weβd go in the lounge where lady with the toxic cloud of Chanel No. 5 was playing. And theyβd say, βLet the little girl sing!β and so Iβd sing βEmbraceable You,β and everybodyβd clap and then weβd go eat our dinner.β
She also credits her choral director Brench Broden with early inspirationβand with convincing her mother not to let her have her tonsils removed at thirteen when her voice was just developing. Under his direction, she learned to sing Bach cantatas and pieces by William Byrd and Benjamin Britt, and a collection of carols.
In high school, she landed a role in Godspel at Trinity, the local Catholic boysβ school, the only girl cast who wasnβt from Assumption or Our Lady of Perpetual Sorrows, the local Catholic girls schools. She worked to overcome stage fright and even organized a band for a while in high school. Mosser went on to study theater ar Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green.
Mosser came to Nashville around 1985 and was encouraged to βhave a persona,β which she says fell flat. Some people advised her βto be more aloof or youβll never be a rock singerβ or told her, βIf youβre going to do this kind of song, why donβt you go ahead and be a country singer?’ It never felt authentic to me.β
She said there were many female singers she admired βBonnie Raitt, Streisand, even Janis Joplin, to whom she has drawn comparisons–but few to emulate. She says she found was influenced more by male singers, including Otis Redding with his strength and ability, but total honest and lack of artifice.
She also mentioned Lowell George, who βcould have a really strong kicking rock chorus and then some weird, funky little fun melodic thing in the verse. I donβt know. He didnβt put limits on his music because of other peopleβs expectations and Otis didnβt either. And so for me, thatβs where I went.β

Over the years, sheβs found herself working both on stage and in the studio. Meanwhile, Americana Music has been coming of age, with a big enough tent to shelter a wide range of musical talent.
βI kind of thank God for Americana because thatβs honestly the only place I fit these days, and itβs been a gift. Americana didnβt exist when I was first in Nashville, so I was in demand as a session singer but I wasnβt being offered deals that I thought I could sign. β
In her first record, Around Townes, which brought her to the attention of producer Don Was, she sang the songs of the late Townes Van Zandt, and, she says, βI believe that brought me genuinely under the American umbrella.β
Now while facing the challenge of promoting a new release during the current pandemic, she misses βplaying with the guys.β She hasnβt been able to play as much with Tom Britt since his recent cancer treatment makes him vulnerable to Covid-19.
After this time of sheltering at home, she says she most looks forward to hugging again and going to a βgood bar with a really good glass of wine,” perhaps sharing a βbig boozy girlsβ lunchβ with Maura OβConnell. Sheβs also eager to see more of her two sons, the oldest a nurse at Vanderbilt Hospital.
Meanwhile, she is biding her time, listening to a great mix of musicβVan Morrison, Candi Staton, Joni Mitchellβand looking forward to being back on stage performing with friends and promoting Little Black Dress.
