| Rod Stewart |

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| Background information |
| Birth name |
Roderick David Stewart |
| Born |
January 10, 1945 (1945-01-10) (age 62) |
| Origin |
London, England  |
| Genre(s) |
Rock, Pop |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer-songwriter |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals
Banjo
Guitar |
Associated
acts |
The Faces
The Jeff Beck Group |
| Website |
RodStewart.com |
Roderick David Stewart, CBE (born January
10, 1945),
is a Scottish
singer
born and raised in London.
He describes himself as a "Scottish rock singer", owing to his parentage. He
was a member of the The Jeff Beck Group
and the
Faces. He was also briefly in a band entitled Roddy
Rod and the Dynamic Duo
with fellow band members Mark McCallister and Sammy Pierce before
embarking on a solo career. His wife is model
Penny
Lancaster.
With his career in its fifth decade, Stewart has achieved
numerous hit singles worldwide, most notably in the UK, where he has
achieved six consecutive #1 albums and his tally of 62 hit singles
includes 24 that went Top 10, of which six went to number one.
It has been estimated that Stewart's album and single sales
total more than 250 million,
easily earning him a place on the list of
best-selling music artists, and he is probably most widely known for
his instantly identifiable husky voice. His biggest-selling song was
the 1978 disco hit "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?", which
Stewart never took seriously.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Early
life
- 1.2 1960–1969
- 1.3 1969–1975
- 1.4 1975–1981
- 1.5 1982–2001
- 1.6 2002—Present
- 2 Personal
life
- 3 Awards
and recognition
- 4 List
of bands
- 5 Discography
- 5.1 UK/U.S.
#1 albums
- 5.2 UK/U.S.
#1 singles
- 6 References
- 7 See
also
- 8 External
links
|
Biography
Early life
Rod Stewart (born Roderick David Stewart) is the youngest of
five children and was born in Highgate, North
London [2] to parents who owned a
newsagents shop there. His father, Robert Stewart, and his two brothers
and two sisters were all born in Scotland. Rod and his mother, Elsie, are
the only family members born in England. He took up guitar at a young age.
1960–1969
Rod Stewart had trials with football clubs including Brentford
(based in West London). [3] He then worked as a grave
digger. He soon switched to a career in music joining folk singer Wizz
Jones in the early 1960s as a street singer travelling around
Europe; this resulted in his being deported from Spain for vagrancy. [4]
In the spring of 1962, he helped to found The Ray
Davies Quartet, later known as the successful British band The
Kinks, as their lead singer. He performed with the group on
at least one occasion, but was soon dropped due to complaints about his
voice from then-drummer John Start's mother as well as musical and
personality differences with the rest of the band.
After Rod Stewart's return to London, he also joined Jimmy Powell
& the Five Dimensions in 1964 as a vocalist and blues harp
player. He and the band recorded a single for Pye
Records. Long John Baldry
discovered him drunk and busking for train fare and invited him to
join The Hoochie Coochie Men which recorded a single, "Good
Morning Little Schoolgirl", that failed to chart. The Hoochie Coochie
Men evolved into Steampacket featuring Stewart,
Baldry, Julie Driscoll, Brian
Auger, Mickey Waller and Rick Brown. Steampacket supported the Rolling Stones and the
Walker Brothers on tour in the summer of 1965.
They also recorded tracks that would not be released as an album until 1970,
after Stewart had become well-known in musical circles. Stewart also
earned the nickname "Rod the Mod" during that period, as a result of
his appearance in a 1965 BBC documentary on the mod
subculture.
Steampacket broke up in early 1966
with Stewart joining Shotgun Express as lead vocalist with Beryl
Marsden. Shotgun Express also contained Mick
Fleetwood and Peter Green who
would go on to form Fleetwood Mac and Peter
Bardens. Shotgun Express released one single before breaking
up.
Stewart then joined the Jeff Beck Group as vocalist. In 1968,
their first album Truth became a
hit on both sides of the Atlantic and the group toured extensively. The
second album Beck-Ola
also was a hit in the middle of 1969 but the group had broken up by
the end of the year. Much of Stewart's sense of phrasing was developed
during his time with the Jeff Beck Group.
1969–1975
The U.S. band Cactus offered Stewart a job as lead
singer but he decided instead to join The
Faces (the remnants of The
Small Faces after the departure of Steve
Marriott) with Ron Wood. Wood had played bass guitar with
the Jeff Beck Group, but wanted to switch to guitar.
Stewart also signed a solo recording contract with Mercury
Records. An Old
Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down became his
first solo album in 1969 (it was known as The Rod Stewart
Album in the U.S.). It established the template for his solo
sound: a heartfelt mixture of folk, rock, and country
blues, all informed by a British working-class sensibility, with both
original material ("Cindy's Lament" and the title song) and cover
versions (Ewan MacColl's "Dirty
Old Town" and Mike d'Abo's "Handbags
and Gladrags") being very effective.
The Faces released their debut album First
Step in early 1970 with a rock and roll style
similar to the Rolling Stones. While the album did better in the UK
than the U.S., the Faces quickly earned a strong live following.
Stewart would release his second album, Gasoline Alley
that autumn and Elkie Brooks would go on to achieve a
hit with a version of the title track in 1983. Rod's new approach was
similar to his first album, as exemplified by the dynamic but haunting
title track, also mandolin was introduced into the sound. He also
launched a solo tour.
Stewart sang guest vocals for the Australian group Python
Lee Jackson on "In a Broken Dream" in 1970. His payment was a set of
seat covers for his car. It was re-released in 1972 to become a
worldwide hit.
The single cover to "Maggie May"
Stewart's 1971 solo album Every Picture Tells a
Story made him a household name when the B-side
of his minor hit "Reason to Believe", "Maggie
May", started receiving radio play. The album and the single hit #1 in
both the U.S. and the UK simultaneously, a chart first, in September. A
loss of innocence tale set off by a striking mandolin part (by Ray
Jackson of Lindisfarne), "Maggie
May" was also named in The Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll,
which is one of three songs by him to appear on that list. The rest of
the album was equally strong, with "Mandolin Wind" again showcasing
that instrument, "(I Know) I'm Losing You"
adding hard-edged soul to the mix, and "Tomorrow is a Long
Time" being one of the best British Bob Dylan covers. But the ultimate
manifestation of the early Stewart solo style was the
Stewart-Wood-penned "Every Picture Tells a Story" itself: powered by
Mick Waller's drumming and a mostly acoustic arrangement, it is a fast,
rocking, headlong romp relating the picaresque adventures of the singer.
The second Faces album, Long
Player, was released in early 1971 which
enjoyed greater chart success than First Step. The
Faces also got their only U.S. Top 40 hit with "Stay With Me" from
their third album A Nod
Is as Good as a Wink...To a Blind Horse
released in late 1971. This album reached the Top 10 on both sides of
the Atlantic on the back of the success of Every Picture
Tells A Story. Throughout this period there was a marked
dichotomy between Stewart's solo and group work, the former being
meticulously crafted while the latter tended towards the boozy and
sloppy. The Faces were unable to perform Stewart's solo work
effectively in concert, as the subsequent Rod Stewart/Faces
Live album would show; faithful renditions of those songs
would have to wait two decades until Stewart's MTV
Unplugged appearance. However Steve Jones from The
Sex Pistols regarded The Faces very highly and named them as a main
influence on the British punk rock movement.
The Faces had an extensive tour in 1972
with growing tension in the band over Stewart's solo career enjoying
more success than the band's. Stewart released Never
a Dull Moment in the same year. Repeating the Every
Picture formula for the most part, it reached #2 on the U.S.
album charts and #1 in the UK and enjoyed further good notices from
reviewers. "You Wear It Well" being a hit single that reached #13 in
the U.S. and went to #1 in the UK, while "Twisting the Night Away" made
explicit Stewart's debt to Sam Cooke.
For the body of his early solo work Stewart earned tremendous
critical praise. Rolling Stone’s
1980 Illustrated History of Rock & Roll
includes this in its Stewart entry:
- Rarely has a singer had as full and unique a talent as Rod
Stewart [...] a writer who offered profound lyricism and fabulous
self-deprecating humor, teller of tall tales and honest heartbreaker,
he had an unmatched eye for the tiny details around which lives turn,
shatter, and reform [...] and a voice to make those details indelible.
[... His solo albums] were defined by two special qualities: warmth,
which was redemptive, and modesty, which was liberating. If ever any
rocker chose the role of Everyman and lived up to it, it was Rod
Stewart.
The Faces released their final album Ooh
La La which reached #1 in the UK and #21 in the
U.S. in 1973. The Faces went on their final
tour in 1974 to support Ooh La La
and the single "Pool Hall Richard". The band formally broke up in 1975
with Ron Wood joining The Rolling Stones as their guitar player and
Stewart pursuing his solo career.
Stewart would release the Smiler
album in late 1974 which proved to be a disappointment. In Britain it
reached No.1, and the single "Farewell", #7, but only #13 on the Billboard
pop album charts and the single "Mine For Me" only #91 on the Billboard
pop singles charts. Smiler is generally regarded as
Stewart's weakest album of the seventies; it was also his last original
album for Mercury Records. After the release of the double album
compilation The Best Of Rod Stewart, he switched
over to Warner Bros. Records and
remained with them throughout the vast majority of his career.
1975–1981
In 1975, Rod Stewart moved to the U.S., applying for citizenship due to his
love affair with Britt Ekland and a fight with the UK
tax authorities. He released the Atlantic
Crossing album for his new record company,
using producer Tom
Dowd and a different sound based on the Muscle
Shoals rhythm section. Atlantic Crossing marked
both a return to form and a return to the Top 10 of the Billboard
album charts. The first single, a cover of the Sutherland
Brothers song "Sailing", was a massive
number one hit in the UK, while it only reached the Top 60 of the U.S.
charts. The single returned to the UK Top 10 a year later when used as
the theme music for a BBC
documentary series about HMS
Ark Royal, and having been a hit twice over
became, and remains, Stewart's biggest-selling single in the UK. Holland-Dozier-Holland cover
"This Old Heart Of Mine" was also a Top 100 hit in 1976.
Musically, Atlantic Crossing showed Stewart was
clearly distinguishing his slow material (such as Danny
Whitten's wrenching "I Don't Want To Talk About It") from his largely
by-the-numbers rockers (such as "Three Time Loser"). Additionally in
1976, Stewart covered the Beatles song “Get Back” for the ephemeral musical documentary
All This and World War II.
Later in 1976, Stewart topped the Billboard
singles charts for eight weeks and the Australian singles charts with
the glossy seduction ballad "Tonight's the Night", with a steamy
accompanying music video featuring Ekland. It came
from the A Night on the Town
album, which went to #2 on the Billboard album
charts and was Stewart's first album to go platinum. By explicitly
marking the album as having a "fast side" and a "slow side", Stewart
continued the trend started by Atlantic Crossing. "The First Cut is the
Deepest", a cover of a Cat Stevens song, went Top 30
in the U.S. in 1977 and #1 in the UK (even though "God Save the Queen"
by the Sex Pistols is widely believed
to have sold more records in that week). "The Killing of Georgie (Part
1 and 2)", about the murder of a gay man, was also a Top 40 hit for
Stewart during 1977.
Foot Loose & Fancy
Free from 1978 continued Stewart's run of chart
success, again reaching #2 and featuring much the same sound as from A
Night on the Town. "You're In My Heart" was the hit
single, reaching #4 in the U.S. The rocker "Hot Legs" achieved a lot of
radio airplay as did the confessional "I Was Only Joking". In
appearance, Stewart's look had evolved to include a glam
element, including make-up, spandex clothes, and the like.
Stewart scored another UK #1 and U.S. #1 single with "Da
Ya Think I'm Sexy?" which was a crossover hit reaching #5 on the Billboard
black charts due to its disco sound. This was the lead single from
1979's Blondes Have More Fun...or do
they? which went to #1 on the Billboard
album charts and sold 4 million albums. It was to be Stewart's last #1
album for 25 years.
There are two schools of critical thought about this whole
period of Stewart's career. One is exemplified by the same 1980 Rolling
Stone History entry quoted above, as it actually
begins:
- Rarely has a singer had as full and unique a talent as Rod
Stewart; rarely has anyone betrayed his talent so completely. Once the
most compassionate presence in music, he has become a bilious
self-parody—and sells more records than ever...full of the rewards he
received for his work, and seemingly without noticing, he exchanged
passion for sentiment, the romance of sex for a tease, a reach for
mysteries with tawdry posturing ...
The other school acknowledges that Stewart has never surpassed
his earliest work, but states that by Never a Dull Moment
and certainly Smiler it was clear that that formula
had run dry, and that he needed to make a musical change in direction.
Furthermore, Stewart's early solo work had inadvertently benefited from
The Faces drawing off his less-inspired, straight-rocking party
efforts; without The Faces around, this side of him became more
manifest in his solo work. Given that, this view concludes that his
albums during this period are not so bad and in particular Atlantic
Crossing and A Night on the Town are more
than occasionally inspired.
A focal point of this debate was "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?". To
detractors, this was the epitome of Stewart's egotism and the nadir of
his career. Supporters defend the music by saying this was Stewart's
try at the disco sound, much in the same way as Paul
McCartney did "Silly Love Songs" or The Rolling
Stones did "Miss
You". In interviews Stewart, while admitting his accompanying look had
become "tarty", has defended the lyrics by pointing out that the song
is a third-person narrative
slice-of-life portrayal, not unlike those in his earlier work, and that
it is not about him. In any case, the song's refrain was identical to
Brazilian Jorge Ben Jor's earlier "Taj Mahal"; a
lawsuit ensued. Stewart donated his royalties from the song to UNICEF, and he
performed it at the Music for UNICEF Concert at
the United Nations
General Assembly in 1979.
Rod moved a bit to a more New
Wave direction in 1980 by releasing the album Foolish
Behaviour. Not very well received, the album produced one hit
single in the song "Passion". In 1981, Stewart added further elements
of New Wave and synth pop to his sound for the Tonight
I'm Yours album. The title song and "Young
Turks" both reached Top 5 of the Billboard charts with the album going
platinum.
On December 18th 1981, Rod Stewart played the Los Angeles
Forum, along with Kim Carnes and Tina
Turner. This show was broadcast around the world to a television
audience of 35 million.
1982–2001
Stewart's career then went into a relative slump, and his
albums between Tonight I'm Yours (1981) and Out
of Order (1988), received harsh criticism from many critics.
He only had three Top 10 singles between 1982 and 1988, although "Baby
Jane" became his sixth and final UK #1 in 1983. The corresponding Camouflage
album went gold in the UK, and the single Infatuation
received considerable play on MTV. A reunion with Jeff Beck produced a
successful take on Curtis Mayfield's "People Get Ready", but an
attempt to tour together fell apart after a few dates. He reached UK #2
in 1986 with "Every Beat Of My Heart", a song designed to be of similar
crowd-waving qualities to "Sailing".
In 1988, he returned with Out Of Order
produced by Duran Duran's Andy Taylor and by Bernard
Edwards of Chic. "Forever Young" and "Lost in You"
from that album were both significant hits on the Billboard
Hot 100 and mainstream rock charts. ("Forever Young" was an unconscious
revision of Bob Dylan's song of the same name; the artists reached an
agreement about sharing royalties.)
In January 1989 Rod set out on the South
American leg of the Out of Order Tour playing to sold out audiences
throughout South America. Audiences hung on every line, often prompting
Rod and the band to stop and listen to the crowd, as it knew every word
to every song. In Buenos Aires the famed River
Plate Stadium that seats 70,000+ was estimated to have had in
attendance more than 90,000, with several thousand outside the stadium.
Firehoses were sprayed on the crowd to avoid heat prostration, and the
excitement was palpable.
Despite the rigours of traversing South America's questionable
highway system with three separate convoys of equipment holding the
millions-dollar light show and stages (the loss of a truck in a
landslide delayed one show in Brazil), the show went on with a grueling
schedule of performances. Venues in remote, seemingly desolate small
towns would fill to standing room only capacity in the local soccer
stadium, and ring the stadium in a sea of fans electrified by the
music, the entertainer, and the fact that he was willing to perform for
them.
Stewart's version of the Tom Waits song "Downtown Train" went to #2
of the US singles charts in 1990. This song was taken from a four CD
compilation set called Storyteller. The Vagabond
Heart album continued his comeback with "Rhythm of My Heart"
and "Motown Song" both reaching the Top 10. Also in 1990 he recorded
"It Takes Two" with Tina Turner which reached #5 on the UK
charts.
In 1993, he recorded "All For Love" with Sting
and Bryan
Adams for the soundtrack to the movie The Three Musketeers;
the single reached #1 on the US charts.
Also in 1993, Stewart reunited with Ron Wood
and a talented backup group to record an MTV
Unplugged special. For the first time, Stewart
assembled a musical line-up whose instrumentation and musical approach
could do justice to his earliest solo work. Highlights included a
heartfelt "Handbags and Gladrags", a furious "Cut Across Shorty", and
four selections from Every Picture Tells A Story.
The show also featured an acoustic version of Van
Morrison's "Have I Told You Lately" which
topped the Billboard adult contemporary chart and
went Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. A rendition
of "Reason to Believe" also garnered
considerable airplay. The Unplugged album reached
#2 on the Billboard album charts.
Stewart was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame in 1994.
In 1995, Stewart released A Spanner in the Works
containing a single written by Tom Petty "Leave Virginia Alone" which
reached the Top 10 of the adult contemporary charts. The latter half of
the 1990s
was not as commercially successful with If We Fall In Love
Tonight not making much of an impression on the charts.
When we Were the New Boys, his final album
on the Warner
Bros. label released in 1998, contained versions of songs by Britpop acts
such as Oasis and Primal
Scream, and reached #2 on the UK album charts. In 2000,
Stewart decided to leave Warner Bros. Records and moved
to Atlantic Records, another division
of Warner Music Group. In 2001, he
released his only album "Human" in Atlantic
label. Human only just reached the Top 50 in 2001
with the single "I Can't Deny It" going Top 40 in the UK and Top 20 in
the adult contemporary. Because of the poor sales, Atlantic
Records dropped him from their roster and he signed to Clive
Davis' new J
Records label. Of note is that Rod was unable to promote Human
properly due to a cancer diagnosis . Indeed, a second single from the
album Run back into your arms was scheduled but
never released.
The Story So Far: the Very Best Of a
greatest hits album compiled from his time at Warner Bros. went to the
Top 10 in the UK and reached #1 in places like Belgium and France in
2001.
2002—Present
In recent years, Stewart has concentrated on singing 1930s and 1940s pop standards
from the "Great American Songbook",
written by songwriters such as Irving Berlin, Cole
Porter, and George Gershwin and Ira
Gershwin, with great popular success but middling critical success.
These albums have been released on Clive Davis's J Records
label and have seen Stewart enjoy album sales equal to the 1970s.
The first album from the songbook series, It Had to
Be You ... The Great American Songbook, reached #4 on the US
album chart, #8 in the UK and #10 in Canada when released in late 2002.
The track "These Foolish Things" reached #13 on the Billboard
adult contemporary charts and #2 in Taiwan. "They Can't Take That Away
From Me" went Top 20 on the world internet charts and Top 30 on the
adult contemporary charts.
The second series album, As
Time Goes By: the Great American Songbook 2,
reached #2 in the US, #4 in the UK and #1 in Canada. "Bewitched,
Bothered and Bewildered", a duet with Cher went Top 20 on the US adult contemporary
charts and Top 5 in Taiwan. "Time After Time" was another Top 30 track
on the US adult contemporary charts.
A musical featuring many of Stewart's
songs opened November 7, 2003 at London's Victoria Palace theatre. It is
written and directed by Ben Elton, who previously created a
similar production, We Will Rock You,
with music by Queen.
In 2004,
Stewart reunited with Ron Wood for concerts of The
Faces material. A Rod Stewart and the Faces best of Changing
Faces reached the Top 20 of the UK album charts. Five
Guys Walk Into A Bar, a Faces box set compilation, went in to
the shops. Together with Wood, he is still working on the album You
Strum, I'll Sing.
In October 2004 Young Turks appeared on
the popular videogame
Grand Theft Auto: San
Andreas, playing on fictional classic rock station K-DST.
In late 2004, Stardust ... The Great American
Songbook 3, the third album in the series, was released. It
was his first US #1 album in 25 years, selling over 200,000 albums in
its first week. It also debuted at #1 in Canada, #3 in the UK and Top
ten in Australia. His version of Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful
World", featuring Stevie Wonder has made the Top 20 of
the world adult charts. He also recorded a duet with Dolly
Parton for the album - "Baby, It's Cold Outside".
Stewart won his first ever Grammy Award for this album.
October 18, 2005 saw the release of the fourth and final
songbook album. Thanks
for the Memory: The Great American Songbook 4 it included duets with Diana Ross
and Elton
John. Within weeks of its release, the CD made it to #2 on
the Top 200 list.
In late 2006, Rod Stewart made his return to the rock music,
with the release of Still
the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time, a
new album featuring rock milestones from the last four decades,
including a cover of Creedence Clearwater
Revival's "Have You Ever Seen The Rain" which was released as the first
single. The album was released on October 10. The album debuted at #1 on
the Billboard charts with 184,000 copies in its first week. The number
1 debut was helped by a concert in NYC that was on MSN music and an
appearance on Dancing With The Stars. He performed tracks from his new
album Live from the Nokia Theater on October 9th. Control Room
broadcast the event Live on MSN and in 117 movie theaters across the
country via National CineMedia.Check out the concert on MSN Music[5].
The BBC quoted
in their Breakfast Show on 1st November 2006 that Rod Stewart is one of
the top ten biggest-selling artists in recording history, with well
over 250,000,000 records sold.
On 12th December he performed for the first time at The Royal
Variety Performance at The London Coliseum in front of HRH The Prince
of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall, singing another Cat Stevens
number, "Father and Son", and the Bonnie Tyler song, It's
a Heartache.
On December 22, 2006, Rod Stewart hosted the 8th Annual A Home
for the Holidays special on CBS at 8:00 PM (PST)
In 2007 Rod's son, Sean, starred in the A&E television
show called Sons of Hollywood, in which Rod's
role as a parent is a major theme. He also performed "Sailing", Baby
Jane", and "Maggie
May" at the memorial concert for Princess Diana
in the same year.
Personal life
In 1982,
Rod Stewart was car-jacked in Los Angeles, California. The incident
occurred while Stewart was standing next to his $50,000 Porsche that was
parked on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood.
In 1999 Stewart was diagnosed as having thyroid
cancer, for which he underwent surgery in July 2000. Besides being a
major health scare, the resulting surgery also threatened his famous
voice, and he had to re-learn how to sing. [6] Since then he has been active
in raising funds for The City of Hope Foundation charity to find cures
for all forms of cancer, especially those affecting children. [7]
Stewart has remained physically active in recent years,
playing in a senior football league in Palos Verdes, California and
still kicking balls into the audience during
concerts. When discussing the rock 'n' roll excesses he has been
through in his career, he maintains that his love of playing football
has been his saviour. As a fan he is a well-known supporter of Celtic
F.C. and the Scotland national
team. Growing up in London, Stewart is said to follow West
Ham United as his English side, and played in the celebrity match,
before the Steve Potts testimonial at
Upton Park.
In appearance Stewart still maintains his trademark rooster-style
haircut.
Stewart is also known for owning one of the 400 Enzo
Ferraris.
On October
11, 2005,
Stewart received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at
2093 Hollywood Blvd.
On April
18 and April
19, 2006,
Stewart was the guest artist and celebrity vocal coach on American
Idol, leading the remaining seven finalists in
singing entries from the Great American Songbook.
Relationships
Throughout his career Stewart has been known for his liaisons
with attractive women (fathering seven children with five of them; the
oldest being born in 1964 and his latest child being born in November
2005):
- 1963-1964: Art student Susannah Boffey; one daughter Sarah
Thubron Streeter (born 1964)
who was put up for adoption in England
- 1971-1975: Model
Dee Harrington
- 1975-1977: Actress Britt
Ekland
- First marriage (1979-1984): to Alana
Hamilton (ex-wife of actor George Hamilton); one
daughter Kimberly (born 1979) and one son Sean
Stewart (star of A&E's Sons
of Hollywood) (born 1980)
- 1983-1990: Model
Kelly
Emberg; one daughter Ruby Stewart (born 1987)
- Second marriage (1990-2006): to model
Rachel
Hunter; one daughter Renée Stewart (born 1992) and one son Liam Stewart (born 1994). Rod was quoted
as saying that he'd rather have his penis cut off than cheat on her. He was later
sued for divorce.
- Third marriage (2007-present): With his
new wife, model
Penny Lancaster, he had his seventh
child, a boy, Alastair Wallace Stewart, on 27
November 2005.
The couple married on June 16, 2007 on board his yacht Lady Ann Magee
moored in the Italian
port of Portofino.
Awards and recognition
Rod Stewart star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame,
February 2006
- Grammy
Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, 2005, Stardust
... The Great American Songbook Volume III
- Diamond Award of World
Music Awards show for over 100 million records sold worldwide, 2001.
- Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame, 1994
- Inducted into the UK
Music Hall of Fame, 2006
- "Bar none, he's the best singer I've heard in rock
'n' roll. He's also the greatest white soul
singer." —Elton John on Rod Stewart
- "Is this a white guy? You are kidding me!!" Chuck
Berry commented when asked what he thought about Rod's cover of Sweet
Little Rock & Roller in an interview by the Belgian Rock
magazine Humo
in 1975.
- Rod Stewart played to the largest concert crowd ever, with
3.5 million fans in attendance. This was at Copacabana Beach in Rio de
Janeiro for the 1994 New Year’s Eve celebrations.
List of bands
During his career, Rod Stewart has been a member of a number
of groups including:
- Jimmy Powell and the Five Dimensions (1963)
- The Hoochie Coochie Men, later called Steampacket
(1964–1965)
- Soul Agents (1965-1966)
- Shotgun Express (1966)
- The Jeff Beck Group (1966–1969)
- The Faces (1969–1975)
Discography
-
Main article: Rod Stewart discography
UK/U.S. #1 albums
- 1971
Every Picture Tells a
Story (UK/U.S.)
- 1972
Never a Dull Moment
(UK)
- 1973
Sing It Again Rod
(UK)
- 1974
Smiler (UK)
- 1975
Atlantic Crossing
(UK)
- 1976
A Night on
the Town (UK)
- 1978
Blondes Have More Fun
(U.S.)
- 1979
Greatest Hits,
Vol. 1 (UK)
- 1981
Tonight I'm Yours
(U.S.)
- 2004
Stardust:
the Great American Songbook 3 (U.S.)
- 2006
Still
the Same... Great Rock Classics of our Time
(U.S.)
UK/U.S. #1 singles
- 1971
"Maggie
May" / "Reason To Believe" (UK/U.S.)
- 1972
"You
Wear It Well" (UK)
- 1975
"Sailing" (UK)
- 1976
"Tonight's The
Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (U.S.)
- 1977
"I Don't Want to Talk
About It" / "The First Cut Is the
Deepest" (UK)
- 1978
"Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (UK,
U.S.)
- 1983
"Baby
Jane" (UK)
- 1993
"All for Love" (U.S.) (Featuring Bryan
Adams and Sting,
first appearing on the official soundtrack from the movie "The Three
Musketeers")
References
-
[1] Barry's Tickets; Accessed
December 2006; Claims 250 million records
-
WHU
- Fans Hall of Fame
-
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,4-2007270883,00.html
- [8] BBC News, Apprentice
professional football player with Brentford Football Club]
- [9] BBC News, Stewart born in
Highgate, north London, in January 1945]
- [10] BBC News, Stewart deported
from Spain for vagrancy]
See also
- Best selling music artists
- List of
number-one hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
External links
Rod Stewart noquotend -->
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