His new religious beliefs led him in a number of directions. Then, in 1978, Stevens suddenly renounced his music career, changed his name to Yusuf Islam, auctioned off his instruments and rededicated his life to being a family man and a devout Muslim.īut he didn’t entirely disappear. He achieved superstardom with evergreen standards like “Morning Has Broken,” “Moonshadow” and “Peace Train,” and toured the world as a major headliner. During his convalescence his songwriting morphed, and he emerged as the acoustic-guitar-wielding, long-haired Pan most people still conjure in their minds when they hear his name. His career began in the late ’60s as a teenage pop star in Britain, before a bout with tuberculosis nearly killed him. Stevens’s road has been anything but a straight line. If my path has never followed conventional patterns, just consider its source in a real sense, I owe it all to Cat Stevens. Operating under the mainstream radar, I’ve headlined on stages ranging from the fancy (Lincoln Center) to the less so (dank basements in rural Romania). Critics wrote nice things about us, we began making records, and for the past couple of decades I’ve been blessed with a music career, albeit a nontraditional one.
A few years later, after I moved to Brooklyn, a series of chance encounters led to a high-profile engagement for my quartet. Stevens’s songs eventually led me to Bob Dylan Dylan led me to early-20th-century blues, jazz and country music and by my early 20s I was living in New Orleans, fronting my first band.
The very next day I acquired a cheap guitar and began teaching myself how to play. The film, which turned 50 this year, prominently features Stevens’s songs, including one that could be called its theme: “If You Want to Sing Out, Sing Out.” I decided that I did. I’d first heard Stevens’s music as a teenager in the mid-’80s, when friends and I watched “Harold and Maude,” Hal Ashby’s paean to nonconformity. And it had been too long since I’d spent time with Scott Joplin’s opera “Treemonisha” the relevance of its poignant, resilient finale, “A Real Slow Drag,” gave me goosebumps.Īnd then came Cat Stevens. Similarly, both Sun Ra and the Shaggs found their way back from the nether regions of my stacks and into regular rotation once again, each now making more sense than ever. The magnificent gospel compilation set “Goodbye, Babylon” from 2003 bathed me again in its heavenly glow every time I put it on, making me wonder why I’d ever consigned it to mothballs. Foolishly, I’d dismissed Randy Newman as a Hollywood lightweight, but a return to the sharp, subversive danger of his 1974 album “ Good Old Boys,” and the more recent “Dark Matter” from 2017, reminded me of his particular genius. I’ve deliberately reached for albums with which I have distant, uncertain relationships, producing new revelations. Part of this process for me has involved a careful survey of what is literally on my shelves, which includes an ungainly collection of music housed on old media: vinyl, CDs and cassettes.