Biography

Biography-Overview

With unique silky sultry voice International Recording Artist, Lyn Stanley has secured a worldwide fanbase as she releases her tenth project (9th full album) in 2022 (a holiday jazz big band and strings album).  There’s also a tenth full album project in the works.  Lyn Stanley’s debut album released in 2013.  And, by 2018 the Program Director for Los Angeles KKjz-88.1 jazz radio named her Female Jazz Vocalist of the Year.  Her talent lies in a velvety alto sound and a style reminiscent of mid-century jazz vocals, along with unusual approaches to her arrangements.   She was discovered by jazz legend, Paul Smith, Ella Fitzgerald’s musical director, conductor and pianist for 25 years.  She records with the music industry’s best engineers and at world class recording studios.

All of Lyn Stanley’s award-winning albums have achieved the status of “Top Sellers with her independent distribution networks, including the audiophile market.  Her album titles are: Lost In Romance, Potions [from the 50s’] and Interludes, The Moonlight Sessions Volumes One and Two; plus two tributes to Julie London—London Calling and London with a Twist plus a live performance album “Live At Studio A” as an Immersive Blu-ray video and CD/LP vinyl album. Her big band holiday album, Novel Noel-A Jingle Cool Jazz Celebration, is set for a September 2022 release, and released six singles from the album in 2021. Her 10th full album, currently being recorded is a tribute to the music of 1924 with a working title of 1924.  It will be released in 2023.

Lyn Stanley uses the finest jazz musicians in LA, NYC and Nashville and has sold over 100,000 physical albums and hundreds of thousands more downloads and steaming (Spotify, iTunes, AppleMusic, Pandora etc.) around the world.  She surpassed $103,000 in sales revenue artist with Indie Artist distributor, CDBaby.com

Biography by Kirk Silsbee

“To a GREAT talent”: These are the words of Sammy Nestico, as inscribed his autobiography to Lyn Stanley. Mr. Nestico is a composer, arranger, and conductor who has worked with Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, Sarah Vaughan, Michael Buble, and Barbra Streisand. These are the words of Sammy Nestico. He chose these words to inscribe Lyn Stanley’s copy of his autobiography. Multiple worldwide music critics are calling her “The new sultry jazz vocalist of the decade.” As an interpretive vocalist and acclaimed jazz stylist, Ms. Stanley invites the listener to enter and be part of her unique sonic world as she shapes it with a fresh take on jazz sensibilities and song selections.

Lyn Stanley goes a step further: She is dedicated not only to singing great songs in a singular manner but to making a fantastic-sounding ALBUM as well. This 2016 Global Music Award winning singer knows her way around quality recording reproduction, hiring the engineering monarchy of sound—veteran and 23 Grammy awards legend Al Schmitt and mastering engineer Bernie Grundman. She records as the big names did at their respective peaks, at top tier places like Avatar in NYC and Hollywood’s Capitol Recording studios. That beautiful voice of hers is captured the way it should be, via Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole’s most beloved microphone, lovingly dubbed “Telly.” Stanley is more involved than many singers in the recording, mixing, and mastering of her music, lovingly leaving nothing to chance. And, this singer works with only the best—including Mike Garson, three-decade pianist for David Bowie, who started his career in jazz, as did Bowie for those who did not know.

Jazz singers, naturally, approach the art of singing in different ways—some employ the voice as an instrument, and songs become vehicles for flights of fancy. Other jazz singers value the song and its integrity—they get into the song, the story it tells, and make it sound as if it might have been written for him or her. Lyn Stanley falls into the latter category—while she brings a jazz sensibility to her singing, The Song is The Thing. (Jazz tenor sax icon Lester Young, for one, would not record a song unless he knew the lyrics.) Pianist Bill Cunliffe, no slouch himself when it comes to weaving a tale (albeit on the keys), said of her, “She understands the lyric and is able to communicate it to the audience.” She is a singer inviting listeners to find a new truth within, all the while keeping the qualities that made the song special to so many listeners in many eras.

Most jazz singers perform Great American Songbook standards, but Stanley approaches that swath of history on a very personal level. She’s LIVED, infusing her song choices with hard lessons learned, with life experience to drive home the songwriter’s intent. This cannot be taught or faked. “I’ve been through a lot,” she states, “and if I don’t have it in my background, I can’t sing it. When I’m singing, I try to see in my mind where I was at a time in my life.” Ms. Stanley’s got that hands down as she has not shied away from the school of hard knocks. Two divorces, two sons and an eclectic career ranging from advertising executive to college professor to competitive ballroom dancer –she’s got some reference points. “When I’m singing, I try to feel the song, but maintain a sense of empathy so listeners can find their own paths in the stories within, too. Like the best tellers of tales, Stanley feels what she telling the audience but maintains a tiny bit of detachment so the listener can find their own path and truth into the songs she sings. She never emotes for the sake of emoting or displays her impressive technique to dazzle—Stanley lets the songs do that. “Lyrics are meaningful to me,” Stanley says. “I sing lyrics…not sing songs per se [and] it’s so much deeper [this way].”

Tall and elegant, Stanley can’t be mistaken for anyone else, standing out amid a scene abundant with talent. She’s not a piano-playing introvert, a belter, a scatter, or a faux Billie, Ella, Sarah, Carmen, or Betty. With her burnished alto and singular affinity for timing and enunciation, Stanley creates a sultry mood that evokes romance and affirms the timeless musical values of the Great American Songbook. Audiences leave feeling that they’ve just had an emotional experience. Lyn Stanley doesn’t aim to “sound like” the aforementioned goddesses of Song, but rather to be like them; to enrich the tradition, not to merely emulate. As Sinatra was inspired by Tommy Dorsey’s trombone, Stanley has listened to the tenor saxophone evangelist Stanley Turrentine, “a personal favorite whom I use to help guide me into melody interpretations.”

Music was always part of Stanley’s life. Her mother was a spirited jitterbug dancer, her father was an enthusiastic amateur jazz pianist and her grandfather was a trained opera singer. Despite this grounding in the arts, Stanley’s mother steered her toward a corporate profession. College, a communications degree, a Ph.D. program, marriage, and a career as a successful businesswoman took her elsewhere, but the lure of song is strong. She then sought out the late pianist Paul Smith and asked for a hearing. Vocal coach Annette Warren Smith, his widow, describes their reaction: “We couldn’t get over how good she was. She knew she was a great dancer but she didn’t know how good she was as a singer.”

Lyn Stanley brings the tradition into play in her recordings as well. After listening to Interludes, the aforementioned Nestico wrote in an email: “She is excellent…what a thrill to work with great talent.” Her albums are not simply collections of songs—each one is a virtual novella and displays a distinct growth as a performer/artist. Stanley’s maiden voyage, My Romance brims over with a selection of standards that establishes her as a distinctive stylist with the Great American Songbook. Her crew, including ace drummer Jeff Hamilton, pianist Mike Lang, and saxophonist Bob Sheppard, provide spacious, swinging accompaniment that dovetails with Stanley’s unerring, unassuming embrace of these songs’ spirit. George Harrison’s “Something”—a favorite of Frank Sinatra’s—is given a shimmering, gently swinging, slightly bossa nova-flavored reading. “Too Close for Comfort” epitomizes Saturday night swagger and the promises of romance. Steve Rawlins’ production gives the vocals and instruments such presence the listener is practically in the studio with the ensemble.

Potions From the 50s find Stanley extending the Songbook tradition with jazz-enriched versions of songs from the spheres of 1950s rock & roll and rhythm & blues. “I’m Walkin,’ made famous by Fats Domino and Rick Nelson, is transformed into a sassy New Orleans-flavored panorama one can easily imagine sung by Louis Armstrong or Bessie Smith. “In the Still of the Night” because a languid jazz waltz and The Coasters’ “Love Potion #9” an undulating, exotic bluesy tale of love-luck-gone-wrong. The spirit of N’awlins evinces itself yet again with the loping, genially seductive “After the Lights Go Down Low.” Producer Kenny Werner’s unfailingly lyrical piano alternates with the punchier key-craft of Mike Lang, while saxophonist Rickey Woodard lays down some earthy tenor reminiscent of the late great Turrentine.

2015’s Interludes continued her progression, and all the aspects of Stanley’s approach come together in a sublime fashion once again. Among the cast of players herein is a quartet featuring pianist Mike Garson, longtime pianist and musical lieutenant for the late David Bowie from 1973 to 2003. He’s a versatile musician that strides the rock and jazz spheres with equal aplomb. Instrumentation more varied— including jazz harmonica wizard Henrick Meurkens and trombonist Bob McChesney–arrangements on standards such as “One of Those Things” more complex yet maintain a sense of streamlined simplicity. Songs from the rock canon become uniquely her own—Pat Benatar’s “Black Velvet” achieves a lusciously sultry ambience as does Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love,” delivered in a manner Peggy Lee herself might envy. These are high-wattage showstoppers and the band must have known when recording because these songs were recorded in one or two takes. “Whole Lotta Love” is the scratch vocal and this song was recorded as you hear it in 15 minutes during a power session at Studio A at Capitol Recording Studio,” says Stanley.

Lyn Stanley embraces a slightly more rarified tradition, one very near and dear to her heart. Her late stepfather was a Ph.D. in Engineering at Purdue University and a devoted audiophile, and she brings this love of the top-of- the-line enjoyment of music from her formative years to both the recording process as well as to the finished product as heard in both of vinyl and compact disc mediums. In the studio, recording in gloriously warm analog sound. Consequently, Stanley and her albums have been embraced by the audiophiles the world over. “The audiophile community is very open for the most part to all kinds of music. They appreciate music in general. That’s a point of differentiation between jazz and audio fanatics. There are some [genre fans] stuck on classical, rock, or another genre and will not deviate from that love. But in my experience, audiophiles just love music [in general] and have a wide range of genres in their collections.”

While Lyn Stanley is most assuredly a jazz artist, she is in humble opposition to those jazz aficionadas that maintain that it’s a rarified art form suitable for stately and staid admiration rather than enjoyment. “I am a former champion amateur ballroom dancer,” earning three first places in USA Championship DanceSport in 2010, and she placed third in a World Title Pro/Am event. Most of my songs will have some connection to a known dance, from rhumba, foxtrot, and cha-c ha to nightclub two-step, West Coast swing or even a bolero.” The eclectic Ms. Stanley, who values singers diverse as Al Green, Nancy Wilson, Etta James, and Jerry Lee Lewis along with Peggy Lee, Sarah Vaughan, and Julie London, remembers that jazz at one time was “pop music” and can be again, without compromise. Stanley’s outstanding two 2017 releases-Volumes One and Two of her Moonlight Sessions project have proven to be fascinating, ambitious and critically reviewed as ground breaking and risky but with an outstanding critical acclaim result. Here, Stanley melds the European classical tradition with the Great American Songbook in collaboration with Mike Garson, Christin Jacob, and Tamir Hendelmen. Imagine- ‘Over The Rainbow’ with Debussy… Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight Sonata’ merged into ‘Angel Eyes.’” These creative ideas initially were Ms. Stanley’s from an inspiring moment with Paul Smith’s wife, Annette Warren Smith where a discussion of Carlos Antonio Jobim’s “How Insensitive” and the classic by Chopin’s “Prelude in eMinor.” This started the ball rolling for her handpicked team of classical players and jazz sensations.

The future is, as has been said, unwritten—and Lyn Stanley is a lady that’s going to write new chapters in America’s book of songs. She is currently exploring a tribute to Julie London and an up tempo jazz album for dancers.

“She sings spot-on key, phrases with practiced ease, and simply interprets this set of juicy songbook goodies in such a way that one knows she has done her homework.” – George Fendel, ejazznews.com

“After listening to this recording we can safely say that Stanley is not only a singer, but a great singer of contemporary jazz. Knows how to choose the songs, find the best arrangements—they are anything but trivial–and her voice knows extract from the verses those feelings that authors have expressed in words.” – Vittorio, MusicZoom (Italy)

“She’s one of today’s most outstanding jazz vocalists…her Moonlight Sessions Volume Two is one of the best albums of this century in my opinion.”-Saul Levine, owner/programmer for syndicated Global Jazz, Inc. and KKJz-88.1FM Los Angeles

 

 

 

 

 

Lyn Stanley’s recording formats include 3-Step and 1-Step double 180g/45RPM vinyl records, SACDs, Reel To Reel, CDs and High Resolution files.  Her discography includes: Lost In Romance (debut), Potions [from the 50s}, Interludes, The Moonlight Sessions Volume One and  Volume Two (2017 releases). A single, Little Drummer Boy is also available on CdBaby.com. Her main distribution is through CDBaby.com, Amazon.com, ElusiveDisc.com, Acoustic Sounds.com, Target.com and many fine audio websites worldwide.  She is also featured in Spotify, Tidal, Apple Music and Pandora and high resolution downloads are available at NativeDSD.com

8 Replies to “Biography”

    1. Hello Gary,
      I do know “a little” as you say. Of what I know, Julie London stayed very close to her first husband and father of two of her 5 children, Jack Webb. Jack was the producer of Emergency! and at the time, Julie and her second husband, Bobby Troup, who was also in the Emergency! series as Dr. Joe Early. Both Julie and Bobby were entering the time of parenting that required, from their perspective, more time at home and a stable environment for their teen years children. Prior to this Julie and Bobby worked clubs as a jazz band, either together, or booked separately, and it was difficult on the children. Jack helped out by hiring them both for his show. You might remember Jack from his “Dragnet” days, which turned him into an overnight success as an actor. He took this role and launched into TV and film production. When he first met Julie, she was a blossoming actor and getting some roles, and he had not make it that far until Dragnet came along. It’s all an interesting tale of life, children and ex’s. As to why Julie was an assett, my guess is she was known for her beauty for many years, and had a following with millions of record sales prior to the Emergency! job. Jack Webb was probably trying to capitalize on this, plus help out his own daughters. It’s just a guess…but seems logical. Julie was a really practical woman based on my research of her. Hope this helps.

  1. What is the title of your next direct to disc recording that u were promoting at Axpona where I met u. ? U said it would be out May 10, 2019. It was very nice to meet u and u have a wonderful voice and charming personality. Shay Aboor

    1. Hi Shay:
      It is out and available London With A Twist–D2D 45rpm two disc album. Limited edition to 2000 units. Half are already gone as of May 10th. Elusive Disc has them too.

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