Journalism Stanley was educated at
Whitgift School in
Croydon, London. After leaving school, Stanley worked in various record shops. While working at
Virgin Records in
Peterborough he met
Andrew Midgley (with whom he would later create the group
Cola Boy). The two produced a fanzine called
Pop Avalanche in 1986. Stanley also wrote four issues of
Caff, a fanzine created with childhood friend
Pete Wiggs (with whom he would later form Saint Etienne). In 1987, Stanley sent an issue of
Caff to
James Brown, then live reviews editor for
NME. This led to Stanley's first commissioned work, a review of a
Johnny Cash show in Peterborough. After two years he moved to
Melody Maker, where he wrote regularly until Saint Etienne became a full-time occupation in 1991. Even as Saint Etienne dominated his career, Stanley continued to write occasionally for
The Face and
Mojo in the 1990s. In the 2000s he has returned to journalism, writing about art and architecture as well as music. He contributes regularly to various publications including
The Times and
The Guardian. Books Stanley has written two books that document the history of popular music. The 2013 book
Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Story of Modern Pop examines the history of pop music from the publication of the first British pop chart in 1952 until the advent of
iTunes. Reviewing the book in
The American Conservative, Robert Dean Lurie wrote: “What a joy it is to find a music writer who didn’t get the rock-critic memo—the one that says you’re supposed to worship at the altar of punk rock, praise
Radiohead, and hate
the Eagles. Stanley has plenty of nice things to say about the Eagles,
the Bee Gees,
Hall and Oates, and
Abba.” In 2022, Stanley published a follow-up book ''Let's Do It: The Birth of Pop Music: A History,
which examines the history of popular music from the beginning of recorded sound until the advent of rock and roll in the 1950s. Reviewing the book in The Guardian'',
Alexis Petridis wrote: “Its 656 pages are a perfect guidebook, filled with smart thinking and the kind of communicable enthusiasm that sends you rushing to the nearest streaming service, eager to hear what all the fuss was about.” In 2007, with
Paul Kelly, Stanley edited
Match Day, a book of football programme artwork. In 2023, Stanley published
Bee Gees: Children of the World, a biography of the
Bee Gees, with Nine Eight Books, an imprint of
Bonnier Books. Stanley was the winner of the 2017 Eccles
British Library Writers in Residence Award, which supported his research for ''Let's Do It'' using the Library's American collections. ==Film==