
“You In The World” arrives as one of the most quietly powerful moments on Jont’s forthcoming album Walk Right Through (out May 15th). It’s a song that feels less written than revealed. Loving, fulfilled, and deeply reflective, the track unfolds as a universal declaration of connection, gathering together threads of romantic love, parenthood, time passing, and the deeper knowing that there is both only this moment and still meaningful work left to do.
The song emerged at the close of an intense and unusually focused creative cycle. In the spring of 2024, 10 songs arrived over 10 weeks; not summoned, but insistent. “They were wanting to be written,” Jont says. Some carried specific purposes: one written for a friend in hospital who needed reminding of what she still had to return to; another facilitating forgiveness and healing after a long-held rift with an ex-partner. Each song arrived as a response to something real, urgent, and human.
At the end of those 10 weeks, “You In The World” announced itself differently, through a dream. A melody appeared first, wordless but unmistakable. When Jont later picked up a guitar to find its harmonic shape, he instinctively reached for the same chord voicings that had opened the cycle on previously released single, “Dark Days Are Over.” Not the same progression, but the same language. “I knew it would be the end of the cycle,” he reflects. A symmetry had revealed itself.
The words took longer. Weeks of feeling into the song followed, allowing it to gather traces of every person, spirit, and emotion present across the 10-song arc. What emerged is a piece that functions much like an abstract painting suggestive rather than literal, autobiographical without being confined to specifics. The details hint at lived experience, but the song’s true concern is essence: the euphoria of romantic love, the pride and fulfillment of parenthood, the love we hold for our children, the illusion of age, and the deep knowing that while there may only be this moment, we still carry dreams we are called to make real.
“You In The World” resists easy categorization, sitting gently at the intersection of singer-songwriter intimacy and indie-folk warmth. It is both personal and expansive, grounded and transcendent; a song that holds gratitude without complacency, presence without passivity.