On a quiet Thursday in downtown Peterborough, you can hear it before you see it—the low hum of conversation, the clink of pint glasses, and then that unmistakable voice. Inside The Black Horse Pub, Carling Stephen stands at the mic, cool and unhurried, letting each note spill into the room like warm light. Beside her, pianist Rob Phillips works the keys like a man in on a secret. Together, they own the night.
Carling isn’t just a singer—she’s a mood, a vibe, a living playlist that flips effortlessly from jazz to blues to soul, and then, just to show off, drops a French chanson into the mix. You might catch her in a candlelit church at the Music in the Hall series, where the acoustics turn her voice into something near-spiritual. Or maybe at Brushstrokes & Jazz, where her songs blend with the swirl of paint on canvas, creating something that feels like a memory in the making.
But it’s The Black Horse residency that’s become her heartbeat. Every Thursday, she turns a local pub into a listening room, pulling you in with smooth phrasing, just-right grit, and that rare ability to make even familiar songs feel like they were written for you.
She’s one of those artists you stumble upon by chance and then start planning your week around. And if you do, you’ll realize—Carling Stephen isn’t background music. She’s the reason you stayed for another drink.
Photo: Bryan Reid
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