CAT STEVENS' TIMELINE
1948
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July 21. Steven Demetre Georgiou is born in London, the
youngest of Stavros and Ingrid Georgiou's three children. Stavros is a
Greek Cypriot who'd migrated to Britain via Egypt and the United
States; his wife is from the Swedish port town Gavle.
The Georgiou family runs a cafe, the Moulin Rouge, in the
heart of the West End. The family's living quarters are above the shop;
Steve's bedroom window looks out on the stage door of the Princes
Theatre, where "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,"
"Hair" and many others have their British premiere. Although he is
sometimes pressed into duty at the Moulin Rouge, his loves – encouraged
by his parents—are painting and music.
His sister Anita's record collection includes Sinatra and
Gershwin, while brother David is partial to the Everly Brothers and
Buddy Holly. Steve takes it all in, as well as the pulse of the theater
district, where he and a friend often climb the fire escape to the roof
of the Princes, to hear – and to feel—the vibrant musicals going on
below as they watch the lights come on all over London.
|
1958
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December 12. Across the West End, at Her Majesty's Theatre,
Haymarket, the American musical "West Side Story" makes its London
debut. Soon all of England is in the sway of Leonard Bernstein's
passionate, pulsating music, including young Steve Georgiou, who can't
get it out of his head.
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1959
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February 3. "The Day the Music Died." Buddy Holly dies in
the crash of a chartered airplane in the American farm belt, along with
Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper.
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1961
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February 13. The musical "King Kong" begins a lengthy run
at the Princes. The "All African" story of boxer on the ropes becomes a favorite for Steve, whose appearances outside the backstage door are so frequent the cast knows him by name.
|
1963
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February. The Beatles hit #1 for the first time with "Please
Please Me," setting off the tidal wave of Beatlemania that will, by
year's end, sweep away everything in its path in Britain. Steve, along
with millions of other teen–agers, is enthralled.
At age 15, Steve convinces his father to buy him a guitar.
The family has a baby grand piano, which nobody knows how to play
particularly well, but Steve has taken to working out chord structures
and melody.
His diverse musical interests – particularly folk and rhythm &
blues—transcend Beatle–style rock 'n' roll. After a half–hearted stab
at forming a group with a couple of buddies, he decides he'd rather
play solo.
This year, the Beatles' record company, EMI, purchases the Princes
Theatre and re–names it the Shaftesbury.
|
1964
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July. Steve's first public appearance, during Folk Night
at the Black Horse Public House, near the family home. While studying
at Hammersmith Art College, he begins to make frequent appearances at
the campus pub and at folk clubs in nearby Soho. Although painting and
cartooning will remain a lifelong passion, Steve leaves the art college
before graduation and devotes himself to music. Equally moved by
musical theater, Nina Simone, Bob Dylan, jazz, and blues artists
(particularly Leadbelly and Muddy Waters) he begins writing his own
songs.
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1965
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"Back to the Good Old Times/Everything's Piling On"
recorded at a small demo studio in Regent Street. Brother David takes
the little disc around Denmark Street—London's Tin Pan Alley – to impress music business people and hopefully make contacts.
Through David's efforts, Steve signs a publishing deal with Ardmore
& Beechwood, for which he records a series of demos, including "The
First Cut is the Deepest," at 30 pounds per song.
He intends to be a songwriter, and his ultimate goal is to compose
musicals like his heroes Gershwin and Bernstein. The thought of writing
strandard moon–june love songs isn't appealing at all.
Two of the year's biggest films are American comedies – "Cat Ballou" and "What's New, Pussycat?"
|
1966
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February 6. Auditions for Mike Hurst in the latter's
Knightsbridge office. A former member of the Springfields, Hurst is
looking to manage and produce new talent. Steve tells Hurst his stage
name is Cat Stevens, because a girlfriend at art school had told him he
had eyes like a cat's. Hurst loves him but is noncommittal; the two
will meet again in June and cut rough demos of four songs, resulting in
a management contract and a recording deal with Deram, Decca's new
custom label.
July 10. For the first recording session proper, Hurst
chooses Steve's "I Love My Dog," which he allies with a staccato,
tympani–and–viola arrangement unlike anything on the pop charts at the
time. The session bassist is John Paul Jones, two years shy of Led
Zeppelin. Nicky Hopkins plays piano.
The B–side, "Portobello Road," was written by American Kim
Fowley, an Ardmore and Beechwood client who persuaded Cat Stevens to
compose the melody. Seven takes of "I Love My Dog" require most of the three–hour session; "Portobello Road," a solo (with whistling) from Steve, is cut in 20 minutes.
September 30. Single: I Love My Dog/Portobello Road.
Reaches #28 in November. The non–stop promotion machine – personal
appearances in working man's clubs and theaters—begins to whir.
December 26. Begins a 14–day run at Brian Epstein's Saville Theatre. The "Fame in '67" show also includes Georgie Fame, Julie Felix and Sounds Incorporated.
December 30. Single: Matthew and Son/Granny. With its sly
blend of Dickensian imagery and Carnaby Street musical jangle (the
latter courtesy Hurst and his arranger Allen Tew), "Matthew and Son"
takes Britain by storm, reaching No. 2 in the chart and turning Cat
Stevens into a pop phenomenon.
|
1967
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March. LP: Matthew & Son. Although the album is heavily
orchestrated, many of Steve's songs stand above their busy
arrangements, particularly the melancholy "The Tramp," which Hurst
uncharacteristically trims with just Steve's guitar and a muted
trumpet, the poppy "Here Comes My Baby," and the folky "Portobello Road." Reaches No. 7.
March. The Tremeloes (without recently departed leader
Brian Poole) take Steve's "Here Comes My Baby" to No. 4.
March. Single: I'm Gonna Get Me a Gun/School is Out. The
third Cat Stevens single – a bit more aggressive but still grandly
theatrical in its arrangement—is promoted with a series of p.r.
photos featuring the artist cradling a six–shooter (he is at the time
writing a musical based on the life of Billy the Kid). The record is
another hit (#6).
March. Cat Stevens begins a 25–date package tour on a bill
that also includes Engelbert Humperdinck, the Walker Brothers and the
Jimi Hendrix Experience.
May 7New Musical Express Poll Winners Concert, Wembley.
June. P.P. Arnold, once a member of the Ikettes, has a Top
20 hit with "The First Cut is the Deepest," produced by Hurst.
July. Single: A Bad Night/The Laughing Apple. Reaches No.
20.
December. Single: Kitty/Blackness of the Night. Reaches No.
47.
December. LP: New Masters. A darker, deeper album than its
predecessor, with better songs—notably Steve's own version of "The First Cut" and the widescreen "Kitty" and "Northern Wind." The artist's serious disagreements with Hurst over the heavy–handed production had come to legal blows, and the sessions were tense at best. The album fails to chart, and then it's back fulltime to the singles game, which Steve is starting to actively detest.
|
1968 |
January. Single: Lovely City (When Do You Laugh?)/Image of
Hell. An envigorating snapshot of the bustling West End, "Lovely City" actually benefits from Hurst's "more is more" approach. Still, it does not chart, nor will the last two Cat Stevens singles on Deram.
February. A nagging cough, ignored as probably the result
of too much drinking, smoking and fast living, is diagnosed as
tuberculosis, resulting in an emergency three–month stay at King Edward
VII Hospital, a National Health facility in the country, and the better
part of nine more at home in bed. Steve is 20 years old.
He begins to slow down, to think about what he really wants and to
read up on Buddhism and starts to medidate. Time inert allows him to
substantially improve his abilities on guitar, and he practices
diligently on the Georgiou baby grand.
September. The first of a "new age" in musicals, "Hair"
opens at the Shaftesbury. Like many young people around the world,
Steve is affected by its seamless marriage of hippie ideals and
high–calibre musical theater. Its success only reinforces his decision
to change his musical ways.
October. Single: Here Comes My Wife/It's a Super (Dupa) Life.
|
1969 |
February 23. Opens for The Who at Chalk Farm benefit
concert, the Roundhouse, London. For the first time, Cat Stevens the
star appears onstage playing guitar.
April 15. Informed that one more single is owed on the Deram deal, Steve meets Mike Hurst in the studio
for the last time, to record "Where Are You." Hurst has not seen his
one–time protágé since Steve had been sick.
June. Single: Where Are You/The View From the Top. "I'm also working on an album of originals," Steve tells Melody Maker. " I think I will just use guitar as backing. I'm not doing a traditional folk thing, but a contemporary thing – my own version of folk, if you
like."
His year out of the limelight has given him time to think deeply
and re–examine his pop star lifestyle; inspired by Dylan, Joni
Mitchell, Tim Hardin and Van Morrison he decides to take a more organic
approach to his music – the orchestrations and session men of the Hurst
era will not return.
New manager Barry Krost has a background in theater, and he
encourages Steve's proposed musical about the Romanovs, "Revolussia." A script is prepared and Steve writes a handful of songs for the project, including "Maybe You're Right," "The Day They Make Me Czar" and "Father and Son."
By year's end he will be signed with Chris Blackwell's Island
Records and working feverishly at Olympic Studios with former Yardbirds
bassist Paul Samwell–Smith at the console. He has more than 30 new
songs either finished or in significant pieces. And he's grown a beard.
July 20. America's Apollo 11 astronauts become the first
men to walk on the moon. In the U.K., it is July 21 – Steve's 21st
birthday.
|
1970 |
April 10. Paul McCartney's announcement about the end of
the Beatles is front page news the world over.
April. Single: Lady D'Arbanville/Time/Fill My Eyes. A
melancholy "olde English" ballad in which the lady in question (Steve's ex–girlfriend at the time) is metaphorically laid to rest. Featuring complimentary acoustic work from freshly–hired second guitarist Alun Davies, drummer Harvey Burns' Latin rhythms and a driving, syncopated bassline from John Ryan, "Lady D'Arbanville" is nothing like the Cat Stevens hits of yore; it takes U.K. radio by storm and ultimately reaches #8.
May. Steve moves out of his parents' home on Shaftsbury
Avenue for the first time, purchasing a three–story house in Fulham. He
will live here until he leaves England for tax reasons four years later.
May. LP: Mona Bone Jakon. The newly reflective Cat Stevens
emerges with a set of plaintive and highly personal songs. Originally
titled "The Dustbin Cried the Day the Dustman Died," until it's
discovered the title is too long to fit on the cover with the painting
Steve has provided; the song "Mona Bone Jakon" is a feral blues in the
style of his early heroes and has a decidely sexual connotation. The
album barely misses the U.K. Top 50.
August 6–9. Plumpton Blues Festival – Steve's comeback gig in
England, performed with Alun Davies.
September. Produced by Steve, who plays piano on the track,
Jimmy Cliff's version of "Wild World," one of the reggae legend's
best–ever experiments in the pop style, reaches No. 12 in Britain.
Cliff's single will not be released in America, for fear it will
compete with the Cat Stevens version. Steve and his tiny coterie of
comrades have been working at Morgan Studios in Willesden, London
virtually since the day "Mona" was released.
September 18. Jimi Hendrix dies in London.
October. Single: Wild World/Miles From Nowhere (U.S.)
Reaches #11.
November. LP: Tea For the Tillerman. The second Island album
is the first to be issued in America under Steve's newly–minted deal
with A&M Records ("Mona" will belatedly follow before year's end).
"He seems to fasten without effort onto tunes with a life of their own,
tunes of small beginnings and wide resonances," raves Rolling Stone.
"It really must be heard."
"Tillerman" catches fire on college campuses, where genuflecting
singer/songwriters are finding sympathetic ears ("Tillerman" charts
alongside James Taylor's "Sweet Baby James," Neil Young's "After the
Gold Rush" and Paul Simon's solo debut). Its exquisite simplicity and
decidely English point of view strike a deep and resonant chord in the
States, and the album makes the Top Ten and earns a gold record.
Steve had written and recorded the track "But I Might Die Tonight"
in July for the Jerzy Skolimowski film "Deep End," which featured Jane
Asher and Diana Dors.
November 18. Cat Stevens makes his American stage debut,
as he and Alun Davies open for Traffic at New York's legendary Fillmore
East. By the end of the short set, he has won over the audience and
receives three encores. Next, it's three triumphant headlining shows at
the Village Gaslight (with such luminaries as Joni Mitchell and James
Taylor in appreciative attendance), and after a few more dates a week
at the Troubadour in Los Angeles, with opening act Carly Simon.
December 18. Back home for a sold–out show at Fairfield
Hall, Croydon, with Amazing Blondel as support.
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1971
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June/July. Back to the States with Davies, drummer Gerry
Conway and bassist Larry Steele to enjoy the first post–"Tillerman"
adulation. During these dates, "Moonshadow" makes its stage debut. It
will be recorded for the next album, at Morgan in London.
June. Single: Moonshadow/Father and Son (#30 USA, #22 U.K.)
September. Single: Peace Train/Where Do The Children Play?
Not issued as a single in England, "Peace Train" becomes Steve's first
massive American hit, reaching No. 7.
September. LP: Teaser and the Firecat. This one puts three
singles into the charts and puts Cat Stevens on the map in America,
where nothing from the "I Love My Dog" era had ever registered. He
addresses his Greek heritage on the joyous "Rubylove," revisits the
church hymns of his youth with an eloquent interpretation of "Morning
Has Broken" and records a couple of uncharacteristally uptempo songs,
"Changes IV," "Bitterblue" and "Tuesday's Dead." The titular
characters, painted by Steve on the cover, star in an award–winning
short animated film, narrated by Spike Milligan, to the accompaniment
of "Moonshadow." Goes to #2 USA, #3 U.K.
October: Another American tour, playing bigger halls to
bigger audiences.
November. Single: Morning Has Broken/I Want to Live in a
Wigwam. The A–side gives session pianist Rick Wakeman his first
appearance on a hit single; the B–side is a non–LP track from the
"Teaser" sessions (#9 U.K., #6 U.S.)
|
1972
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May. Cat Stevens music figures prominetly in Hollywood
director Hal Ashby's dark comedy "Harold and Maude." Their winsome melancholy is perfect for Ashby's story of two lonely people at each end of life's journey. Two new songs: "Don't Be Shy" and "If You Want
to Sing Out, Sing Out" are recorded in San Francisco, specifically for
the film. Steve plays piano (offscreen) for the scene in which actress
Ruth Gordon performs "If You Want to Sing Out."
August. Australian tour.
September. LP: Catch Bull at Four. An ambitious and
musically diverse project, "Catch Bull at Four" was recorded at the
Chateau d'Herouville in France, at Manor Studios, Oxfordshire, and at
Morgan Studios in London, where "Tea" and "Teaser" had been created.
The title refers to the Zen Buddhists' 10 stages of
enlightenment (No. 4, catch the bull, No. 5, ride the bull.) It also
happens to be Cat Stevens' fourth Island/A&M album. Jean Roussel
joins the band on keyboards and effectively employed synthesizer, and
drummer Gerry Conway's role – predictably, after months of touring –
becomes more essential to the sound. Steve expands his musical
vocabulary, too, playing drums on the album's "O Caritas."
In the States, the album spends three weeks on top of the chart,
while in Steve's home country it stays at #2.
Released at the same time is "Daydo," a solo album by Alun Davies,
co–produced by Cat Stevens and Paul Samwell–Smith.
September. Single: Sitting/Crab Dance (U.S., #16)/
Can't Keep it In/Crab Dance (U.K., #13) Both "Catch Bull" tracks
are paired with a non–LP instrumental.
September 29: 31–date North American tour, featuring an
11–piece orchestra conducted by Del Newman, begins in Los Angeles. Most
of the shows – which open with a screening of the "Teaser" cartoon film
– sell out.
December 4. The "Catch Bull at Four" tour comes to a
successful close with a sold–out concert at the Royal Albert Hall in
London; fans brave the thickest London fog in recent memory to get to
the show.
|
1973 |
March: Seeking a respite from what he perceives as creative
complacency, Steve records for three weeks at Dynamic Studios,
Kingston, Jamaica, without Samwell–Smith or his regular band.
June. LP: Foreigner. A very R&B–infused and
keyboard–based collection, "Foreigner" displays a 180–degree stylistic turn. The centerpiece, "The Foreigner Suite," is 17 minutes long and takes up the entire first side of the album (it is actually three songs loosely strung together). Although the album makes #3 on both sides ofthe Atlantic, it is not favorably reviewed, and its release is not
followed by a tour.
June. Single: The Hurt/Silent Sunlight. Reaches #31 in
America.
November 9. ABC In Concert 'Moon & Star,' a 90–minute
program taped at the Aquarius Theatre in Los Angeles, is Cat Stevens'
American network TV debut. Linda Ronstadt and Dr. John make guest
appearances. The full 18–minute "Foreigner Suite" is aired without
commercial interruption – quite a stretch by network standards of the
time. But Steve and his manager have had it written into their contract.
|
1974
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February. LP: Buddha and the Chocolate Box. Co–produced by
Cat Stevens and Paul Samwell–Smith at Sound Techniques in London;
reaches #2 USA and #3 U.K.
The title refers to an epihany Steve has had during an airplane
flight: In one hand, he held a tiny statue of Buddha, a constant
traveling companion; in the other, a box of chocolates. Halfway between
the spiritual and material worlds.
His religious conviction deepens.
February. Single: Oh Very Young/100 I Dream. Reaches #10
Stateside.
March 19. Bamboozle tour opens in Glasgow. It is so named
because of its association with "Buddha and the Chocolate Box" and its
design which features bamboo reeds. The stage is also dressed in
bamboo. (Steve's house in Fulham boasts a Japanese garden, with bamboo,
which he designed himself.)
By this time, Cat Stevens is big business, playing to tens of
thousands per night in America's largest and most sonically vacant
arenas. The band, the crowds, the limos, the halls and the ticket
prices have all gotten bigger; Steve is still just one person, in the
eye of the self–actualized hurricane.
July 17. Bamboozle closes w/sold–out date at Madison
Square Garden, NYC. Steve donates the proceeds to the international
children's organization UNICEF, which will soon name him its first pop
music ambassador.
August. Single: Another Saturday Night/Home in the Sky.
Recorded during the tour at studios in Australia and Japan, Steve's
cover of the Sam Cooke classic makes #6 USA, #19 U.K.
August. Seeking refuge from Britain's crippling tax laws,
Steve takes up residence in Rio de Janiero. He will spend most of the
next year there.
September. Saturnight, a live LP from the Bamboozle tour, is
released in Europe and Japan as a UNICEF benefit. Recorded June 21/22
at Sun Plaza Hall, Tokyo.
November. Single: Ready/I Think I See the Light (U.S.)
Reaches #26.
December. Tired of too much Rio sun, Steve spends Christmas
in Switzerland, where he studies numerology, which has been introduced
to him by Hestia Lovejoy, a woman he met in Australia. Here he writes
the rest of his next album.
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1975
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June. Single: Two Fine People/A Bad Penny. Left off the
forthcoming "Numbers" album and released as a teaser for "Greatest
Hits." Reaches #33 (USA).
June. LP: Greatest Hits. The singles from Steve's
Island/A&M catalog are collected, including "Another Saturday
Night." The album reaches #6 in America and becomes one of the
best–selling Cat Stevens albums of all time.
Not long after this, Steve is swimming in the Pacific at the home
of A&M boss Jerry Moss. Caught in a riptide, he feels himself being
pulled out to sea. Crying out for help, he promises to work for God.
Suddenly swept back to shore, he knows his prayer has been answered and
that his quest for contentment will not last much longer.
November. LP: Numbers. Recorded in the spring amidst the
snowy Laurentian mountains at Le Studio Quebec, Morin Heights, Canada,
where he hoped a change of scenery would nourish the muse, the album is
subtitled "A Pythagorean Theory Tale" and represents his current
infatuation with numerology. An accompanying fantasy storybook, with
Steve's illustrations, tells the story of the "little planet of
Polygor." A planned full–scale book fails to materialize.
November 30. The elaborate Majikat Tour opens in
Gothenburgh, Sweden. Each concert is preceded by an illusionist show,
which includes a live tiger and doves. At the end of the three–member
magic team's act, Cat Stevens is brought out "in pieces" and assembled
in front of the cheering audience. By the end of the first dress
rehearsal, the road crew could do all the tricks, squeezing into tiny
boxes and sawing one another in half.
December. Cat Stevens' final "official" concert in his home
country, Dec. 20 at the Hammersmith Odeon, London (although no one
knows it at the time).
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1976
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January 15. The Majikat tour begins a two–month North
American run in Lakeland, Fl.
March. Single: Banapple Gas/Ghost Town (U.S.)/Land
O'Freelove & Goodbye/(I Never Wanted) To Be a Star (U.K.) The
former charts poorly, the latter not at all.
April 17. The final leg of Majikat begins at the Concerthus
in Stockholm.
May 26. Following the concert at the Palacio Municipal in
Barcelona, Steve fractures his right heel while leaping down a flight
of hotel stairs. He finishes the tour in a cast and considerable pain.
June 2. As the tour party is being feted by the Athens
promoter, Steve goes swimming in the Mediterranean – hoping to soothe
his aching foot—and is stung by a jellyfish. The concert at
Karaiskaki Stadium is the night before school exams, and so the hall is
half full, which further agitates him. Following a dispirited "Father
and Son," he drops his guitar and storms off the stage, the concert
summarily ended. Contractually, he must reimburse the promoter.
Steve's interest in maintaining Cat Stevens, superstar, is
seriously waning.
June 5. After one more concert at the Alexandreon Athleticon
in Thessalonica, to another near–empty hall (Greece is playing England
on TV the same night), Majikat limps to a close. Steve himself pays
nearly 300,000 pounds to cover the costs of the mammoth production. He
never tours again.
July 21. On his 28th birthday, Steve is given the
Qur'an, the holy book of Islam, a gift from brother David.
Steve serves as executive producer on "Alpha Omega," a
concept album written by David and featuring performances by various
artists. Steve sings his brother's song "Child For a Day," and will
include the recording on his next album.
|
1977 |
March. LP: Izitso. Produced by Steve and David
Kershenbaum, the album was recorded in studios in Massachusetts,
Alabama and Denmark, places where Steve – a rootless tax exile – has
been living in hotels with his "mobile vegetarian flight case." Reaches
#7 USA, #18 U.K.
He spends nearly all of his spare time in this period reading the
Qur'an.
May. Single: (Remember the Days of the) Old Schoolyard/Doves
(U.K., #44)/(Remember the Days of the) Old Schoolyard/Land O'Freelove
& Goodbye (U.S., #33)
October. Single: Was Dog a Doughnut/Sweet Jamaica (U.S.)
December 23. Steve enters the Regents Park Mosque in London
and formally embraces Islam. It is Muharram, 1398 on the Islamic
calendar.
|
1978 |
March. During a UNICEF visit to war–ravaged Bangladesh,
Steve and Alun Davies perform at a "cultural festival" in Rangamati. On
March 21 they give a spontaneous concert in the farming village of
Rangpur. Then it's on to Thailand and Egypt, where Steve delights in
visiting each and every mosque.
July 4. Steven Georgiou changes his name to Yusuf Islam. He
still owes Island/A&M one more Cat Stevens album, for which he is
reunited with Paul Samwell–Smith – and with Alun Davies, who didn't
appear on "Izitso." Alun co–writes two new songs.
November. LP: Back to Earth. The old team has come together
to complete the final record. Recorded in several places including
Longview Farms in Massachusetts, London's Advision and CBS in New York
City, the album is completed Le Studio in Quebec. Yusuf is praying five
times daily, and the sessions take on a melancholy edge as it's
implicitly understood that they are to be the last.
Indeed, Yusuf has no more use for Cat Stevens, having found
something that satisfies him a great deal more. With no artist to
promote it, "Back to Earth" and its singles make a poor showing in the
charts.
November. Single: Bad Brakes/Nascimento (U.S.)
December 3. Stavros Georgiou dies.
|
1979
|
January 9. As a UNICEF ambassador, Yusuf is in the audience
of the "Year of the Child" concert at the United Nations building in
New York (he had declined to perform, and the final headliners are the
Bee Gees, Rod Stewart and ABBA). He is introduced from the stage, as
Yusuf Islam, not Cat Stevens, and when the event airs the following day
on NBC–TV, this segment has been edited out.
January. Single: Last Love Song/Nascimento (U.K.)
January. Single: Randy/Nascimento (U.S.)
September 7. Yusuf Islam
marries Fouzia Ali at Regent's Park Mosque, the 1000th
wedding to take place there.
Yusuf has moved back to
Britain, and he purchases a home next to his mother in Hampstead
Gardens.
November 22. 'Year of the Child' multi–artist concert,
Wembley Arena, U.K. This UNICEF benefit is Cat Stevens' final concert
appearance. "I enjoyed the show but my heart was with Allah," Yusuf
tells the Evening Star. " I don't think I'll be performing on
stage again, but I can't be dogmatic and say that I never will again. I
just think that's not the way I want to go from now on."
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1980
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July 11. Hasanah, a daughter, is born to Yusuf and his wife.
Yusuf makes the hajj, the Muslim pilgrimage to the holy
city of Makkah. He auctions his musical instruments and gold records,
the proceeds divided between Help The Aged and Capital Radio's Help a
London Child campaign. Over the next decade he will help found and
support numerous other charities.
Cat Stevens was no more. "Sometimes I had to close my mind
to everything else in order to achieve my goal," Yusuf explains. "I did
that when I was a songwriter. I almost didn't listen to anybody else's
music, because I thought it might influence me, and I'd end up copying
them.
"And I did it when I entered my spiritual discovery of Islam. It
made me think only about just that, and I didn't want to think about
anything else."
|
1981
|
To help increase his own knowledge and to assist others in
understanding Islam, Yusuf begins a weekly Islamic Circle, open to all,
every Saturday at London's Central Mosque.
For the first time since becoming a Muslim, he writes a song: "A is
For Allah," for his infant daughter.
And he gives his first public lecture, titled "My Path to
Surrender," at the Mind, Body, Spirit Festival in Olympia.
|
1982
|
February 10. Yusuf, with Rashid Farah, a white–haired,
elderly British Muslim, forms the Islamic Circle Organization Charity
Trust.
>October 23.Yusuf
has purchased and renovated an old Victorian manor house in Kilburn,
London – not far from the site of the old Morgan Studios building – and
with an initial enrollment of 13 nursery–age children, Islamia, one of
England's first all–Islamic schools, is born.
|
1984
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March 2. Yusuf visits the Sudan, where a devastating famine
is taking tremendous tolls on the population.
He begins to expand his public profile, giving lectures at
universities in Britain.
|
1985
|
July 13. At the massive Live Aid charity concert, taking
place at Wembley Stadium, Yusuf arrives and offers to perform – a
capella – a new song written for the occasion, "The End." The promoters
allow Elton John to overrun, thus leaving no time for Yusuf.
Having turned his back on the music business, Yusuf now
comes to understand that the business has also turned its back on him.
November 30. Muslim Aid is established.Yusuf's idea to to
help Muslims channel their charitable contributions to those areas of
the world devastated by war and famine.
|
1987
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During a visit with refugees in Peshewar, in war–ravaged northwest
Pakistan, Yusuf sings an impromtu "A is for Allah." A crudely–made
cassette is soon copied and circulating – the first Muslim bootleg!
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1989
| March. Islamia acquires the old Brondesbury & Kilburn
Secondary School – ironically the very grammar school Mike Hurst had
attended as a child.
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1990
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May 5.
Yusuf's sixth child, a son named Abdul Al Ahad, dies after 13 days of
life. Two months later, Ingrid
Georgiou, Yusuf's mother, dies.
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1992
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September. On a visit to
northern Bosnia, Yusuf gets a first–hand look at the front lines. The
country is being pulverized by
civil war, as the former Yugoslavia is dissolved.
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1994 |
December. CD:
The Life of the Last Prophet. The first release on Yusuf Islam's
Mountain of Light label is a spoken–word recording
relating the life of the Prophet Muhammad, including selected verses of
the Qur'an read by Shaikh Muhammed
Al–Minyaoui, and the well–known traditional song "Tala'a al–Badru
'Alayna."
"Mountain of Light"
refers to Jabal al–Nur, the peak outside of Makkah where, according to
the Qur'an, the prophet Muhammad received
the words of God through the angel Gabriel.
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1997 |
After years of ceaseless
campaigning by Yusuf, Islamia becomes the first government–subsidized
Islamic school in Britain.
November 16. Accompanied by a Bosnia youth chorus, Yusuf sings
three songs a cappella in Sarajevo, in front of 6,000
people – including the country's president—at the Cultural Center
Skenderija.
He is in
the process of putting together a CD of Bosnian songs, the proceeds
from which will go to the victims of the recent
genocide in the country.
December. CD: I Have No Cannons That Roar. The title track was
given to Yusuf as a poem by Bosnian Foreign
Minister Irfan
Ljubiyangic, whose helicopter was tragically shot down soon afterward.
Yusuf helped translate the words and
recorded it, and his own a capella song "The Little Ones" (another
snapshot of the Bosnian tragedy) was included
alongside. Bosnian singers Dino Merlin, Aziz Alili, Senad Podojak and
others were featured as well.
In Turkey,
"I Have No Cannons That Roar" goes to #1.
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1998 |
January 9. On the road to
Sarajevo, Yusuf receives the news that Britain's Secretary of Education
David Blunkett has awarded grant–maintained status to Islamia, an
historic first for the country.
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1999 |
April. Visits to Macedonia
and Albania to distribute aid to Kosovan refugees. In a terrible
program of "ethnic cleansing," Serbian
forces have driven more than a million people from their homes, and
massacred thousands
August/September. Yusuf
establishes Small Kindness, and the Kosova Orphan & Family Fund,
providing regularmoney
for orphans of the war.
December.
Yusuf visits Turkey, where he pledges financial support for victims of
the recent earthquake.
March. CD: A Is For Allah. A two–CD set on Mountain of Light
featuring the essence of Islam through an explanation of
the Arabic alphabet, recited by Yusuf, with music. It is released
simultaneously with a hardcover book
of the same name, written and illustrated by Yusuf.
May 10. Prince
Charles visits Islamia, telling the students, Yusuf and the news media
"I believe that Islam has much to teach
increasingly secular societies like ours in Britain."
October
1. American cable network VH1 profiles Cat Stevens on "Behind the
Music," lifting the veil of mystery from
Yusuf and allowing him to speak directly to his fans about his
disappearance from the world of popular
music, and to address the many misconceptions and rumors that had grown
up over the years.
It also
provides the program with one of its highest–ever ratings.
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