The second part on my chapter about Yusuf's early career.
The
first editorial mention of Cat Stevens to appear in the London pop press was in
Melody Maker on October 22. A brief
anonymous feature revealed that his real name was Steve Adams, that he had written over 40 songs and that his ambition was
to write a musical. “‘I Love My Dog’ was written some time ago,” Steve told the
MM’s interviewer. “I had the melody
but I didn’t want to waste it on corny lyrics. Despite what some people say I
don’t think the song is corny. It has a meaning for me. Actually I can’t own a
dog… it is unhygienic in a restaurant. I did have one called Columbus but I had
to get rid of it.”
The MM
feature also revealed that negotiations were under way for Stevens to visit
America and that TV dates had been fixed in Belgium, France and Germany. “Plans
for a tour and an album are being held back until we know how big a hit ‘I Love
My Dog’ will be,” added Steve.
In the event, Steve played his first live
dates as a recording artist in November but Hurst, as his manager, was in two
minds about adding his protégé to a package tour. “He was not a good live
performer. He did not add anything to the strength of his records because he
was still so nervous, totally edgy. He admitted to me many times as he smoked
his Woodbines, forty or fifty of them a day.”
As a warm-up for bigger things, a short
tour of Scotland was arranged for November to be followed by club, ballroom and
cabaret dates in December. “We used a group called George Bean and The Runners
as a supporting act and they backed Steve for his part of the show,” says
Hurst. “He hated it… absolutely loathed it and I didn’t blame him at all. They
were virtually living in a van all the time… most uncomfortable.”
The Scottish dates were followed by
appearances around Tyneside and at Epping, Morecambe, Huntingdon, Birmingham
and Trowbridge before Steve flew to France for three shows at the Paris Olympia
in mid-December. These turned out to be a pre-amble for Steve’s most important
showcase to date, a two week season at Brian Epstein’s Savile Theatre in London
sharing a bill with Georgie Fame, Julie Felix and Sounds Incorporated. The
season was called “Fame in ‘67 Show” and, by all accounts, there was a
pantomime atmosphere to the 14 concerts. The run opened on Boxing Day.
“I was petrified because I knew it wasn’t
going to be comfortable… that it was just what Steve didn’t like,” says Hurst.
“I advised him to do something crazy on stage, to act weird by sitting on top
of an amplifier cross–legged, to do something eccentric.
“He said that’s what he would do but when
it came to the opening night he didn’t do any of those things. He was dressed
in black velvet suit with a frilly white shirt but it was just a very negative
performance that didn’t help him at all.”
Cat Stevens’ second single ‘Matthew And
Son’ was released by Deram in the first week of January 1967. Inspired by the
London firm of Foster Wheeler Power Products, Steve took the title Matthew And
Son from a sign he had spotted on his travels around the city. The lyrics were
based on a Dickensian theme in which oppressed labour suffers at the hands of
dictatorial owner management. It was unusually socio-sympathetic for its time.
“We did a demo of it with just Steve on
guitar and I took it to play to Tony Hall who was the head of promotion at
Decca,” recalls Hurst. “He didn’t like it at all but I went ahead and recorded
it anyway with about 25 musicians, strings and everything, even a harp. Still
Decca didn’t like it, but they released it anyway and I took the first
promotional copy to Allan Keen at Radio London who had been very helpful at plugging
the first record. He didn’t like it either but he agreed to play it for a week
to see if it would catch on. I remember having a bet with him for a pint of
beer if it was a hit.
“That same week Cat did Pop Inn for the Light Programme at the
BBC’s Paris Studio in Lower Regent Street and while we were there recording the
show Tony Hall came rushing in to tell us that ‘Matthew And Son’ had sold 30,000 copies in one day.”
By a not so curious coincidence, ‘Matthew
And Son’ was reviewed in Melody Maker’s Blind Date feature by
Georgie Fame and Julie Felix, the two artists who shared the bill with Steve at
the Savile Theatre during the post-Christmas run. Here are their comments:
Julie Felix: “I have to get ready for my spot when I hear him sing this one in
the show. I put my dress on and go to the wings”; Georgie Fame: “The other side
is great as well. It’s got a good trumpet thing that comes out better in the
show than on the record. It will definitely be a hit. It’s a strong
double-sider. I was never anti-Cat Stevens but now I’m completely knocked out.
Unanimous hit.”
‘Matthew And Son’ entered the charts a week after release and rose to number two,
the highest position a single by Steve would ever reach in his home country.
Occupying the top position at the time was ‘I’m A Believer’ by The Monkees, the
US teenybop outfit whose star was firmly on the ascendant and whose British
born lead singer had jetted into London from California that same month to grab
the headlines by revealing that the group did not play on their own records.
The revelation did little to curb the hysteria amongst their teenage fans.
A month later Stevens was back in the
British charts, albeit in the bracketed small print reserved for composers
beneath the name of the performer.
‘Here Comes My Baby’, the début hit by
Brian Poole’s former backing band The Tremeloes, was one of the first songs
that Steve had ever written, well before he encountered Mike Hurst. It was
written at a time when Steve considered his potential as a songwriter far
outweighed his chances as a performer.
Later the same year, during May, he would
score further success as a songwriter when P.P. Arnold took a Mike Hurst
production of ‘First Cut Is The Deepest’ to number 18 in the charts. This same
song, of course, provided Rod Stewart with half of a double A-sided Number One
(coupled with ‘I Don’t Want To Talk About It’) in April 1977.
While ‘Matthew And Son’ maintained its lofty chart position,
Stevens was interviewed by Chris Welch of Melody
Maker. “I remember the occasion well,” says Welch today. “Cat announced
that he had given up drinking and smoking. Then he promptly ordered a double
vodka and chain-smoked for an hour and a half. He said they always tasted
better if you’d given them up. We had several rounds but he never paid once. I
thought he must be a tight-fisted fellow, especially since he must be making a
bit of money from those two hit records.”
The subsequent feature was peppered with
the kind of enigmatic quotes for which Steve would later become well known.
“You have to be yourself to stay alive in the business,” he told Welch. “You
mustn’t start believing what people say about you or you’re in trouble. Believe
in yourself – that’s very important.
“I’m not worried about having an image or
not. I want fans to like the good things about me and forget the bad things. I
suppose they see me as someone new and wonder what I’m like. I think new
artists can injure themselves when they start knocking people before their feet
are on the ground. That way they can fall over. It’s very good for me that
there have been so few solo artists around compared with the number of groups.
I’m learning from other people’s mistakes but I’m lucky. Material is the most
important thing and I’m lucky because I’ve got Me and Me writes songs for myself.
I love writing songs. When I feel down I start to write.
“Two years ago when I was just playing
guitar I thought I was ‘it’ and if anybody said anything against me I was
terrible and I had it in for them. These days everybody is trying to do
something or other and how do you knock that? I think it is a very healthy
scene at the moment. Everybody is growing. The scene will change and people
will get more sophisticated. Teenagers in particularly want their tastes
recognised.
“They loved it when parents liked The
Beatles. This is great and the day of the rebel thing is over. I think we all
want to be one happy mass and teenagers want to be part of swinging England.
There is now less of a division between young and older people.”
During the same month, Steve was the
subject of Melody Maker’s Pop Think
In – an extended word association test in which artists gave their views on
random subjects. On the subject of Brian Epstein, Stevens expanded his remarks
to include managers in general and commented on his relationship with Mike
Hurst. “We are so good for each other,” he said. “When we sit down to work out
arrangements we just click straight away.”
His comments on various other topics
provide an interesting insight into Stevens’ thought process at the time. On “depression”
he said: “I get a lot of that at parties and big gatherings. I’ve got to be
really stoned to really enjoy a party. I write songs to get out of depressions
– I believe that to write a good song you have to feel a bit hurt. I don’t
write many happy tunes. You will be thoroughly depressed after you’ve heard my
LP – but please buy it before you shoot yourself. At art school I used to get
depressed and go on to the fire exit stairs and play guitar. They found out…
that’s why I had to leave.”
On “restaurants” he said: “I used to work
in my father’s place when I was about ten, waiting on customers. I grew to
really hate it. Now I tip waiters too heavily because I know what they are
going through. I like eating in good restaurants like Isow’s.”
On “sport” he said: “I used to love
sports. There is a swimming pool opposite our place and I used to go every day
and increase the number of lengths each time. But in cold weather I got this
thing where my hands went yellow and I had to stop. Pop stars need to be fit.
It’s very important to build yourself up.”
On “smoking” he said: “I smoke too much.
I force myself to throw my matches away so I don’t have a cigarette too early
in the morning. Once I start smoking I carry on all day. I daren’t count how
many I smoke. I keep wondering what the inside of my lungs look like. Still,
smoking calms me – though that’s probably psychological.”
On “Folk music” he said: “That’s where I
came from. I still have a tinge in me. The sort of melody in folk songs used to
get me – when I write a song it’s the melody first. I used to write folk songs
and maybe I’ll release them on an EP. I was never really accepted in the folk
world because I was too progressive – they only want Dominic Behan and the
traditional stuff. Next year they will be singing the same things and the year after. I can’t stand that.”
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