Album Review & Artist Profile
The Lighthouse
Tessa Rose Jackson
A Voice That Found Its Name
Tessa Rose Jackson — born 22 August 1992 in London — is a Dutch-British singer, songwriter, composer, multi-instrumentalist and visual artist. Few artists navigate the space between indie folk and cinematic composition with the same fluency, yet Jackson has quietly done so for over a decade, working across records, screen, and stage with remarkable range.
She released her first album, (Songs From) The Sandbox, in 2013 under her own name before adopting the moniker Someone from 2017 onwards — a pseudonym that afforded her creative freedom while she developed her craft. Under that alias she released several acclaimed records, including the cult favourite Owls, and built a reputation for beguiling, layered songwriting that drew comparisons to Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush and Nick Drake.
Alongside her solo work, Jackson has forged a significant career as a film and television composer. Her screen credits include the true-crime drama De Sneeuwman (winner of a Buma Music In Media Award for Best Score), the animated feature Silver Bird and Rainbow Fish, and five original songs for the widely anticipated video game Life Is Strange: Double Exposure (2024). She also contributed vocals to the 2018 feature Terminal, starring Margot Robbie and Simon Pegg, and co-scored The Phantom Carriage, performed live with the Dutch Metropole Orchestra.
Based between Amsterdam and London, Jackson works from a home studio furnished with an extensive collection of vintage guitars and synthesisers, and maintains a dedicated space at the iconic Metropolis Studios in London. It is this dual world — the intimacy of a home and the grandeur of a professional studio — that lends her music its unique combination of tenderness and orchestral ambition.
By 2024, the Someone chapter was complete. "It did its work," she reflects. "It allowed me to develop in my own artistry without too much outside pressure. I feel like it did its job now, and I can go back to my own name." That return is marked, with no small amount of courage, by The Lighthouse.
"I could see the album before it was made. I knew the world I wanted it to live in — a slightly more out-of-time world, a little bit of ghostly folklore."
— Tessa Rose Jackson