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The Boy Next Door

Stacey Kent Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
Price: £8.99
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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Buy the MP3 album for £7.49 at the Amazon MP3 Downloads store.


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Music

Image of album by Stacey Kent

Photos

Image of Stacey Kent

Biography

The ability to tell a story, capture an emotion, a mood, hone it and share it like a secret with her audience; these are the qualities that make Stacey Kent so special. Happy at home in a variety of genres, she casts wide her net in search of inspiration.
A native of New Jersey, now living in Colorado, Stacey Kent developed a childhood fascination for musical comedies and the great jazz ... Read more in Amazon's Stacey Kent Store

Visit Amazon's Stacey Kent Store
for 23 albums, 10 photos, discussions, and more.

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The Boy Next Door + Breakfast on the morning tram + Raconte-moi...
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Product details

  • Audio CD (22 Sep 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Candid Productions Ltd
  • ASIN: B00009YOUO
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 25,291 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. The Best Is Yet To Come 3:28£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  2. The Boy Next Door 3:43£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  3. The Trolley Song 4:06£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  4. Say It Isn't So 4:43£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  5. Too Darn Hot 3:28£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  6. Makin' Whoopee 3:11£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  7. What The World Needs Now Is Love 4:12£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  8. You've Got A Friend 4:21£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen  9. I Got It Bad 4:59£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen10. Ooh-Shoo-Be-Doo-Bee 3:07£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen11. People Will Say We're In Love 3:48£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen12. 'Tis Autumn 4:32£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen13. All I Do Is Dream Of You 3:28£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen14. I Get Along Without You Very Well 3:28£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen15. You're The Top 2:31£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen16. Bookends 1:16£0.89  Buy MP3 


Product Description

Product Description

Best-selling singer Stacey Kent's latest album is a superlative set of interpretations from the great American songbook, taking its inspiration from the artists who have inspired Stacey's meteoric rise through the jazz world. With an all star band including David Newton and Colin Oxley, this album is a lesson in the art of jazz arranging as well as singing. For the last few years, Stacey has attracted plaudits from all corners of the jazz world, with Humphrey Lyttleton saying last year "I could listen to Stacey Kent sing morning, noon and night from now to eternity".

BBC Review

Humphrey Lyttleton's favourite vocalist is renowned for her devotion to the Great American Songbook and for her wonderful way with a ballad. For her new album 'The Boy Next Door', the tempo is still relaxed and the delivery languid, but there are some new kids on the block. Stacey's still clutching the Songbook in one hand, but in the other she's brandishing music associated with the likes of Chet Baker, Paul Simon and James Taylor.

Stacey draws consonants out like bubblegum in 'The Best is Yet to Come', her voice smooth but with that serrated edge that keeps you entranced, and David Newton contributes a tiny but perfectly-conceived piano solo on this and on the title track. Both are simple but beautiful vehicles for Stacey's Christmas-bauble vocals and impeccable timing.

'Makin' Whoopee' sees Stacey and the band getting low down and bluesy. Imagine Carrie from 'Sex and the City' as a jazz singer, and that's Stacey on 'Makin' Whoopee'. She's completely in control, with a demure, half-hidden sexiness that shines through in her diction and delivery. Stacey's musicians happily succumb to her lead - the rhythm section hangs back behind the beat and Stacey's husband Jim Tomlinson provides gentle support on the sax (but only when the lady permits it). 'Ooh-Shoo-Be-Doo-Bee' is infused with the same pert sexiness, but here it becomes mock theatrical as David, Jim and recording engineer Curtis Schwartz add tongue-in-cheek backing vocals and tons of swing behind Stacey's luscious phrasing.

Keeping the band focused on accompaniment and not on solos works to give the tightly-structured performances that we've come to expect. Nothing can ruffle her cool, in-control exterior. You can almost hear her relaxed smile in 'Tis Autumn' and in 'I Get Along Without You Very Well' she's jettisoned Chet Baker's air of mild despair and adopted stoical acceptance instead.

It's questionable whether Stacey adds anything to 'You've Got a Friend' - where even her vibrato is reminiscent of Carole King's - or to "Bookends" by Paul Simon. Both are covers, not reworks. Burt Bacharach's 'What the World Needs Now', though, demands playing and replaying. David Newton's piano sits well behind the lyric, allowing it freedom and movement, and Stacey's breathy, perfectly-timed vocals give David the space to stretch his fingers out just a little.

At 16 tracks you certainly get your money's worth from this album, and there are no interruptions from long or inaccessible instrumental solos. If that's how you like your jazz, you'll love The Boy Next Door. Ms Kent's stepping out beyond the Great American songbook and there's no stopping her now. Go, Stacey! --Kathryn Shackleton

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Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Feel Good - Classic FM

The voice of Stacey Kent has such a soothing, calming effect that one cannot help but relax. Her phrasing is very creative and you`ll want to listen over and over!
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars classsics sung with stacey's charm 27 Sep 2003
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
I bought this album after falling on the bandwagon of liking Norah Jones and then Diana Krall. I bought it without knowing anything about Stacey and have been pleasantly suprised. It has the kinds tunes you would imagine in romantic films or classy jazz bars. The nice thing is that it has songs you will know, and they are sung in Stacey's own way. It works, it's relaxing, charming and very much worth sticking on a rainy sunday with your lover near by!
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Stacey Kent never intended to be a jazz singer. She was on course for a career in academia, but through an unexpected twist of fate, she found herself enrolled at the Guildhall School of Music with Jim Tomlinson, who would later become her husband and musical soul mate. The rest, as they say, is history. Today, the London-based New Yorker has six bestselling solo albums to her credit, a clutchful of jazz awards on her mantelpiece, and continues to perform to sellout audiences across the world.

Ms Kent's unique, distinctive style could best be described as classic chic; the musical equivalent of the "little black dress". Just as the little black dress has the power to let a woman's personality shine through, Ms Kent's delicately nuanced interpretations of the Great American Songbook eloquently showcase the complex melodies and classy, sophisticated lyrics of American popular music during its golden ages.

Vocally, Ms Kent has never sounded better. And there is so much to admire: her dulcet-toned mezzo soprano, with its shimmery jazz lilt and translucent vibrato, her innate sense of swing and instinctive timing, her subtly shaded line readings, and the exquisite delicacy of her phrasing. A master storyteller and communicator, Ms Kent also brings a comparative literature graduate's acute interpretive skills to her singing, eschewing shopworn sentimentality for a piquant romantic lyricism.

Ms Kent's latest album, "The Boy Next Door", is a heartfelt and reverent tribute to her musical heroes, which include legendary crooners Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, octogenarian jazz master Dave Brubeck and Manhattan cabaret doyen Bobby Short....

"The Best Is Yet To Come", the opening track of this album, begins with a beguiling quietness. Abetted by Dave Chamberlain's supple, tantalizing bass line, Ms Kent's wonderfully lithe voice floats across the melody in light, flirtatious tones. "The best is yet to come, and babe won't it be fine," croons Ms Kent seductively, and you know she's on to a winner. The cheeky uptown swagger and brash bravado that Tony Bennett brought to the number have been replaced by a relaxed, confident sexuality as she sashays appealingly through Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh's zesty, jazz-inflected tune, which also features a brisk, scintillating piano solo by David Newton.

"The Trolley Song", so long regarded as Judy Garland's signature tune, has been dusted off the shelves and given a new life by Matt Home's punchy, throbbing beat. Ms Kent registers a thrilling sense of giddy exhilaration here, with Tomlinson's playful obbligatos dancing around her sparkling vocals. As she peals joyfully through the Irving Berlin swinger, you can just imagine Ms Kent, with her elfin figure and puckish smile, as the fresh-faced ingénue whose adventure on public transportation would inevitably change her life, and Tomlinson as the dapper, dashing gentleman who sweeps Ms Kent off her feet.

"Too Darn Hot", Cole Porter's second-act showstopper from "Kiss Me, Kate", pulses with a palpable sense of urgency that underpins the edgy, syncopated rhythms of the song. Ms Kent's vocals are preceded by a catchy, insinuating jazz riff, and she infuses the number with a restless, insistent energy. Her effervescence and vivacity are a perfect match for Porter's vocal dexterity, wit, warmth and humor; nowhere is this more evident than in "You're The Top", which in her capable hands, is transformed into a patter song.

In a funky, bluesy version of "Makin' Whoopee", Ms Kent pounces on the dire warning to would-be Romeos lurking beneath the song's playful surface: that once the honeymoon is over, marriage can become a trap from which there is no escape. Or in the language of song: "Now don't forget folks, that's what you get folks, for makin' whoopee," she notes wryly, and with a knowing smile.

If the upbeat numbers on the album showcase Ms Kent and her formidable jazz sidemen at their collective best, it is the ballads which highlight the sublime musical partnership she has forged with her husband.

Ms Kent brings a slight shade of huskiness and just a touch of midnight intimacy to "Say It Isn't So" as she implores her lover to come clean, directly and painfully, with Tomlinson's horn providing a haunting melodic counterpoint to her fragile, melancholic lamentations.

"People Will Say We're In Love" has been reconfigured as a sultry, breathless bossa nova, where Ms Kent's demure vocals are elegantly framed by Colin Oxley's warm, flesh-toned chords and thoughtfully punctuated by Tomlinson's lustrous solo.

"'Tis Autumn" is a lush, gentle meditation on the arrival of fall, which Ms Kent infuses with the enveloping warmth and softness of a pashmina worn on a crisp October morning. Taken at a languorous pace, it is beautifully lucid and sensuously dreamy.

Ms Kent receives impeccable support from her sleek, urbane jazz quintet, whose rhythmic fluency is further enhanced by the tasteful, literate arrangements. Newton and Tomlinson, both accomplished musicians in their own right, also display hitherto unknown musical talents as they join Curtis Schwartz to provide tongue-in-cheek backing vocals for Ms Kent's deliciously bouncy rendition of "Ooh-Shoo-Be-Doo-Bee".

It is difficult to imagine Ms Kent's future releases surpassing "The Boy Next Door". Fortunately, she has provided live audiences with a glimpse of what may be in store: a blissfully idyllic "Tea for Two", a quietly contemplative "What Are You Doing For The Rest Of Your Life?" and a touchingly poignant "Garden In The Rain". Could it be that, as she sings, "the best is yet to come?" I certainly hope so! Read more ›

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Ella for the 21st Century 8 May 2009
By paulus
Format:MP3 Download|Amazon Verified Purchase
I discovered Stacey Kent on a flight from Aukland to Singapore and was instantly bowled over. Stacey brings the qualities and values of the likes of Peggy Lee to the twenty first century. Stunning performances in English and French. She may not be Ella or Billie yet, but she has time on her side. I wait for more. Try Breakfast on the Morning Tram too.
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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Stacey Kent's Best Yet 3 Nov 2003
Format:Audio CD
Just when you thought she could not do better Stacey pulls this one out of the bag. It's a departure from the normal formula but takes her voices places you would not expect.
Jim and the band are, as always superb and the production values so exceptional, they jump out of the speakers!
This lovely mix of material combined with Stacey's voice transport to a magical place where you are completely relaxed and de-stressed.
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Was this review helpful to you?
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Stacey Kent never intended to be a jazz singer. She was on course for a career in academia, but through an unexpected twist of fate, she found herself enrolled at the Guildhall School of Music with Jim Tomlinson, who would later become her husband and musical soul mate. The rest, as they say, is history. Today, the London-based New Yorker has six bestselling solo albums to her credit, a clutchful of jazz awards on her mantelpiece, and continues to perform to sellout audiences across the world.

Ms Kent's unique, distinctive style could best be described as classic chic; the musical equivalent of the "little black dress". Just as the little black dress has the power to let a woman's personality shine through, Ms Kent's delicately nuanced interpretations of the Great American Songbook eloquently showcase the complex melodies and classy, sophisticated lyrics of American popular music during its golden ages.

Vocally, Ms Kent has never sounded better. And there is so much to admire: her dulcet-toned mezzo soprano, with its shimmery jazz lilt and translucent vibrato, her innate sense of swing and instinctive timing, her subtly shaded line readings, and the exquisite delicacy of her phrasing. A master storyteller and communicator, Ms Kent also brings a comparative literature graduate's acute interpretive skills to her singing, eschewing shopworn sentimentality for a piquant romantic lyricism.

Ms Kent's latest album, "The Boy Next Door", is a heartfelt and reverent tribute to her musical heroes, which include legendary crooners Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, octogenarian jazz master Dave Brubeck and Manhattan cabaret doyen Bobby Short....

"The Best Is Yet To Come", the opening track of this album, begins with a beguiling quietness. Abetted by Dave Chamberlain's supple, tantalizing bass line, Ms Kent's wonderfully lithe voice floats across the melody in light, flirtatious tones. "The best is yet to come, and babe won't it be fine," croons Ms Kent seductively, and you know she's on to a winner. The cheeky uptown swagger and brash bravado that Tony Bennett brought to the number have been replaced by a relaxed, confident sexuality as she sashays appealingly through Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh's zesty, jazz-inflected tune, which also features a brisk, scintillating piano solo by David Newton.

"The Trolley Song", so long regarded as Judy Garland's signature tune, has been dusted off the shelves and given a new life by Matt Home's punchy, throbbing beat. Ms Kent registers a thrilling sense of giddy exhilaration here, with Tomlinson's playful obbligatos dancing around her sparkling vocals. As she peals joyfully through the Irving Berlin swinger, you can just imagine Ms Kent, with her elfin figure and puckish smile, as the fresh-faced ingénue whose adventure on public transportation would inevitably change her life, and Tomlinson as the dapper, dashing gentleman who sweeps Ms Kent off her feet.

"Too Darn Hot", Cole Porter's second-act showstopper from "Kiss Me, Kate", pulses with a palpable sense of urgency that underpins the edgy, syncopated rhythms of the song. Ms Kent's vocals are preceded by a catchy, insinuating jazz riff, and she infuses the number with a restless, insistent energy. Her effervescence and vivacity are also a perfect match for Porter's vocal dexterity, wit, warmth and humor; nowhere is this more evident than in "You're The Top", which in her capable hands, is transformed into a patter song.

In a funky, bluesy version of "Makin' Whoopee", Ms Kent pounces on the dire warning to would-be Romeos lurking beneath the song's playful surface: that once the honeymoon is over, marriage can become a trap from which there is no escape. Or in the language of song: "Now don't forget folks, that's what you get folks, for makin' whoopee," she notes with a wry smile.

If the upbeat numbers on the album showcase Ms Kent and her formidable jazz sidemen at their collective best, it is the ballads which highlight the sublime musical partnership she has forged with her husband.

Ms Kent brings a slight shade of huskiness and just a touch of midnight intimacy to "Say It Isn't So" as she implores her lover to come clean, directly and painfully, with Tomlinson's horn providing a haunting melodic counterpoint to her fragile, melancholic lamentations.

"People Will Say We're In Love" has been reconfigured as a sultry, breathless bossa nova, where Ms Kent's demure vocals are elegantly framed by Colin Oxley's warm, flesh-toned chords and thoughtfully punctuated by Tomlinson's lustrous solo.

"'Tis Autumn" is a lush, gentle meditation on the arrival of fall, which Ms Kent infuses with the enveloping warmth and softness of a pashmina worn on a crisp October morning. Taken at a languorous pace, it is beautifully lucid and sensuously dreamy.

Ms Kent receives impeccable support from her sleek, urbane jazz quintet, whose rhythmic fluency is further enhanced by the tasteful, literate arrangements. Newton and Tomlinson, both accomplished musicians in their own right, also display hitherto unknown musical talents as they join Curtis Schwartz to provide tongue-in-cheek backing vocals for Ms Kent's deliciously bouncy rendition of "Ooh-Shoo-Be-Doo-Bee".

It is difficult to imagine Ms Kent's future releases surpassing "The Boy Next Door". Fortunately, she has provided live audiences with a glimpse of what may be in store: a blissfully idyllic "Tea for Two", a quietly contemplative "What Are You Doing For The Rest Of Your Life?" and a touchingly poignant "Garden In The Rain". Could it be that, as she sings, "the best is yet to come?" I certainly hope so! Read more ›

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5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic 16 Jun 2012
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
I saw this great jazz singer life in Norwich and she was just fantastic and the CD has the same clear and great sound.
If you are a audiophile nut like me you will really enjoy the sound of this cd.
ENJOY
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Kent Bills and Coos Like a Honeymooner
"The Boy Next Door," by American-born British songster Stacey Kent, is a collection of songs associated with singers she admires, from Tony Bennett to Frank Sinatra. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Stephanie DePue
5.0 out of 5 stars mellow and relaxing
I heard Stacey kent singing on the radio one evening and loved her voice. It prompted me to buy 2 of her CDs from amazon and i havent been disappointed with them. Read more
Published 17 months ago by cathy
5.0 out of 5 stars smooth and sophisticated, classy and relaxing too
Having seen Stacey perform during her recent tour, I wanted to find another CD of her work as a gift for my wife, who is also a big fan. Read more
Published 18 months ago by hfph
5.0 out of 5 stars "Wish I was the Boy Next Door"
Plenty of tracks on here to indulge yourself. Stacey and her husband Jim can do no wrong. This is superb stuff, good production, good recording and her voice is just so, so sexy! Read more
Published on 6 April 2011 by Mr. Douglas P. Taylor
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant !
I played the clips before purchasing and was impressed enough to buy the cd and I have definitely not been disappointed. From first to last this album is wonderful. Read more
Published on 4 Dec 2010 by Amazon Addict
5.0 out of 5 stars A real find
This album is a delight from start to finish. A glorious voice and classy interpretations ... definitely not just jazzy background music.
Published on 2 May 2006 by Persephone
4.0 out of 5 stars Low-key late-night cure for insomnia
Stacey Kent is another of Michael Parkinson's favourites; hardly a Sunday goes by without him playing something of hers. Read more
Published on 18 Jun 2004 by Mr. R. B. Ager
1.0 out of 5 stars The boy next door
went to see stacey at grayes asembly hall on this tour.
Another fantastic gig bit spoiled by the no beer no smoking policy,What is jazz without alchohol and nicotine. Read more
Published on 28 Nov 2003 by "mick4701"
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