Magazine

STACEY KENT

Stacey Kent: A Jersey Girl with a Global Compass 

by Chrys L. Roney

In a jazz world where some singers need a wall of sound just to hold your attention, Stacey Kent does the opposite—she dials it all the way down. No fireworks. No vocal gymnastics. Just clear, conversational phrasing that somehow says more by doing less.

But don’t get it twisted: behind that understated delivery is an artist with deep roots, major co-signs and a global career that’s anything but small-scale.

Born in South Orange, New Jersey, Kent didn’t grow up in a jazz dynasty. No club circuit pedigree. No big family name. What she did have was an early obsession with stories, lyrics and languages. She studied comparative literature at Sarah Lawrence College—a solid literary foundation that shows up in how she treats a lyric: like something to be unwrapped, not just performed.

She didn’t start out thinking she'd be a jazz singer. But after college, she moved to the UK and enrolled at London’s Guildhall School of Music and Drama. That’s where everything started to click. That’s also where she met saxophonist Jim Tomlinson—her future husband and long-time musical partner. Between the two of them, they crafted a sound that blends jazz, bossa nova, chanson and American standards without feeling like a sampler platter. It’s cohesive. It’s international. And it’s unmistakably Stacey.

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