Darrell Scott became one of the more successful
country songwriters of the late '90s and early 2000s, placing songs with the biggest names in
country music, including several major chart hits.
Garth Brooks,
the Dixie Chicks,
Tim McGraw,
Faith Hill, and many others recorded his work. At the same time, he worked consistently as a studio musician and released a series of his own solo albums.
The son of musician Wayne Scott, James Darrell Scott was born August 6, 1959, on a tobacco farm in London, KY, and moved as a child to East Gary, IN.
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He was playing professionally by his teens in Southern California, later living in Toronto and Boston. He attended Tufts University, where he studied poetry and literature. Finally, he relocated to Nashville to get into the
country music business. In the first half of the 1990s, he appeared on albums by John Lincoln Wright,
Catie Curtis, Hypnotic Clambake, Peter Keane, Duke Levine,
Suzy Bogguss, and
Randy Travis, singing and playing banjo, Dobro, guitar, bass, and pedal steel. In 1995 alone, he was on records by
Guy Clark, Kate Wallace,
John Berry, Marcus Hummon, Doug Stone, and
Martina McBride, and he began to get recordings for his songs. Hummon and
Scott co-wrote "Honky Tonk Mona Lisa," which appeared on Hummon's All in Good Time and on Doug Stone's Faith in Me, Faith in You (and was later covered by
Neal McCoy);
Scott and
Hal Ketchum's "An Ordinary Day" was sung by Maura O'Connell on Stories; and
Scott and
Tim O'Brien's "Daddy's on the Roof Again" was on
O'Brien's Rock in My Shoe.
Scott's sideman activities in 1996 included albums by
John Berry,
Suzy Bogguss, and
Twila Paris. He and Verlon Thompson co-wrote "Ol' Joe Clark," which appeared on
Sam Bush's album
Glamour & Grits.
Scott's most successful effort of the year was "No Way Out," a song he wrote with Marcus Hummon that
Suzy Bogguss recorded for a
country singles chart entry. (It was later covered by
Julie Roberts.)
Scott appeared on albums by David Beaudry, Bruce Carroll,
Chris Rice, Monk Wilson, Jason Sellers,
Guy Clark, Michael Peterson, and
Tim O'Brien in 1997. With
Clark, he co-wrote "Out in the Parking Lot," which was on
Clark's album Keepers (and later covered by Kyle Jennings and by
Brad Paisley), and with
O'Brien he co-wrote "When There's No One Around," which
O'Brien recorded on his album When No One's Around and which
Garth Brooks covered on his chart-topping, multi-platinum album
Sevens. Meanwhile,
Scott had been signed to Sugar Hill Records as a solo artist, and on April 22, 1997, Sugar Hill released his debut album,
Aloha from Nashville.
Scott's star clearly was in the ascendant by 1998, when he appeared on albums by
Olivia Newton-John,
Deana Carter,
Sam Bush, Jenny Simpson,
Suzy Bogguss, Jon Pousette-Dart, and Susan Werner, also earning a producer credit on Werner's Time Between Trains. "I'm Trying," a song he wrote with Tia Sillers, appeared on Kevin Sharp's Love Is. (It was later covered by
Lee Greenwood and by
Diamond Rio.) Pousette-Dart used three
Scott songs on his album Ready to Fly, "She Looks Good to Me," "Tonight," and "Walking to a Different Rhythm," the last two co-written with his band.
Scott's session work in 1999 included albums by Rhythm,
Guy Clark,
Sherrié Austin, Jason Sellers,
Kate Rusby,
Suzy Bogguss, and
Paul Brandt; he produced
Clark's
Cold Dog Soup.
The Dixie Chicks placed "Heartbreak Town," a song from
Aloha from Nashville, on their chart-topping, multi-platinum album
Fly, and it went on to become a
country Top 40 hit, later earning a cover by Big Wooden Radio; New Grange used "Music Tree," written by
Scott and
Tim O'Brien; and
Trace Adkins recorded
Scott's song "Someday" on his album
More... On April 20, Sugar Hill released
Scott's second solo album,
Family Tree.
Scott remained as busy as usual in 2000, appearing on albums by Jelly Roll Johnson, Judith Edelman,
Sam Bush,
John Cowan,
the Warren Brothers,
Jimmie Dale Gilmore,
Trisha Yearwood,
John Rich, and John McCusker. His and Verlon Thompson's "Beside Myself" appeared on Johnson's Jelly Roll Johnson and a Few Close Friends; his and
Cowan's "Sligo" was on
Cowan's John Cowan; "Born to Fly," written by
Scott,
Sara Evans, and Marcus Hummon, was recorded for a single by
Evans that hit number one in the
country chart on January 20, 2001, and appeared on her album
Born to Fly; Bill Miller recorded "Different Drum," a song he and
Scott co-wrote, for his Reservation Road album; and
Travis Tritt recorded
Scott's "It's a Great Day to Be Alive," a song from
Aloha from Nashville, for his
Down the Road I Go album, after which it went on to hit number two in the
country singles chart. (It was later covered by
Pat Green and Cory Morrow.) Meanwhile,
Tim O'Brien and
Scott recorded a duo album, Real Time, released by Howdy Skies Records on April 18, 2000. "The Second Mouse," a song from the album, was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance.
Scott's 2001 session work included albums by Ginny Hawker,
Kate Rusby,
Sherrié Austin,
Patty Loveless,
Chely Wright, and
Tim O'Brien. "Constant State of Grace," a song written by
Scott and Irene Kelley, appeared on Kelley's album Simple Path, and
Scott's song "You'll Never Leave Harlan Alive," first heard on
Aloha from Nashville, was covered by
Brad Paisley on his album
Part II and by
Loveless on
Mountain Soul.
Scott was named Songwriter of the Year for 2001 by the Nashville Songwriters Association.
In 2002,
Scott appeared on albums by
John Cowan,
Guy Clark, Elizabeth Cook,
Little Big Town,
Montgomery Gentry,
Steve Earle, and Ty Herndon; he also produced
Clark's album
Dark. "Long Time Gone," the advance single from
the Dixie Chicks' chart-topping, multi-platinum album
Home, was a
Scott composition that had first appeared on Real Time; it crested at number two in the
country charts, and it earned
Scott a second Grammy nomination, this one for Best Country Song. Another
Scott-written hit was
Darryl Worley's cover of "Family Tree," the title song from
Scott's second solo album, which appeared on
Worley's album
I Miss My Friend and reached the
country Top 40 as a single. And
Scott received the dubious honor of being parodied by
country comedian Cledus T. Judd, who mangled "It's a Great Day to Be Alive" as "It's a Great Day to Be a Guy" on his album Cledus Envy.
Scott was named ASCAP's Songwriter of the Year for 2002.
Scott appeared on albums by Malcolm Holcombe, Dick Siegel, Andrea Zonn, Steve Conn,
Tim O'Brien, and
Sara Evans in 2003. "Another Day," a song he and
O'Brien wrote, appeared on both
O'Brien's album
Traveler and on
Karan Casey's Distant Shore.
Evans,
Scott, and Marcus Hummon wrote "Feel It Comin' On," featured on
Evans' album
Restless. Also in 2003,
Scott founded his own independent label, Full Light Records, on which he released his third solo album, Theatre of the Unheard, on September 23. The disc consisted of songs
Scott had written between 1986 and 1990 that had been recorded previously for an album that was to have been released by a major label in 1992, but was canceled. Now, in re-recorded form, they emerged for the first time.
Scott's session appearances in 2004 included albums by
Jim Lauderdale, Johnsmith,
Buddy Mondlock, and Dirk Powell. "Proving You Wrong," a song he wrote with
Keb' Mo', was used on the
Keb' Mo' album
Keep It Simple.
Scott, Marcus Hummon, and
Andy Griggs wrote "My Kind of Beautiful," which appeared on
Griggs' album
This I Gotta See. And "Old Town New," co-written by
Scott and Bruce Robison, was a cut on
Tim McGraw's chart-topping, multi-platinum album
Live Like You Were Dying.
Scott's 2005 session work included albums by
the Warren Brothers,
Tim O'Brien,
Allison Moorer, Ciaran Tourish,
Faith Hill, Jessi Alexander,
Jon Randall, Shelly Fairchild,
Kathy Mattea, and
Sara Evans. He and
Leslie Satcher wrote "Eight Crazy Hours (In the Story of Love)," which appeared on Fairchild's album Ride. Alone, he wrote "We've Got Nothing but Love to Prove" (aka "Goodle, USA"), which appeared on
Hill's chart-topping, multi-platinum album
Fireflies. He had two cuts on the various-artists album Hands Across the Water, performing his song "This Beggar's Heart" with Amhlaoibh and Muireann Nic, while
John Cowan and the Brock-McGuire Band played the
Cowan/
Scott composition "Cumberland Plateau."
Scott served as a producer and backup musician on the album as well.
Neal McCoy recorded "Head South," a song from
Scott's debut solo album,
Aloha from Nashville, on his album That's Life.
Scott's "Love's Not Through with Me Yet" appeared on
Mattea's album Right Out of Nowhere. And
Scott again collaborated with
Sara Evans and Marcus Hummon on "Momma's Night Out," which
Evans put on her
Real Fine Place album. On Full Light Records,
Scott issued a concert recording, Live in NC, backed by
Danny Thompson and Kenny Malone on April 5, 2005. He released This Weary Way, an album by his father, Wayne Scott, which he produced and played on, as well as co-writing "I Wouldn't Live in Harlan County" and "What I Really Need Is You" with the elder
Scott. And he reissued his 2000 duo album with
Tim O'Brien, Real Time.
In 2006,
Scott appeared on albums by Casey Dreissen,
Rascal Flatts, Doug & Telisha Williams,
John Cowan, and Johnsmith. "Simple Man," a song he wrote with
Hal Ketchum, appeared on
John Corbett's self-titled album. The
Cowan album, New Tattoo, featured "6 Birds (In a Joshua Tree)" and "Drown," both co-written by
Scott and
Cowan, and a cover of "With a Memory Like Mine" by
Scott and Wayne Scott, originally heard on Real Time.
Sam Bush recorded
Scott's "River Take Me," a song from Theatre of the Unheard, on his album Laps in Seven. And Johnsmith's Break Me Open included a cover of "Love's Not Through with Me." On June 27, 2006,
Scott released The Invisible Man, his first album of newly written material since
Family Tree in 1999. It was his fourth solo studio album and sixth album overall. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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