Yusuf Islam
(formerly Cat Stevens) |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Steven Demetre Georgiou |
| Born |
July 21, 1948 (1948-07-21) (age 59) |
| Origin |
London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Folk rock, pop, soft rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer-songwriter |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals, guitar, classical
guitar, ovation guitar, bass
guitar, electric mandolin, bouzouki, keyboards, harpsichord,
polymoog,
penny
whistle, drums,
percussion |
| Years active |
1966–1978, 2006–present |
| Label(s) |
Island Records, A&M,
Polydor,
Mountain of Light, Jamal |
| Website |
www.catstevens.com
www.yusufislam.org.uk |
Yusuf Islam
(Arabic:
يوسف إسلام) (born Steven Demetre Georgiou
on 21
July 1948 in
London),
who was known as Cat Stevens from 1966 to 1978, is
an English
musician,
singer-songwriter, educator, philanthropist
and prominent convert
to Islam.
Under the name "Cat Stevens," he has sold over 60 million
albums around the world since the late 1960s. His albums Tea
for the Tillerman and Teaser and the Firecat
were both certified by the RIAA as having achieved Triple
Platinum status in the United States (three million sales
each); his album Catch Bull at Four
sold half a million copies in the first two weeks of release and was Billboard's
number-one LP for three consecutive weeks. His songwriting has also
earned him two ASCAP
songwriting awards (for "The First Cut Is the
Deepest," which has been a hit single for four different artists.)
At the height of his fame, in 1977, Stevens converted to Islam. In 1978, he
adopted the name Yusuf Islam, leaving his music career to devote
himself to educational and philanthropic causes in the Muslim community.
As a high-profile voice for Islam, he caused controversy in 1989 with
public statements
that were widely interpreted as support for the fatwa against Salman
Rushdie, an interpretation which he has denied. In 2006, he returned to
pop music, with his first album of new pop songs in 28 years, entitled An
Other Cup.
He has been given several awards for his work in promoting
peace in the world, including the 2004 Man
for Peace award and the 2007 Mediterranean Prize for Peace. He lives
with his wife, Fauzia Mubarak Ali, and five children in Brondesbury
Park, London,
and spends part of each year in Dubai.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life (1948–1965)
- 2 Musical
career (1966–1978)
- 2.1 Early
musical career
- 2.2 Comeback
after tuberculosis
- 2.3 Success
- 2.4 Conversion
to Islam
- 3 Life
as Yusuf Islam (1978–present)
- 3.1 Islamic
faith and musical career
- 3.2 Salman
Rushdie controversy
- 3.3 September
11 attacks
- 3.4 Denial
of entry into the United States
- 3.5 Return
to music
- 4 Awards
- 5 Discography
- 5.1 As
Cat Stevens
- 5.2 As
Yusuf Islam
- 5.3 Compilations
- 6 See
also
- 7 Notes
and references
- 8 Further
reading
- 9 External
links
|
Early life (1948–1965)
Steven Georgiou was the third child of a Greek-Cypriot
father (Stavros Georgiou) and a Swedish mother (Ingrid Wickman). The
family lived above Moulin Rouge, the restaurant that his parents
operated on Shaftesbury Avenue, a few steps
from Piccadilly Circus in the Soho area of London.
His whole family worked in the restaurant.
Although his father was Greek
Orthodox and his mother a Baptist, Steven was sent to a Catholic
school, St. Joseph Roman Catholic Primary School in Macklin Street.
When Steven was about eight years old, his parents divorced,
but both continued to run the restaurant and live above it. At age 12,
Steven, who already played the piano, began to play guitar and write
songs. A few years later, his mother returned with him to Gävle, Sweden, where he
started developing his drawing skills, influenced by his uncle Hugo, a
painter.
At age 16, he left school and was accepted, then later
dismissed from, Hammersmith Art School.
Although he enjoyed art — his later record albums would feature his
original artwork on the covers — Steven wanted to establish a musical
career. It was during this period he was first influenced by folk music.
Musical career (1966–1978)
Early musical career
He began to perform his songs in coffee houses and pubs.
Thinking that his Greek name might not be memorable as a stage name -
"I couldn't imagine anyone going to the record store and asking for
that Stephen Demetre Georgiou album. And in England, and I was sure in
America, they loved animals."
- he started calling himself Cat Stevens,
reportedly chosen because a girlfriend said he had eyes like a cat. In
1966, at age 18, he impressed manager/producer Mike
Hurst (formerly of British vocal group The
Springfields) with his songs and Hurst arranged for him to
record a demo and then helped him get a record deal; the first singles,
"I
Love My Dog" and "Matthew and Son" (the title song
from his debut album, released in the beginning of 1967) reached
Britain's Top 10, and the album Matthew
and Son itself began charting.
Over the next two years, Stevens recorded and toured - with
artists ranging from Jimi Hendrix to Engelbert Humperdinck
- and Stevens was considered a teen pop sensation, placing several
single releases in the British pop music charts. Some of
that success was attributed to the pirate radio station Wonderful Radio London, which
played his records. (In August 1967, he went on the air with other
recording artists who had benefited from the pirate station to mourn
its closure.)
His December 1967 album New
Masters failed to chart in the United Kingdom;
but the album is now most notable for his song "The First Cut Is the
Deepest" which has become an international hit for P.P.
Arnold, Keith Hampshire, Rod
Stewart and Sheryl Crow, and has won several
song-writing awards.
Stevens was living a fast-moving pop-star life and in early
1968 at the age of 19, he became very ill with tuberculosis.
During several months in the hospital and a year of convalescence,
Stevens began to question aspects of his life, took up meditation, read
about other religions and became a vegetarian.
In that time, as part of his spiritual awakening and questioning, he
wrote as many as 40 songs, which were much more introspective than his
previous work. Many of those songs were to appear on his albums in
years to come.
Comeback after tuberculosis
Now healthy, armed with a new perspective on what he wanted to
bring to the world with his music, and a catalog of introspective
songs, the stage was set for international stardom. He landed a new
record contract with an American distribution deal in 1970, signing
with Island Records (then rival A&M
Records in North America), and released Mona
Bone Jakon, a folk-based album that was much different
from his more "pop" style earlier records, drawing on his new,
introspective work. The album featured the songs "Lady D'Arbanville,"
which was written for Stevens' girlfriend at the time, actress Patti
D'Arbanville; "Pop Star," about his experience as a teen star; and
"Katmandu," featuring Genesis frontman Peter
Gabriel playing flute. Mona Bone Jakon
was an early example of the solo singer-songwriter
album that would later become very popular for other artists as well.
It was followed by Stevens' international breakthrough album, Tea
for the Tillerman, which became a number-one Billboard
hit and reached Gold record status within six months of release (at
least 500,000 sales) in the United States and in Britain, combining
Stevens' new folk style with accessible lyrics that spoke of everyday
situations and problems, mixed with some spiritual imagery. Tea
for the Tillerman features the top-10 single "Wild
World", "Hard-Headed Woman," and "Father
and Son," a unique, double-voiced, autobiographical, song. In 2001,
this album was certified by the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) as a Multi-Platinum record,
meaning it had sold 3 million copies in the United States at that time.
It is included at #206
in Rolling Stone magazine's 2003 listing of the "500 Greatest
Albums of All Time".
With the success of Tea for the Tillerman,
Stevens was no longer opening for other acts on tour--he launched his
own tour and became a star. During this period, he was romantically
linked to singer Carly Simon whose top 50 songs "Legend
in Your Own Time" and "Anticipation" were written about Stevens.
Success
Having established a signature sound, Stevens enjoyed a string
of successes over the following years. The Teaser and the Firecat
LP album (1971) reached number two and achieved gold record status
within three weeks of its release in the US. It yielded several hits,
including "Peace
Train," "Morning Has Broken" (a Christian
hymn with lyrics by Eleanor Farjeon), and "Moonshadow."
This album was also certified by the RIAA as a Multi-Platinum record in 2001, with
over three million US sales up until then.
When interviewed on a Boston radio station, Stevens said about
Teaser:
"I get the tune and then I just keep on singing the tune
until the words come out from the tune. It's kind of a hypnotic state
that you reach after a while when you keep on playing it where words
just evolve from it. So you take those words and just let them go
whichever way they want... 'Moonshadow'? Funny, that was in Spain, I
went there alone, completely alone, to get away from a few things. And
I was dancin' on the rocks there... right on the rocks where the waves
were like blowin' and splashin'. Really, it was so fantastic. And the
moon was bright, ya know, and I started dancin' and singin' and I sang
that song and it stayed. It's just the kind of moment that you want to
find when you're writin' songs."
Also in 1971, several of his songs were used in the soundtrack
to the movie Harold and Maude,
including at least one that had not been on any album prior to its
inclusion on a second "greatest hits" collection many years later. Harold
and Maude would go on to become a cult hit, popular for
decades, bringing Stevens' music to a wide audience, long after he
stopped recording.
His next album, Catch
Bull at Four, released in 1972, was his most
rapidly successful album - reaching Gold record status in 15 days, and
holding the number-one position on the Billboard
charts for three weeks. This album continued the introspective and
spiritual lyrics that he was known for, combined with a rougher-edged
voice and a less acoustic sound than his previous records. "Sweet
Scarlet" was his response to Carly Simon's two songs about him. The
single "Sitting" was released from this album, and charted at #16. Catch
Bull at Four was Platinum certified in 2001.
Subsequent releases in the 1970s also did well on the charts
and in ongoing sales; his final album under the name Cat Stevens was Back to Earth,
released in late 1978. Several compilation albums were released before
and after he stopped recording; the most successful of which was the
1975 Greatest Hits
which has sold over 4 million copies in the United States. In May 2003
he received his first Platinum Europe Award
from the IFPI
for Remember Cat Stevens, The Ultimate Collection,
indicating over one million European sales.
In 1977, Stevens secured his last chart hit with "(Remember
The Days Of The) Old Schoolyard", a duet with fellow UK singer Elkie
Brooks, although she remains uncredited on the release.
His last performance before his subsequent return to music was
at The Year of the Child concert in Wembley Stadium, on November
22, 1979.
Conversion to Islam
When Stevens nearly drowned in an accident in Malibu
in 1975,
he reports having pleaded with God to save him. Stevens described the event in
a VH1
interview some years later: "I suddenly held myself and I said, 'Oh
God! If you save me, I'll work for you.'" The near-death
experience intensified his long-held quest for spiritual truth. He had
looked into Buddhism "Zen and I Ching, numerology, tarot cards and
astrology",
but when his brother David gave him a copy of the Qur'an, Stevens
began to find peace with himself and began his transition to Islam.
He formally converted to the Islamic faith in 1977 and took
the name Yusuf Islam in 1978,
saying that he "always loved the name Joseph" and was particularly
drawn to the story of Joseph in the Qur'an.
(Yusuf is the Arabic version of the name Joseph.)
Life as Yusuf Islam
(1978–present)
Islamic faith and musical career
Following his conversion, Yusuf Islam abandoned his career as
a pop
star. Song and the use of musical instruments is an area of debate in Muslim jurisprudence,
considered Harām
by some, and is the primary reason he gave for retreating from the pop
spotlight.
He decided to use the continuing wealth he earns from his
music career
on philanthropic and educational causes in the Muslim community of
London and elsewhere. In 1981, he founded the Islamia Primary School in
Salisbury Road in the north London area of Kilburn; after
that, he founded several Islamic secondary schools and devoted his
energy to providing an Islamic education to children and to charitable
causes. He founded, and is chairman of, the Small
Kindness charity, which initially assisted famine victims in Africa and now
supports thousands of orphans and families in the Balkans, Indonesia,
and Iraq.
He also was chairman of the charity Muslim Aid from 1985 to 1993.
In 1985, Yusuf Islam decided to return to the public
spotlight, for the first time since his religious conversion, at the
historic Live
Aid concert, inspired by the famine threatening Ethiopia.
Though he had written a song especially for the occasion, his
appearance was skipped when Elton John's set ran too long.
Salman Rushdie controversy
-
Main article: Cat
Stevens' comments about Salman Rushdie
The singer attracted controversy in 1989, during an address to
students at London's Kingston University, where he
was asked about the fatwa
calling for the death of author Salman Rushdie. Newspapers quickly
interpreted his response as support for the fatwa, but he released a
statement the following day clarifying that he had not been supporting vigilantism,
and was merely explaining the legal Islamic punishment for blasphemy.
While there has been an on-going debate over the degree to
which the singer supported the assassination of Rushdie, the incident
left an indelible mark on his reputation as a "man of peace".
He maintains that he was misinterpreted.
September 11 attacks
Yusuf Islam immediately and vehemently spoke out against the
September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, saying:
- "I wish to express my heartfelt horror at the
indiscriminate terrorist attacks committed against innocent people of
the United States yesterday. While it is still not clear who carried
out the attack, it must be stated that no right thinking follower of
Islam could possibly condone such an action: The Qur'an equates the
murder of one innocent person with the murder of the whole of humanity.
We pray for the families of all those who lost their lives in this
unthinkable act of violence as well as all those injured; I hope to
reflect the feelings of all Muslims and people around the world whose
sympathies go out to the victims of this sorrowful moment."
He appeared on videotape on a VH-1 pre-show for the October
2001 Concert for New York
City, condemning the attacks and singing his song Peace
Train for the first time in public in more than 20 years--an a cappella
version. He also donated half of his box-set royalties to the September
11 Fund for victims' families, and the other half to orphans in
underdeveloped countries.
Denial of entry into the United
States
On 21 September 2004, Yusuf Islam was
traveling on a United Airlines flight from London to Washington,
en route to a meeting with singer Dolly Parton, who had recorded his "Peace
Train" several years earlier and was planning to include another Cat
Stevens song on an upcoming album. While the plane was in flight, the Computer
Assisted Passenger Prescreening System flagged his name as being on a no-fly
list. Customs agents alerted the Transportation
Security Administration, which then diverted his flight to Bangor,
Maine,
where he was detained by the FBI.
The following day, Yusuf Islam was deported back to the United
Kingdom. The United States
Transportation Security Administration claimed there were "concerns of
ties he may have to potential terrorist-related activities." The United
States Department of Homeland Security specifically alleged that Yusuf
Islam had provided funding to the Palestinian Islamic militant group Hamas. However,
Islam was admitted without incident into the United States in December
2006 for several radio concert performances and interviews to promote
his new record.
Yusuf Islam's 2004 deportation provoked a small international
controversy and led the British Secretary
of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Jack Straw to complain
personally to US Secretary of State Colin
Powell at the United Nations. Powell responded by
stating that the watch list was under review, and added,
"I think we have that obligation to review these matters to see if we
are right."
Yusuf Islam believes his inclusion on the watch list
may have simply been an error, a mistaken identification of him for a
man with the same name, but different spelling. On 1 October 2004 Yusuf Islam
requested the removal of his name, "I remain bewildered by the decision
of the US authorities to refuse me entry to the United States."
According to a statement by Yusuf Islam, the man on the list was named
"Youssef Islam", indicating that Yusuf Islam himself was not the
suspected terrorism supporter.
Libel case victory
After the U.S. government deported Yusuf Islam, The
Sun and The
Sunday Times British newspapers in October 2004
stated that the U.S. was correct in its action. Yusuf Islam sued for libel and received a
substantial out-of-court "agreed settlement" and apologies from the
newspapers.
Both newspapers acknowledged that Yusuf Islam has never supported
terrorism and that, to the contrary, he had recently been given a Man
for Peace award from the private Nobel
Peace Prize Laureates Committee.
Yusuf Islam responded that he was " ...delighted by the
settlement [which] helps vindicate my character and good name.... It
seems to be the easiest thing in the world these days to make
scurrilous accusations against Muslims, and in my case it directly
impacts on my relief work and damages my reputation as an artist. The
harm done is often difficult to repair," and added that he intended to
donate the financial award given to him by the court to help orphans of
the tsunami in the Indian
Ocean.
Yusuf Islam wrote about the experience in a newspaper article
titled "A Cat in a Wild World".
Return to music
For several years during the 1990s, Yusuf Islam made
recordings featuring lyrics about Islamic themes accompanied only by
basic percussion instruments, which he felt were acceptable to his
faith. In the late 1990s, he was featured as a guest singer of "God Is
the Light" on an album by the Nasheed group, Raihan. He produced a children's album in
2000 called A Is for Allah
after realizing there were few materials designed to educate children
about Islam.
He also established the record label called Mountain
of Light Productions, which donates a percentage of its proceeds to
Islam's Small Kindness charity.
On the occasion of the 2000 re-release of his Cat Stevens
albums, Yusuf explained that he had stopped performing in English due
to his misunderstanding of the Islamic faith. "This issue of music in
Islam is not as cut-and-dried as I was led to believe . . . I relied on
heresy (sic),
that was perhaps my mistake."
In 2003, after repeated encouragement from within the Muslim
world, Yusuf Islam once again recorded the song "Peace
Train" for a compilation CD, which also included performances by David
Bowie and Paul McCartney. He also
performed "Wild World" in Nelson Mandela's 46664
concert with his former session player Peter
Gabriel, for which he publicly performed in English for the
first time in 25 years. In December 2004, he and Ronan
Keating released a new version of "Father and Son". It debuted at
number two, behind Band Aid 20's "Do They Know It's
Christmas?". The proceeds of "Father and Son" were donated to the Band
Aid charity. Keating's former group, Boyzone, had a hit with the song a
decade earlier.
In a 2005 press release, he explains his revived recording
career:
After I embraced Islam many people told me to carry on
composing and recording but at the time I was hesitant for fear that it
might be for the wrong reasons. I felt unsure what the right course of
action was. I guess it is only now after all these years that I've come
to fully understand and appreciate what everyone has been asking of me.
It's as if I've come full circle - however, I have gathered a lot of
knowledge on the subject in the meantime.
In early 2005, Yusuf Islam released a new song entitled
"Indian Ocean" about the 2004 tsunami disaster. The song featured Indian
composer/producer A. R. Rahman; A-ha keyboard player, Magne
Furuholmen and Travis drummer, Neil
Primrose. Proceeds of the single went to help orphans in Banda
Aceh, one of the areas worst affected by the tsunami, through Islam's Small
Kindness charity. At first, the single was released only through
several online music stores but later
highlighted the compilation album Cat Stevens: Gold.
On 28
May 2005
Yusuf Islam delivered a keynote speech and performed at the Adopt-A-Minefield
Gala in Düsseldorf. The Adopt-A-Minefield charity, under the patronage
of Sir Paul McCartney, works
internationally to raise awareness and funds to clear landmines and
rehabilitate landmine survivors. Yusuf Islam attended as part of an
honorary committee which also included Sir George
Martin, Sir Richard Branson, Dr. Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, Klaus Voormann, Christopher
Lee and others.
In mid-2005,
Yusuf Islam played guitar for the Dolly Parton album entitled, Those
Were the Days, on her version of his "Where Do
the Children Play". (Parton had also covered "Peace Train" a few years
earlier.)
In May 2006, in anticipation of his forthcoming new pop album,
the BBC1 programme "Imagine" aired a 49-minute documentary with Alan
Yentob called Yusuf: The Artist formerly Known as Cat Stevens.
This documentary film features rare audio and video clips from the late
1960s and 1970s, as well as an extensive interview with Yusuf Islam,
his brother, several record executives, Bob
Geldof, Dolly
Parton, and others outlining his career as Cat Stevens, his conversion
and emergence as Yusuf Islam, and his return to music in 2006. There
are clips of him singing in the studio when he was recording An
Other Cup as well as a few 2006 excerpts of him on guitar
singing a few verses of old Cat Stevens songs including "The Wind" and
"On the Road to Find Out".
In numerous interviews Yusuf has credited his 21 year old son
Muhammad Islam, also a musician and artist, for his father's return to
secular music, when the son brought a guitar back into the house, which
Yusuf began playing.
Muhammad's professional name is believed to be "Yoriyos"
and his debut album was released in February 2007.
Yoriyos also created the art on Yusuf's album An Other Cup.
Starting in 2006, the Cat Stevens song "Tea for The Tillerman"
was used as the theme tune for the Ricky
Gervais BBC-HBO sitcom Extras.
A Christmas-season television commercial for gift-giving by the diamond
industry aired in 2006 with Cat Power's cover of "How Can I Tell You".
On 11 December 2006, Yusuf was one of the artists that
performed at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert
in Oslo, Norway, in honour
of the prize winners, Muhammad Yunus and Grameen
Bank. He performed the songs "Midday (Avoid City After Dark)", "Peace Train", and "Heaven/Where True Love Goes".
In December 2006, Yusuf flew to New York City to give a
concert at "Jazz at Lincoln Center". The concert was recorded by KCRW
and Yusuf was interviewed by Nic Harcourt during the concert. The
concert was broadcast on December 21, 2006. Alun Davies, who was always
by Yusuf's side playing guitar in the Cat Stevens days, was with him
and they performed their magic once again. Yusuf also gave several
interviews to other radio stations around New York and Philadelphia. He
played guitar and sang live during these interviews and most of them
are still available to listen to online.
On July 1st 2007, Yusuf performed at a concert in Bochum,
Germany, in benefit of Archbishop Desmond Tutu's Peace Centre in South
Africa and the Milagro Foundation of Carlos and Deborah Santana. The
audience included Nobel Laureates Mikhail Gorbachev, Desmond Tutu and
other prominent global figures.
Yusuf was one of the main acts to appear at the German leg of Live Earth
in Hamburg
on July
7, 2007. He
was the Hamburg finale act, performing some classic Cat Stevens and
more recent compositions reflecting his concern for peace and child
welfare, ending the formal set with Stevie Wonder's "Saturn" prior to
an encore performance of "Peace Train". Yusuf also played the
classic songs, "Where Do the Children Play?", "Ruins", and "Wild World."
An Other Cup
-
Main article: An
Other Cup
In March 2006, Yusuf Islam finished recording his first
all-new pop album since 1978.
The album, An Other Cup,
was released internationally in November 2006 on his own label, Ya
Records (distributed by Polydor Records in the UK and
internationally by Atlantic Records) — the 40th
anniversary of his first album, Matthew
and Son. A single was simultaneously released
from the album, called "Heaven/Where True Love Goes". The album was
produced with Rick Nowels, who has worked with Dido
and Rod
Stewart. The performer is noted as "Yusuf", with a cover
label identifying him as "the artist formerly known as Cat Stevens".
The art on the album is credited to Yoriyos. Yusuf Islam wrote all of
the songs except "Don't Let Me Be
Misunderstood",
and recorded it in the United States and the United
Kingdom.
Yusuf actively promoted this album, appearing on radio and
television and in print interviews. He was interviewed by the BBC in
November 2006, "It's me, so it's going to sound like that of course . .
. This is the real thing. . . . When my son brought the guitar back
into the house, you know, that was the turning point. It opened a flood
of, of new ideas and music which I think a lot of people would connect
with."
Asked in a November 2006 Billboard
magazine interview
about why the artist is credited as "Yusuf" rather than "Yusuf Islam",
he said, "Because 'Islam' doesn't have to be sloganized. The second
name is like the official tag, but you call a friend by their first
name. It's more intimate, and to me that's the message of this record."
As for why the sleeve says "the artist formerly known as Cat
Stevens", he responded, "That's the tag with which most people are
familiar; for recognition purposes I'm not averse to that. For a lot of
people, it reminds them of something they want to hold on to. That name
is part of my history and a lot of the things I dreamt about as Cat
Stevens have come true as Yusuf Islam."
On CBS Sunday Morning in December 2006,
Yusuf Islam said, "You know, the cup is there to be filled . . . with
whatever you want to fill it with. For those people looking for Cat
Stevens, they'll probably find him in this record. If you want to find
Yusuf, go a bit deeper, you'll find him."
On 29 April 2007, BBC1 broadcast a concert given at the
Porchester Hall by Yusuf as part of BBC Sessions, his first live
performance in London in 28 years (the previous being the UNICEF Year
of the Child concert in 1979.) Yusuf played many new songs along with
such classics as "Father & Son", "The Wind", "Where Do the
Children Play?", "Don't Be Shy", "Wild World", and "Peace Train".
Awards
Cat Stevens was nominated to be inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame in 2005, but not voted in.
On 10 November 2004, Yusuf Islam was presented with a Man
for Peace award by the private foundation of former USSR president Mikhail
Gorbachev, for his 'dedication to promote peace, the reconciliation of
people and to condemn terrorism'; the ceremony was held in Rome, Italy and attended
by five Nobel Peace Prize laureates. A
year later, on 4 November 2005, he was awarded an honorary
doctorate by the University of
Gloucestershire for services to education and humanitarian relief.
In October 2003 he received the World Social Award for "humanitarian
relief work helping children and victims of war".
On 20
October 2005,
Yusuf Islam was named ASCAP's
Songwriter of the Year and received Song of the Year honours for "The First Cut Is the
Deepest", at a special presentation in London. At the ceremony, The
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) honoured the
top British writer and publisher members of the UK's Performing Rights
Society.
On 11
October 2006,
Yusuf Islam was named Songwriter of the Year for the second year
running and received another award for the same song "The First Cut Is the
Deepest".
On 4
January 2007,
Yusuf Islam was awarded the Mediterranean Prize for Peace in Naples,
Italy. He received the award "as a result of the work he has done to
increase peace in the world".
On 25
March 2007,
he received the German
ECHO
"special award for life achievements as musician and ambassador between
cultures" in Berlin
On 24
May 2007,
Yusuf Islam was awarded the Ivor Novello award for Outstanding Song
Collection, in a ceremony held in London.
On 10
July 2007,
Yusuf Islam was awarded an honourary doctorate (LLD) by the University
of Exeter, in recognition of "his humanitarian work and improving
understanding between Islamic and western cultures".The
ceremony was attended by esteemed personalities including Professor Ekmeleddin
Ihsanoglu and guitarist Brian May.
Discography
- See also Cat Stevens Albums
As Cat Stevens
- 1967: Matthew and Son
- 1967: New Masters
- 1970: Mona Bone Jakon
- 1970: Tea for the Tillerman
- 1971: Teaser and the Firecat
- 1972: Catch Bull at Four
- 1973: Foreigner
- 1974: Buddha and the
Chocolate Box
- 1974: Saturnight (Live in Tokyo)
- 1975: Numbers
- 1977: Izitso
- 1978: Back to Earth
- 2004: Majikat
As Yusuf Islam
- 1995: The Life of the Last
Prophet
- 1999: Prayers of the Last
Prophet
- 2000: A Is for Allah
- 2001: Bismillah
- 2003: I Look I See
- 2005: Indian Ocean
- 2006: Footsteps in the Light
- 2006: An Other Cup
- 2007: Yusuf's Cafe Session
Compilations
- 1975: Greatest Hits
- 1984: Footsteps
in the Dark: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2
- 1987: Classics, Volume 24
- 2000: The Very Best of Cat Stevens
- 2001: Cat Stevens Box Set
- 2005: Gold
- 2007: 20th
Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: The Best of Cat Stevens
See also
- List of
best-selling music artists
- List of converts to Islam
- List of ex-Christians
Notes and references
The
references in this article would be clearer with a different and/or
consistent style of citation,
footnoting
or external linking.
-
http://music.aol.com/artist/cat-stevens/5528/main
-
"Interview With Yusuf Islam, Formerly Cat
Stevens, Larry King Live", CNN, 2004-10-7. Retrieved on 2007-01-07.
-
[1] Cat Stevens Gives Support To
Call for Death of Rushdie By craig r. Whitney (May 23, 1989)
-
Yusuf Islam:The Artist Formerly Known as Cat Stevens,
BBC documentary film interview with Alan Yentob, May 2006.
-
(2004-05-18) Cat
Stevens Majikat - Earth Tour 1976. Eagle Vision (DVD Booklet).
-
CBS Sunday Morning 3
December 2006
-
see RIAA
website
-
Top 500 albums
-
NPR interview 28 July 2005 on Morning
Edition
-
Cat Stevens on Teaser and the
Firecat quoted by Timothy Crouse, Rolling
Stone, 9 December 1971.
-
announcement of Platinum Europe award
-
Songfacts
-
Widely reported; for example, in this NPR piece.
-
Salon.com "People: Cat
Stevens", Amy Reiter, August 14, 1999
-
from his website
-
Forbes, Jim (host). Cat Stevens: Behind
the Music [TV-Series]. United
States: VH1.
-
He estimated in January 2007 that he continues to earn approximately
$1.5 million a year from his Cat Stevens music. "Questions for Yusuf
Islam: Singing a New Song" Interview with Deborah Solomon, The
New York Times Magazine, 7 January 2007
-
Word
from Our Chairman Yusuf Islam. Small Kindness. Retrieved on 2006-05-06.
-
From Mountain of Light website
-
Kelly, Jane. "Worlds Apart: People thought I was mad when I
stopped being Cat Stevens the rock star — but I've never been happier",
Daily
Mail, 1998-03-24.
Retrieved on 2006-05-06.
-
The May 2006 BBC interview with Alan Yentob displays a
newspaper clipping reportedly from that time, which quotes from his
statement.
-
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/363404/bio_shows_cat_stevens_as_a_man_of_peace/index.html
-
"Cat Stevens Breaks His Silence",
interview by Andrew Dansby, June 14, 2000
-
Quoted by Andrew Dansby in Rolling Stone, September
17, 2001, "Cat Stevens Condemns Attack"
-
[2] "Is Cat Stevens a Terrorist? Why
Yusuf Islam was turned away from the United States" by
Stephen Schwartz (09/22/2004)
-
[http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/20/arts/20yusuf.html?ei=5088&en=0128716b7ac7d3e5&ex=1324270800&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&pagewanted=print
Yusuf Islam Steps Back Into Cat Stevens's Old Sound by Jon Pareles, The
New York Times, December 20, 2006.
-
"Former Cat Stevens wants name taken off 'no-fly' list", Chicago
Sun-Times, 3 October 2004
-
Larry King Live (October 7, 2004). Interview With Yusuf Islam. CNN.
Retrieved on September 30, 2006.
-
Islam, Yusuf. "A cat in a wild world", The
Guardian, 2004-10-01.
Retrieved on 2006-05-06.
-
Some online sources render this word as "hearsay" but the official copy
from The Globe and Mail online archives says
"heresy".
-
Mountain of Light (2005-01-24). Yusuf Islam sings for tsunami victims and
told to make more music and spread peace. Press
release. Retrieved on 2006-05-06.
-
from http://www.yusufislam.org.uk/
-
Available at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-688991723998377475
-
See, for example, this interview on CBS Sunday
Morning from 3 December 2006.
-
"Cat Stevens' Son Makes Music Debut"
-
See his
official website.
-
written by Bennie Benjamin, Gloria Caldwell and
Sol Marcus; discussed by Yusuf in a November 2006 interview
-
Quoted in Agence France-Presse article
-
CBS Sunday Morning
3 December 2006
-
Cat
Stevens Nominated for Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
CatStevens.com (2005-09-15).
Retrieved on 2006-05-06.
-
Friedman, Roger (2005-09-14).
Cat Stevens Nominated for Rock Hall.
Fox News. Retrieved on 2006-05-06.
-
"World should do more", New Sunday Times, 2005-11-06,
p. 26.
-
Yusuf Islam awards
-
2005 ASCAP Press release
-
2006 ASCAP Press release
-
Press release
-
Yusuf
Islam receives Mediterranean Prize for Peace
-
Yusuf Islam's Manager Refutes 'Veil'
Allegations. PR Newswire (2007-04-02). Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
-
[3]
-
[4]
Further reading
External links
| v • d • e Cat
Stevens |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Matthew
and Son | New
Masters | Mona
Bone Jakon | Tea
for the Tillerman | Teaser and the Firecat
| Catch Bull at Four
| Foreigner
| Buddha and the
Chocolate Box | Saturnight
(Live in Tokyo) | Numbers
| Izitso
| Back to Earth
| Footsteps
in the Dark: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 | Majikat |
| Yusuf Islam: The Life of the Last
Prophet | Prayers of the Last
Prophet | A
Is for Allah | I Look
I See | Indian Ocean
| Footsteps in the Light
| An Other Cup |
| Compilations:
Greatest Hits
| The Very Best of Cat
Stevens | Cat Stevens Box Set
| Gold |
| Related
articles |
| Folk music |
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Yusuf Islam |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
Georgiou, Stephen Demetre (birth name); Cat Stevens
(pseudonym 1965-1978); Yusuf (today's pseudonym) |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
English
Singer-Songwriter |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
July
25, 1948 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
London,
England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|