FEATURE:
Spotlight
Jae Stephens
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A few incredible…
dates in December complete the last touring commitments of the year for Jae Stephens. Unless she has any surprise gigs coming up! Also, before that, she plays The Lower Third here in London on 24th November, if you can grab a ticket! I wanted to shine a light on the amazing Texas-born artist. It is a shame I will miss her in five days! However, I am sure she will be back here in 2026 (in fact, she will be playing a few songs outside of the O2 tomorrow, if you are in the area. I hope she has a big coat with her!). Jae Stephens’ E.P., SELLOUT II, was released in August. That was followed by an album, TOTAL SELLOUT, on 14th November. It is a remarkable chapter from an artist that everyone should know about. Before doing anything else, it is important we get to know a little more about the extraordinary Jae Stephens. I want to start out with a fascinating interview from CLASH from August. They spent time with someone who an artist with a long career ahead. “The Def Jam nu-gen RnB artist” talked about “intention, duality, and Victorian child summers”. It is a compelling and illuminating interview. I want to source a section where we discover how and why writing gave Jae Stephens a sense of purpose:
“Born in Texas, Stephens has only a handful of lucid memories of the state — Schlotzsky’s sandwiches and Pappadeaux seafood among them — before her family moved to California when she was six. In Pasadena, she grew up steeped in an entertainment-adjacent lifestyle, taking dance, voice and acting lessons as if by rite of passage. “I went to a performing arts high school. It was very much giving Glee — leaving school early to go to auditions. It was just what people did,” she says.
But even amid all the lessons and auditions, she eventually paused to ask herself: What am I doing with this? How do I want to spend my time? “I was doing all of these things, and I was good at them, but it lacked intention and purposeful impact.”
Writing gave her that sense of purpose. Long before she was known as an artist, Stephens was writing songs, short stories and screenplays, a discipline that carried her into songwriting success with Latto, Jennifer Lopez, and UMI. But the more she looked at the artists she was writing for, the more she realised the mirror was pointing back at her. “I realised I have all of these skills and all these years of experience… I’m already doing it. So why don’t I just do it ten times harder… and for myself?”
That’s when the ‘SELLOUT’ era began. After signing to a major label, Stephens felt she owed it to herself to put her best foot forward. “I wanted to keep it light-hearted, sexy, cool and fun, while not losing myself either,” she shares. “It was me dipping my toes in and seeing what I could get away with while working with a new team.”
Two more interviews after the next before closing things up. I am keen to highlight a section of an interview from May from RANGE, after Stephens released the intoxicating and beautiful That’s My Baby. The stunning U.S. artist spoke about the future, and her experience of touring with FLO. There are few artists out there who has the same sound as Jae Stephens. It is clear to see that she has the talent and potential to go so far in music. Maybe these are the earliest days. They are far from the best. The next few years will see her ascend to dizzying heights:
“Her brand new single, “That’s My Baby,” the second single from her forthcoming EP, is one of her silkiest yet. Road-tested on crowds night after night before its official drop, the track became less of a premiere than a quiet claiming of space, its intimacy amplified in rooms full of strangers. “Performing it every night has just made me more excited about releasing it. I’ve always had dreams about people singing my music and I feel like that’s the one that people sing the most, besides ‘Body Favors,’” she confides, continuing that “every other song on the project is pretty poppy, so I wanted to spotlight [“That’s My Baby”] and give it the moment that I think it deserves.” It’s this strategy that makes an artist like Stephens so compelling: “I want to remind everyone that I’m not a one trick pony here,” she starts. “I’m capable of so many sonics and genres, and I want to express that.”
Stephens’ most recent EP, SELLOUT, marked a major breakthrough—both commercially and creatively. The six-track project signaled a departure from the glossy R&B sound that had defined her earlier work, embracing a more expansive pop sensibility. With influences from ’90s pop, a la Mariah, and early-2000s The Neptunes and Timbaland production, SELLOUT propelled Stephens into a realm of cult-like admiration on social media, largely due to the utterly entrancing single, “Body Favors.” “SELLOUT was my major label debut, and it was sort of me like… ‘I kind of want to try something a bit more pop,’” she reveals. “Now I’m like, bitch… I’m doing it. I am the queen of pop,” she teases. Though clearly joking, I can’t help but reply, “Girl, you will be.”
This newfound confidence isn’t just playful banter; it reflects a clear shift in Stephens’ artistic trajectory. “The new EP is definitely more confident, more self-assured, sexier, more intentional,” she promises, detailing that “There was a lot less writing to send to other people. It’s truly just my voice throughout, and I think that you’re going to be able to hear that sonically, melodically, and lyrically.” Despite the deliberate distance she keeps between her day-to-day self and the capital-P Popstar version of Jae Stephens, the lines still blur—especially when vulnerability becomes the hook. “I think a lot of it is playing a character, but then it somehow ends up being true. Even if I think I’m being playful and bullshitting, it always ends up coming from a real place.”
Stephens has only scratched the surface of what 2025 has in store—but the foundation is already shifting beneath her feet. “As soon as I get home I have sessions to finish the next project, and then I have to shoot a video, and hopefully we’re gonna do some more shows before the year wraps to celebrate,” she says. I eagerly take this moment to campaign for her return to Vancouver. “You better tell the crowd to be hype tomorrow,” she requests in response. Fast forward, 24 hours later, @jaephens posts a selfie on her Instagram story, with a caption reading: “Vancouver that was the best crowd so far im not even kidding lol.” My job here is done”.
There is more that I want to cover off. Bringing things a bit more up to date. I will move to Yams Magazine. They championed an artist not fitting into boxes and who is redefining Pop and R&B. This future star whose incredible music is among the very best around. I am very keen to see Jae Stephens live, as I can imagine she is a phenomenal performer that has this real and raw connection with the audience:
“Now, with ‘SELLOUT II’, out today, Stephens has doubled down on her own instincts. “I felt really comfortable with that world I was creating, but some of the songs on the first project were written for others. This time, I went in writing all of the songs just for me.” For Stephens, the emphasis was on ease and flow. “If I’m struggling with a line or melody for too long, I know it means we gotta wrap it up and move on. Nothing is overthought. For me, I know when to stop and move on, and I appreciate that about my own music.”
Transitioning from songwriter to fully-fledged artist has meant an entirely different workload. “As a songwriter, your job is over when you leave the studio with a complete song. As an artist, it feels like that’s when you’re just getting started; listening back twenty times, realising it needs this or that, then thinking about visuals, then getting buy-in from the team. It’s exhausting,” she admits with a laugh. “It really is ten times the work I committed myself to”.
“Now, with the late-August release of her second EP in the SELLOUT series, her recently released single “Boyfriend Forever”, and The Sellout Podcast, Stephens has captured more and more listeners’ attention as an artist staking her claim in her identity.
PHOTO CREDIT: Randija Simmons
Even when speaking with Stephens, you can sense the excitement and joy emanating from her energy during the interview. As she put it, “this moment feels like the culmination of a lot of hard work, which I’m really excited about”.
Stephens, who calls herself the “sexy comedic relief”, has her artistry dating back to viral social media days almost 10 years ago on Tumblr as “beyoncebeytwice”. This era, marked by song covers and her extensive love of Beyoncé, catapulted her to over 200,000 followers on the platform.
The name even speaks to her musical influences, as she was “raised by Beyoncé”. Some of her other musical influences, such as Brandy, Janet Jackson, and Mariah Carey, are evident throughout her music, as seen in her 2019 solo-produced and written EP, F**k It I’ll Do It Myself. The use of layering, harmonies, writing, and arranging all harken back to the late 1990s to early 2000s hits of Darkchild and the Neptunes, with a more modern feel.
Beyond her own work, she has collaborated with artists such as THEY., VanJess, Khamari, and Xavier Omar, and has written for Jennifer Lopez, Normani, and Sinead Harnett. These collaborations only speak to the quality of the material (in the words of Tiffany “New York” Pollard) and the development of Stephens’s sound and musicality.
This sound, along with a further exploration of Stephens’s artistry, can be felt within her SELLOUT EP series. Blending the worlds of early 2000s pop stardom, R&B-infused sounds, and quotable catchy lyrics, SELLOUT from 2024 and the newly released SELLOUT II show her pulling out all the stops in her rising musical journey.
The EP series name emerged as a way for her to anticipate and address online critiques of her evolving sound after signing with Def Jam and Raedio in 2024, as well as to establish a new identity and persona within the music space.
“I wanted to play this part of this big pop star sellout, and I know the best way was to put on a face a little bit and get ahead of the jokes. It really helped me step into that light and build that world. What was acting a bit in the beginning has become really real to me, and I’m very comfortable and I’m very proud of it now.”
SELLOUT II evokes the feeling of being in a club under blue lights, reminiscent of an early 2000s music video. Thrusting pop blaring from the speakers on songs like “Afterbody” and “SMH”, to slow jam material with “Kiss It” and “That’s My Baby”, the EP is reminiscent of albums like Brandy’s Full Moon and Janet Jackson’s All for You with that heavy pop influence mixed with sounds of R&B and dance.
Obviously, the EP struck a chord with listeners, garnering over 3 million Spotify streams, countless viral video replies under tweets on X, and even an “Afterbody” feature on the most recent season of Love Island Games.
Jae’s newest release, “Boyfriend Forever”, extends the Sellout multiverse into a ‘90s new jack swing sound.
When talking about how “Boyfriend Forever” came about, she said, “It started with me and the producer Dallas, that week he was really obsessed with SWV and I was like, yeah, I want something like that that feels almost kind of innocent and carefree and like you’re flying a little bit.”
The song, which soars through from beginning to end like a classic New Edition, Bobby Brown, or aforementioned SWV song, feels like a blast from the past that still aligns itself within the world Stephens continues to create with the Sellout name.
Through all of her releases, her fans, affectionately known as the JaeBaes, fiercely support her on social media. From finding random tweets to quote-tweeting with the “Afterbody” music video, to having inside jokes within the fandom, her online presence, alongside her music, still rings strong to this day.
This connection fuels both her online presence and the avid fan support she garners online. Not only does she demonstrate how her music resonates with her audience, but also how she connects with them herself.
Looking forward, Stephens is currently hosting her Sellout podcast, which serves as a platform for her to speak and connect with other emerging Black talent in the entertainment world, such as MNEK, Alemeda, and Aliyah’s Interlude. Towards the tail-end of this year, she has shows in London, New York, and Los Angeles, as well as a potential SELLOUT II Deluxe on the horizon”.
PHOTO CREDIT: Bradley Meinz for NME
NME featured Jae Stephens on The Cover this month ahead of her upcoming appearance in London. This amazing songwriter has written for other artists and collaborated a bit, but she is now stepping firmly out on her own and “refocusing her lens on herself in pursuit of playful pop that is sweet yet spicy”. If you do not already know Jae Stephens, then do make sure that you go and follow her now. I was not aware that Stephens lived in London and fell for this country:
“London is where I became a woman,” says Stephens, who upped sticks from her balmy Californian home to the grey skies of Blighty straight out of high school, aged 18. “I was obsessed with it by way of One Direction, I’m not gonna lie to you,” says Stephens, whose fandom fixation garnered her a Tumblr-famous following of over 200,000, for whom she would also post cover songs. “From there, it snowballed into wanting to understand a whole other culture [and] music scene. I just think it was really meant to be.”
It didn’t take long for her to fall in love with British dry wit and offbeat fashion, and the chaos of the Tube, while she also met her management and participated in her first-ever songwriting sessions in the city. “It definitely felt like my coming-of-age movie,” the 27-year-old says of the two years she lived in the UK. “Then I started dating a British guy, and I was living my Wattpad dream!”
Even after moving back to LA, Stephens would return to the UK each year to hone her songwriting chops, writing for herself and others including Bryant Barnes, Sharylen, and Khamari. It wasn’t long before she found herself in the studio with superstar songwriter MNEK, whom she’d first heard on BBC Radio 1 during late-night essay-writing stints. Starstruck, it was one of the first times she felt out of her depth as a young artist in the studio.
Despite being an artist who writes with her tongue in her cheek, Stephens is well aware that Black female artists are subject to a different kind of scrutiny than their white peers when it comes to being sexy. It’s part of the reason why she prefers to lean into humour with her own music, without being too crude. “Black women are so overly sexualised from such a young age, I think that there should be a space for us, especially in music, to be seen as sexy or sexual without it being so brash. I was allowed to listen to songs like ‘Rock The Boat’ by Aaliyah as a young girl, but growing up, I was like, ‘What’s this girl singing about?’ I think that makes for better songwriting when you let people guess a little bit.”
Stephens sees the success of “late bloomer” pop artists like Charli XCX, Sabrina Carpenter, and Chappell Roan, who are finally getting their flowers, and wants to be in the mix. “I want to be, hashtag, main pop girl,” she says. “I really want now to see some Black girls be a part of that conversation, not only in pop, in every genre.” It’s part of the reason she started the Sellout Podcast, which has seen her celebrate Black talent and interview MNEK, Master Peace and Aliyah’s Interlude. “I want us to see that kind of widespread success.”
Now, with ‘Total Sellout’ complete, Stephens is looking to the future where she is more self-actualised, more confident, and more free as an artist. “We’re going to try more balls to the wall, and it’s going to be fun, fresh, free – whatever I want. I don’t have to hide behind anything, and I don’t have to follow anyone else’s rules or guidelines. It’s gonna be major”.
I was going to end there, though I want to drop in Shatter the Standards and some of their review for SELLOUT II. They salute an artist matching personality and polish. An authentic talent released this compelling, complete and cohesive statement:
“It’s not all sugar and no substance. Stephens marries the frothy pop moments with genuine technical skill and musical sophistication. She’s a self-professed “control freak” in the studio who often spends more time on intricate vocal arrangements and layering than on writing the initial lyrics, and it shows. Throughout the EP, her vocals are stacked in lush harmonies, call-and-response ad-libs, and cleverly arranged background parts that add depth beneath the glossy surface. Nowhere is her technical prowess more evident than on “SMH,” the EP’s energetic centerpiece. On this track, a slinky R&B banger that finds Stephens flexing over a knocking beat, she makes an audacious choice: in the bridge, she executes multiple unexpected key changes in rapid succession—effectively a series of hidden modulations that take the listener by surprise. The effect is thrilling and elevates the song’s final act; as Stephens herself put it, she “wanted the bridge to give a bit of musicality…turn it on its head. I was like, ‘What if we change keys like three times?’ Yes.”
Sellout II moves like a compact character study in two acts, front-half flirt and motion, back-half boundary-setting and self-possession, held together by Jae Stephens’s ear for clean hooks, stacked harmonies, and quick, classy lifts in the bridges. “Afterbody” is pure club confidence—“Body after body… I’m the one he want out of everybody”—but notice how she refuses the arms-race flex and centers presence over spectacle, the chorus tightening each time like a camera zoom. The back stretch does the framing work, starting with “Choosy” that turns pickiness into policy (“Don’t get emotional… I’m too pick-and-choosy, they’re losers”) over a beat that moves briskly enough to dodge self-righteousness, and it’s where her songwriter discipline shows in the ruthless edit of each line and the no-waste pre-chorus. “10/10” closes as self-appraisal and runway strut—“Tyra, top model chick, attitude, ten out of ten… Don’t gotta talk, I walk that shit”—with a gliding hook that sells the boast because the vocal stacks keep softening its edges.
Even as an EP, Sellout II succeeds in showcasing the duality at the core of Stephens’ artistry. On one hand, these songs are immaculately produced, hook-heavy, and pop-star ready—the kind of tracks that sparkle under club lights or in a summer playlist. On the other hand, there’s an intimacy and realness beneath the sheen, rooted in her perspective as a young woman navigating love and self-worth on her own terms. Rather than feeling at odds, those two sides enhance each other. The meticulous polish makes the personal moments hit even harder, and her personal stamp prevents the shiny pop from ever feeling anonymous. After repeated listens, we now have a much clearer picture of who Jae Stephens is. A bold, bilingual (musically speaking) artist fluent in both the language of mainstream pop fun and the dialect of soulful R&B honesty. If Sellout II is any indication, she’s effectively bridged the gap between depth and dance-floor, inviting us to enjoy ourselves and get to know her at the same time”.
I will leave it here. Some artists shine for a bit and fade, and others never really get the attention they deserve. When it comes to Jae Stephens, she is going to be a massive success! Her music, incredible talent and personality, together with her passion and intelligence, will ensure she is a modern legend. There really is…
NOTHING that will stop that!
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