It
might seem odd that in July of 1970 Cat Stevens would meet me in a pub off
Fleet Street in order to be interviewed for Melody Maker but the fact is the Red Lion in Red Lion
Alley was the venue for many such encounters between MM writers and stars of the future. Chris Welch can recall meeting David
Bowie there long before ‘Space Oddity’ and when Jimmy Page dropped by
unexpectedly to tell Chris about his new group Led Zeppelin Chris suggested
they nip into the Red Lion for a swift half.
This was one of the first interviews I
ever did for MM, and in hindsight it reads
a bit naïve, but I wasn’t to know – and neither was he – that I caught
Steve on the brink of his most successful period, just before the realise of his
Mona Bone Jakon LP. The next two
years would see him become the UK’s pre-eminent singer songwriter, with the
hugely successful albums Tea For The Tillerman and Teaser And The Firecat.
Nevertheless Cat Stevens was never really comfortable in the role of rock star
and the atmosphere surrounding him seemed quite different from that the others
whose albums topped the charts. As I noted in my book about him: “Though constantly surrounded by the rich and
fashionable, he maintained an uncharacteristically low profile for a successful
musician. There appeared around Stevens an aura of suppressed elegance: he
mixed not with the more hedonistic elements of the rock’n’roll world but with
society friends, introduced to him by his manager Barry Krost and his
publicist, the ever-energetic Tony Brainsby. He was courted by artists and
models, actors and actresses, debutantes, dress designers and fashion
photographers. Cat Stevens was not – and never would be – a rock’n’roll star
with all the overt, often tasteless, machismo that the title has come to imply.”
The other thing I noticed about Steve
was that girls adored him, especially rich, posh ones. Beautiful ones too, as I
noted to my immense delight when I saw Steve do a show at the Drury Lane
Theatre (not the sort of gig anyone else would do) and went to the aftershow at
some posh hotel where the other guests certainly didn’t look like the hard headed
women Steve sang about.
Last week saw the return of
Cat Stevens to the MM chart after a disappearance act
worthy of Houdini. It is 12 months since the release of his last single ‘Where
Are You’, which failed to register, and even longer since the day when the name
Cat Stevens on a record label meant instant success.
Cat has changed since the ‘Matthew’
days. A long spell in hospital with tuberculosis left him helpless for many
months – and the convalescence seems to have been endless.
Now the Cat is back – and chartbustin’ in his old familiar
manner. There’s an album due for release in September with 11 new songs all
written by Cat, and the single ‘Lady D’Arbanville’ is No 21 in the MM chart.
“At the moment we are working on this, the second album, but
we have almost finished it,” he told me. “We haven’t decided on a name for it but
there are two tracks which may provide a name. It will be out sometime in
September. I have just produced a single with Jimmy Cliff called ‘Wild World’
which will be released in two weeks’ time. It’s not a reggae number like his
other singles but the song suits him very well.
“They are a very mixed collection of numbers on the album
but we are doing it at just the right time. When I started recording the ‘vibes’
were just fantastic. It’s about a year since my last single was out – ‘Where
Are You’ a very slow one – and it didn’t get anywhere.
“I had to get everything right before I started again. The
situation and the timing was wrong before. There just wasn’t the time to do
things and it wasn’t the right time to do the things I set out to do.
“This week I am doing Top
Of The Pops and a programme
on BBC2 where I sing three songs, and I have got a couple festivals in August
in Holland and Belgium.
“I am still forming my own group and need a bass guitarist
to complete the line-up. We have Harvey Burns on drums and Alun Davies on
guitar, and they are playing on the album. They are just a backing group
really.
“It seems as if I am making a comeback but I have never
really been away. It’s very strange because the whole attitude changes and
everything is turned inside out. Now I am seeing the shiny side again.
“It has made all the difference to me because I had to have
that break. If it wasn’t the illness it had to be something else. Before I was
almost slaughtering myself working so hard and in no particular direction. Now
I feel alive much more than I have ever done.
“There are no plans yet for a follow-up single to the
current one. Basically the single was released as a promotion for the album
because it is on the album. Of course, we hoped it would get somewhere, but I
am more worried about the album than the single.
“The main thing is to concentrate on LP’s now. I only do
record producing when I feel like it and when there are artists I want to work
with. In my opinion all the musicians that ever take part in sessions are
producers.
“The album is my first long player on Island records and it
has taken two and a half months to do. With Deram, my old label, we got to the
point where I was going in one direction and they were going in another. We
eventually decided to quit it because nothing was happening. We just split.
They were very nice about it.”
I asked Cat who he was listening to himself. “At the moment
I’m a big fan of Frank Zappa and Elton John, but I dig anybody who is making
good sounds. For a long time I was feeling very bad because I wasn’t doing anything.
I wanted to contribute but the timing was not right. I may have been out of
things but I have been listening very intently to what has been going on.”
Cat is currently moving house – from a flat in London’s
Shaftsbury Avenue to a three storey house in Fulham which he hopes will be much
more peaceful than in the centre of town. “I have been painting a lot recently
in the last six month. I am really having a great time with my water colours,”
he said.
“Art was what I originally started out to do and music came
second at first. I had a year at art college but I left because it was too much
like school. I give all my paintings away to people I like.”
He is currently raving over a 21st birthday present, which
we can expect to see him experimenting with in future photos. It’s a great
hemisphere depicting the sky with the earth, moon and sun revolving around
inside. It’s driven by an electric motor and the various stars and planets
light up.
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