For a limited time only, when you order 2 or more items and ship to the United States, Canada, and Mexico!
Songs and Samples
Faded Memories
Take Me There
Jimmy
Bliss
Run
If You Were Mine
Dreamland Tree
Livin' Bread Woman
The Mountain
Innisfree
Before The World
The Man I Love
Some Nice Things People Have Said
With a voice angelic as Margo Timmons and Jane Siberry...Stacy Jagger's latest music project skillfully mesmerizes the listener with a spirit for eternal hope and passion. Much can be said about about a style that merges Gospel, Roots and Americana with a vibrant hint of Soul. With simple lyrics and songs that harkens to the days gone by, she manages to convey a contemporary sense of belonging, security and comfort that skillfully embrace the inner warmth that we all seek within ourselves. This is music that moves and possesses an endearing quality that we should be so lucky to listen to.
- Frank Wing
Concert Agent/Agency for the Performing Arts
Stacy Jagger is a rare combination of organic beauty, transparent ministry, and transcendent talent. She is a timeless artist, with the ability to reach audiences where they truly live, and a soaring voice that opens the door. Please don't miss any opportunity to hear her! She has something extraordinary to sing and to say!
- Allison Allen,
Speaker/Women of Faith/Broadway Actress/Playwright
I have known Stacy for years. Her passion for truth, her own healing and then the healing of other women has been like a fire inside her that has inspired her courageous personal work and then her creative works. Stacy's lyrics and music touch the heart of many because they come out of her own struggle to live and to call others out of darkness and pain into hope and life.
- Barbi White,
Counselor
The broad musical and emotional range that Stacy Jagger shows in her debut project "Faded Memories" definitely shows that a singer-songwriter is in the house. There�s plenty of room for her on stage to tell her stories in song . . . it�s all good.
- Mark Collie,
Singer-songwriter ("Carry On" and "Forget About Us" for Tim McGraw)
About Stacy Jagger
Growing up in Nashville, Stacy Jagger saw many music-star hopefuls come to her hometown with big dreams – and leave with dashed ones. But Stacy Jagger had no intention of even remaining in Nashville, let alone of becoming a professional singer-songwriter.
If you had told her at age sixteen that she would one day make a record that included the likes of musicians Byron House (Johnny Cash, Nickel Creek), Eric Darken (Faith Hill, Amy Grant), and John Catchings (Bob Seger, Dixie Chicks), and her husband, sound engineer/producer, Ron Jagger (Michael W. Smith, Sonic Flood), she would have laughed out loud. Luckily for us, despite her youthful ambitions elsewhere, that is exactly what she has done.
Jagger’s debut album, Faded Memories, was quietly released in January 2006, but since then it has generated industry-wide buzz and created fans in countries everywhere from Japan to Belgium.
Five songs from the album are featured in the award-winning film documentary, A Journey Home, and Jagger has begun to co-write with Grammy award-winning hit songwriters.
But the opportunity Jagger is most excited about at present is a recent collaboration with the Ad Deum and Revolve Dance Company in Houston, Texas. Both companies choreographed to Stacy’s music, alongside choreographic works by Hope Boykin of the Alvin Ailey Dance Company, and Steve Rooks of the Martha Graham Dance Company.
"I cannot explain the feeling I got by singing my songs on stage with these incredibly gifted dancers interpreting my music. I absolutely love working with the dance community, and I am so honored to have the opportunity to collaborate with such excellent artists." Jagger explains her enthusiasm, "I guess when I write I always see choreography in my head. I think, too, that the emotion in my singing has something to do with learning to use my whole body with emotion as a dancer, growing up."
In fact, much of Jagger’s love of music originated in the songs she heard first at the dance studio, which may also explain the range of musical styles on her album. "The dance studio was my safe haven from a crazy alcoholic home life," she recalls, without a trace of bitterness in her voice.
"I escaped into music and the arts, mostly dance at an early age, probably starting around age three – tapping to Duke Ellington, ballet classes with Mozart and Tchaikovsky, and jazz classes with Lionel Ritchie and Chaka Kahn. Then I went home and sang old hillbilly and western and trucker songs with my dad who loved The Sons of the Pioneers and Jim Reeves."
After graduating with a degree in Music from Belmont University, Jagger began teaching dance and voice lessons, finding a deep love for mentoring young artists, with some of her students landing major record deals and performance opportunities.
Ironically, during this same time, Stacy and her husband came to a point where they were seeking a simpler, downwardly-mobile life than the frenetic striving they saw all around them. Thus, they embarked on a year and a half of being "commuter pioneers" – working their regular jobs in town during the weekdays, but living a frontier home life in an 1860’s cabin out in the Tennessee countryside.
"I wasn’t poor," Jagger says, "I was just living in a non-electric cabin, taking showers in a converted milk trough, pumping well water for cooking, and stoking fires in the middle the night to keep warm." She pauses before she adds with a laugh, "And leaving during the day to teach ballroom."
One of her favorite memories is of the night she attended a formal ball in Nashville, and then drove the long, winding way back to the cabin, arriving at the stroke of midnight, just in time to make it to her outhouse, Cinderella ball gown and all!
A down-home girl at heart, Jagger was excited to find, tucked away in her grandmother’s old trunk, a faded black and white photograph of her own family ancestors. It’s the photograph featured on the cover of Faded Memories, and it shows her great-grandfather holding a mandolin, her great-grandmother holding Jagger’s grandmother as an infant, and other family and friends gathered around.
Captured in one long-ago moment, this is the legacy that this artist and new mother, Jagger, lives in and carries on. Music. Family. And oh yes . . . Memories.
News and Reviews
"This is the best CD I've listened to all year..."
- Five Stars from The Phantom Tollbooth

Shelby the dog says,
"Sign up for our email about new music.
We promise to never share your email address with anyone. Ever."


