Sunday 27 April 2014

Rod Stewart album by album




Every Picture Tells A Story is one of my favourite albums. I love it to bits. I first encountered Rod Stewart at the Weeley Festival in August 1971, and I recall him introducing one song as a story about a schoolboy and an ageing Liverpool prostitute. Even though the song was not yet a hit, and the Every Picture Tells A Story album had only been released the previous month, his announcement generated a huge response from the crowd. I think it was that response which made me remember the moment so clearly. And I'm grateful for that, as I can pin-point exactly the moment when I first heard "Maggie May". I saw Rod again at the Hemel Hempstead Pavilion in Feb 1972, after "Maggie May" had been a hit, and he was suddenly the biggest act on the planet. In order to get maximum profit out of the booking, the Pavilion decided to release tickets during a concert in which they booked some cheap acts. So you had to pay twice. The acts were very bad, and most people just bought their Rod Stewart tickets and went home (or to the pub). I watched one act briefly with some friends. I remember the girl singer took her top off in order to encourage more people to watch. One friend said that if we cheered enough she might take her bottom off as well. Anyway, it was worth enduring that atrocious concert, because the Rod Stewart concert became memorable for me near the end. As was common in those days, I was leaning on the front of the stage (no bouncers in font of the stage in those days). Stewart was drinking something, and he playfully offered it to those of us leaning on the stage. I put my hand up, and he grabbed my arm and pulled me on stage, and then pulled up someone else. He then put his arms around us, and we sang "Maggie May" together. Awesome moment. At the end of the song the set was over, and he shouted in my ear that he would get into trouble for having me on stage, so I should go backstage with him. Sadly I turned down that opportunity, preferring to have a few moments on stage, larking about in front of my friends. It may well be that part of the appeal for me of the early Seventies era Rod Stewart and the Every Picture Tells A Story album in particular, is due in part to those two live experiences.

Anyway, even though I enjoyed that album, and some of his other early Seventies albums, I've never really explored his life and career. I mean, I know a bit, and I know some of the legends, such as that he played harmonica on "My Boy Lollipop" (apparently untrue - it was possibly another member of a band that Stewart was a part of), but I don't know much, and I thought it was time to pull all the facts together, and sort out the truth from the rumour.


Career

Rod Stewart was born and brought up in Highgate. He had a comfortable and happy upbringing. Among the legends of his youth are that he played professional football, was a gravedigger, got arrested on protest marches, and went busking in France and Spain. Well, he played football for his school, and for Middlesex Schoolboys, but he was never signed to a professional team. He went for a trial at Brentford, but they didn't call him back. He worked two Saturdays at Highgate Cemetery helping lay out plot, but didn't do any grave-digging, though he encouraged the myth. Some sources do report that he got arrested on an Aldermarston March, though by his own account his involvement was more motivated by fun than serious politics. He started playing the harmonica and busking in 1962 - and did busk in Paris and Barcelona as mentioned in the semi-autobiographical song "Every Picture Tells a Story". In 1963 he briefly sang and played harmonica with the Dimensions, then in 1964 worked with Long John Baldry in the Hoochie Coochie Men, where he had his recording debut on "Up Above My Head" in June, while also starting his solo recording career, and releasing his first solo single, Good Morning Little Schoolgirl, in September. In 1965 he joined Steampacket with Baldry, Julie Driscol and Brian Auger. Though they didn't release any material while together, they did record some demos, such as "Can I Get a Witness",  which were released later to cash in on Stewart's Seventies success, and they appeared in live performances on a couple of TV shows: Steampacket jam with Eric Burdon and Stevie Winwood  (National Jazz Blues Festival at Richmond Athletic Grounds, 6-8 August 1965) and Steampacket live. After Steampacket, Stewart joined Shotgun Express, a similar style group, and they recorded and released I Could Feel The Whole World Turn Round in October 1966 - other members included Peter Green and Mick Fleetwood.

In Feb 1967 he joined the Jeff Beck Group along with Ronnie Wood, and they recorded the albums Truth in May 1968, and Beck-Ola in April 1969. The group broke up, and he and Wood replaced Steve Marriot in the Small Faces and renamed the group the Faces. Around this time he recorded a few songs for Python Lee Jackson, including In A Broken Dream, which would be released in 1972 to cash in on Stewart's success. He had now signed his fourth solo recording contract with Mercury  (the previous three were Decca, 1964; Columbia, 1965-66; Immediate, 1968 - all had released unsuccessful singles), and in 1969 recorded his first solo album, An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down, released in the UK in Feb, 1970 and containing his version of Handbags and Gladrags. Immediately after, he recorded First Step, the first Faces album, which was hastily recorded, and sounds like it, though Three Button hand Me Down works well. His next solo album, Gasoline Alley, was released in Sept 1970.

To be continued.....

Albums



The Steampacket Featuring Rod Stewart  (1970) 

First released in 1970, this set of tracks has been re-released several times since under different names and different track order. However, Stewart left the group in 1966, so I'm placing it here, before the Jeff Beck Group releases purely for chronological order of the recordings.  It's not a great album, purely of historic interest. This is a series of rather flat demos with  the group leader, Long John Baldry, sharing vocals with Julie Driscoll and Rod Stewart on a series of slightly jazzy covers of mostly standards. The best parts are actually not the singing, but the cool jazz guitar of Vic Brigg and the groovy if somewhat limited organ of Brian Auger. Three of the tracks are instrumentals. There's little here to show evidence of what Stewart could do. 

Tracklist

1 "Can I Get A Witness"   Written-By – Holland, Dozier    3:36
2 "The In-Crowd"    Written-By – Billy Page   3:42
3 "Baby Take Me"  Written-By – Ashford, SimpsonArmshead   2:12
4 "Baby Baby"  Written-By – Unknown   2:26
5 "Back At The Chicken Shack" Written-By – Smith   3:52
6 "Cry Me A River  Written-By" – A. Hamilton  2:46
7 "Oh Baby, Don't You Do It"  Written-By – Unknown   3:28
8 "Holy Smoke"  Written-By – Unknown / Brian Auger   3:27
9 "Lord Remember Me"  Written-By – Unknown /  Brian Auger  4:18


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 8 
Score: 3 1/2 

Truth  (August 1968)
Jeff Beck Group

Forget all that nonsense about Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, and Black Sabbath being the unholy trinity of heavy metal. Everything that would become hard rock/heavy metal is set down in steel right here on this album in 1968. That Zeppelin take ideas from this album is clear in that both Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones played on the album; and there is a persistent rumour that Deep Purple guitarist Richie Blackmore played on "Beck's Bolero", recorded in May 1966.  


ReleasedJuly 1968 (USA)
November 1968 (UK)
Recorded16 May 1966; 14–26 May 1968
StudioAbbey RoadOlympic and De Lane Lea, London
Genre
Length40:16
LabelEMI Columbia (UK), Epic (US)
ProducerMickie Most

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Shapes of Things"McCartyRelfSamwell-Smith3:22
2."Let Me Love You"Jeffrey Rod4:44
3."Morning Dew"Bonnie Dobson4:40
4."You Shook Me"Willie DixonJ. B. Lenoir2:33
5."Ol' Man River"Jerome KernOscar Hammerstein II4:01
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Greensleeves"Traditional1:50
2."Rock My Plimsoul"Jeffrey Rod4:13
3."Beck's Bolero"Jimmy Page2:54
4."Blues Deluxe"Jeffrey Rod7:33
5."I Ain't Superstitious"Willie Dixon4:53

Additional credited personnel

Additional uncredited personnel



Wikipedia
AllMusic: 10 
Score: 8

Beck-Ola  (April 1969)
Jeff Beck Group

More straightforward rock than Truth, so less engaging, less exciting, and perhaps sounding more dated, though easier to get into, and certainly of its time. 


ReleasedAugust 1969 UK
Recorded3–19 April 1969
StudioDe Lane LeaAbbey Road and Trident, London; Mirasound, New York City
Genre
Length30:29
Label
ProducerMickie Most

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."All Shook Up"Otis BlackwellElvis Presley4:49
2."Spanish Boots"Ronnie WoodJeff BeckRod Stewart3:32
3."Girl from Mill Valley"Nicky Hopkins3:44
4."Jailhouse Rock"Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller3:12
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Plynth (Water Down the Drain)"Hopkins, Wood, Stewart3:05
2."The Hangman's Knee"Tony Newman, Beck, Hopkins, Stewart, Wood4:47
3."Rice Pudding"Hopkins, Wood, Beck, Newman7:20

2004 CD bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
8."Sweet Little Angel"B.B. King7:57
9."Throw Down a Line"Hank Marvin2:54
10."All Shook Up" (Early version)Blackwell, Presley3:18
11."Jailhouse Rock" (Early version)Leiber, Stoller3:11



Wikipedia
AllMusic:
Score: 7 


Quiet Melon - July 1969 (unreleased)

There is little information about this band. It appears to have been formed by Ron Wood's brother, Art Wood, who had a recording contract with Fontana Records. Members were Art Wood, Ronnie Wood, Rod Stewart, and the remains of the Small Faces after Steve Marriot had left. They recorded four tracks for Fontana, who then terminated Art Wood's record contract as not being what they wanted. The tracks were later released in 1995.  Ronnie Lane left the band to be replaced by Stewart Grainger for a short lived series of concerts apparently attended by only a handful of people. Art Wood and Grainger then left, Lane re-joined, and the band changed name to the Faces.  

Tracks: 

1) Diamond Joe
2) Engine 4444
3) Instrumental 



An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down
Feb 1970 - Solo

This is Stewart's first solo album. He'd signed a recording contract with Mercury in 1968, but didn't start recording the album until after he'd left the Jeff Beck Group in 1969.  Ronnie Wood from the Jeff Beck Group would join Stewart in the Faces, and he played on the album, along with the Faces keyboard player Ian McLagan. The other musicians were session players, with guest appearances by Mike d'Abo , Lou Reizner, and Keith Emerson.

This is a modest album which has elements of Stewart's folky, rocky style, but also elements of the Jeff Beck Group. It doesn't hold together as a cohesive album, as it feels like Stewart is searching for his own voice.  Stewart wrote four of the songs: "I Wouldn't Ever Change a Thing" and "Blind Prayer" are in the style of the Jeff Beck group, and are quite weak. "Cindy's Lament" is an RnB number reminiscent of Steampacket - a style that Stewart would return to on later albums, though without the psychedelic/heavy feel that he uses here to finish the song. The title track is the fourth self-penned song, and is the best of the four, including a little folk, a little slap rock, a little swing, it is a little rough and loose, but is strongly indicative of the direction that Stewart would take. "Man of Constant Sorrow", a folk song, shows Stewart's ability to choose a song and do a telling version of it. This song would not be out of place on Every Picture Tells  A Story.  The other songs are covers: he does a truly dreadful version of "Street Fighting Man", one of the few times he totally fucks up a cover; his cover of "Dirty Old Town" is unremarkable but acceptable; the third cover, "Handbags and Gladrags", is again one of those well chosen songs that he sings so bloody well. Is his version the best? Probably - it's certainly not half bad, and is the best song on this other mediocre and patchy album. Notable other versions - Mike d'Abo (1967),  Chris Farlowe (1967),  Chase (1972),  Big George (The Office theme 2000),  Stereophonics (2001).  
On the whole, not a bad album, and with the classic performance of "Gladrags", it is lifted to decent, though I don't get why AllMusic rate it so high. 


ReleasedNovember 1969 (US)
February 1970 (UK)
RecordedJune–August 1969
StudioLansdowne and Olympic Studios, London
Genre
Length32:47
LabelVertigoMercuryFontana
ProducerRod Stewart, Lou Reizner

All tracks are written by Rod Stewart, except where indicated

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Street Fighting Man"Mick JaggerKeith Richards5:05
2."Man of Constant Sorrow"traditional; arranged by Stewart3:12
3."Blind Prayer" 4:36
4."Handbags and Gladrags"Mike d'Abo4:24
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down" 3:30
2."I Wouldn't Ever Change a Thing" 4:44
3."Cindy's Lament" 4:26
4."Dirty Old Town"Ewan MacColl3:42
Total length:32:47


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 9
Score: 5

First Step
March 1970 - Faces

Decent album with some good tracks. 

Released27 March 1970[1]
RecordedDecember 1969 – January 1970 at De Lane Lea Studios, London
GenreBlues rock,[2] R&B
Length46:22
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerFaces

All lead vocals by Rod Stewart except where indicated

Side one

  1. "Wicked Messenger" (Bob Dylan) – 4:00
  2. "Devotion" (Ronnie Lane) – 4:48 (lead vocals: Rod Stewart, Ronnie Lane)
  3. "Shake, Shudder, Shiver" (Lane, Ronnie Wood) – 3:09 (lead vocals: Rod Stewart, Ronnie Lane) (duet)
  4. "Stone" (Lane) – 5:33 (lead vocals: Ronnie Lane)
  5. "Around the Plynth" (Rod Stewart, Wood) – 5:45

Side two

  1. "Flying" (Lane, Stewart, Wood) – 4:10
  2. "Pineapple and the Monkey" (instrumental) (Wood) – 4:23
  3. "Nobody Knows" (Lane, Wood) – 4:05 (lead vocals: Rod Stewart, Ronnie Lane) (duet) – 4:04
  4. "Looking Out the Window" (instrumental) (Kenney JonesIan McLagan) – 5:00
  5. "Three Button Hand Me Down" (McLagan, Stewart) – 5:30


Wikipedia
AllMusic:
Score: 5 

Gasoline Alley
Sept 1970 - Sept

This is a more balanced and finished album than Raincoat, and is closer to Picture in style and achievement.  "Lady Day" is a lovely track, and would have sat comfortably on Picture.  


Released12 June 1970
RecordedFebruary–April 1970
StudioMorgan, London
Genre
Length42:30
LabelMercuryVertigo
ProducerRod Stewart, Lou Reizner

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Gasoline Alley"Stewart, Ronnie Wood4:02
2."It's All Over Now"Bobby Womack, Shirley Jean Womack6:22
3."Only a Hobo"Bob Dylan4:13
4."My Way of Giving"Ronnie LaneSteve Marriott3:55
5."Country Comfort"Elton JohnBernie Taupin4:42
6."Cut Across Shorty"Wayne P. Walker, Marijohn Wilkin6:28
7."Lady Day"Stewart3:57
8."Jo's Lament"Stewart3:24
9."You're My Girl (I Don't Want to Discuss It)"Dick Cooper, Beth Beatty, Ernie Shelby4:27

  • Rod Stewart – lead vocals, acoustic guitar on "Jo's Lament"
  • Ronnie Wood – guitar, acoustic guitar, bass guitar
  • Martin Quittenton – acoustic guitar
  • Stanley Matthews – mandolin
  • Ronnie Lane – bass on "My Way Of Giving" and "You're My Girl", backing vocals on "My Way Of Giving"
  • Pete Sears – piano on "Country Comforts", bass on “Cut Across Shorty”.
  • Ian McLagan – piano, Hammond organ (the UK credit list notes: "Mac not available due to bus strike", while the US release credits him)[6]
  • Mick Waller – drums
  • Kenney Jones – drums on "My Way Of Giving" and "You're My Girl"
  • William Gaff – whistle
  • Dennis O'Flynn, Dick Powell – violin
  • Jack Reynolds – backing vocals on "Country Comfort"

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 10
Score: 6

Long Player
Feb 1971 - Faces

This is a lovely, warm, authentic, typically ramshackle album. The Faces with Stewart and Wood had a sound that is identifiably Stewart/Faces. 1971 was a good year for Stewart and Wood as they made three solid albums, the middle one being the timeless classic Every Picture. Phew!  The two weakest tracks, for me, are the two live ones. They are just a bit too shambolic and feel somewhat underpowered and out of sympathy with the feel of the rest of the album. And, while Stewart is a great interpreter of others people's songs, he does a dreadful version of McCartney's "Maybe I'm Amazed", and the band never seem to really get behind it or understand it. McCartney really builds the song in layers of tension and joy, giving it one of the greatest vocal performances of his life, and playing all the instruments himself, which gives it a tight coherence, and proves finally that he was the greatest drummer and lead guitarist in The Beatles.  Stewart over dramatizes the singing, and does vocalisations at the end.  McCartney's singing is passionate, true, committed,  joyful - you feel that he is genuinely doing this song out of love. Stewart just feels like he is showboating, I think he may have done a good job of it in the studio, but in a live setting he's just goofing around. The band, meanwhile, are all over the place. Ho hum.  The live tracks aside, the feel on this album is close to that of Every Picture, which does suggest that Ronnie Wood had a significant and largely unrecognised part to play in the success of that album. 

ReleasedFebruary 1971
RecordedSeptember 1970–January 1971 at Morgan Sound Studios, London and with The Rolling Stones Mobile Recording Unit, live tracks recorded 10 November 1970, at Fillmore East, NYC
Genre
Length45:02
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerFaces

Side one

  1. "Bad 'n' Ruin" (Ian McLaganRod Stewart) – 5:30
  2. "Tell Everyone" (Ronnie Lane) – 4:22
  3. "Sweet Lady Mary" (Lane, Stewart, Ronnie Wood) – 5:40
  4. "Richmond" (Lane) – 3:05 (lead vocals: Ronnie Lane)
  5. "Maybe I'm Amazed" [Live at Fillmore East, New York 11/10/70] (Paul McCartney) – 5:35 (co-lead vocals: Rod Stewart, Ronnie Lane)

Side two

  1. "Had Me a Real Good Time" (Lane, Stewart, Wood) – 5:50
  2. "On the Beach" (Lane, Wood) – 4:15 (lead vocals: Ronnie Lane and Ron Wood)
  3. "I Feel So Good" [Live at Fillmore East, New York 11/10/70] (Big Bill Broonzy) – 8:50
  4. "Jerusalem" (instrumental) (Hubert ParryWilliam Blake – arr. Wood; shown as traditional) - 1:55

  • Rod Stewart - lead vocals
  • Ronnie Lane - bass, acoustic guitar, percussion, backing vocals, lead vocal [tracks 4 & 7, first verse/harmony on track 5]
  • Ronnie Wood - lead, slide, acoustic and pedal steel guitars, backing vocals, co-lead vocal [track 7]
  • Ian McLagan - piano, organ and keyboards, backing vocals
  • Kenney Jones - drums and percussion

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 10 
Score: 6 

Every Picture Tells A Story
July 1971 - Solo

One of the greatest albums ever made. Totally awesome. 

Released28 May 1971
RecordedNovember 1970−January 1971
StudioMorgan StudiosLondon
GenreRoots rock[1]
Length40:31
LabelMercury
ProducerRod Stewart

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Every Picture Tells a Story"Rod StewartRonnie Wood6:01
2."Seems Like a Long Time"Theodore Anderson4:02
3."That's All Right / Amazing Grace"Arthur Crudup / traditional; arranged by Stewart6:02
4."Tomorrow Is a Long Time"Bob Dylan3:43
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Henry"Martin Quittenton0:32
2."Maggie May"Stewart, Quittenton5:15
3."Mandolin Wind"Stewart5:33
4."(I Know) I'm Losing You"Norman WhitfieldEddie HollandCornelius Grant5:23
5."(Find a) Reason to Believe"Tim Hardin4:05
Total length:40:31


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 10
Score: 10


Short video:
1. Three Button Hand Me Down
2. Maybe I'm Amazed 
3. Miss Judy's Farm 
4. Stay With Me 
5. (I Know) I'm Losing You

Long video:
1. Three Button Hand Me Down 
2. Maybe I'm Amazed (Paul McCartney cover) 
3. Too Much Woman (Ike Turner cover) 
4. Street Fighting Man (The Rolling Stones cover) 
5. Too Much Woman (Ike Turner cover) (reprise) 
6. Miss Judy's Farm Love in Vain (Robert Johnson cover) 
7. Stay With Me
8. (I Know) I'm Losing You (The Temptations cover)




A Nod Is as Good as a Wink... to a Blind Horse
Nov 1971 - Faces 

"Stay With Me" is the stand out track here. The rest of the album appears to have moved on from the folky and soul touches that marked the best of Stewart and Wood's output in the early Seventies. There's a lot more straight rock and muscle here. But little of the charm that makes Stewart so appealing.  "Stay With Me" is very much is the good time rock camp, with very laddish lyrics, but it works. Most of the quieter, reflective songs are by Ronnie Lane, who wasn't quite of the talent of Wood and Stewart, but very much wanted to be taken seriously.  Some people really rate this album, but I'm seeing it as a bit too shambolic and lacking in focus. Whose album is it? Is it Stewart's (with Wood in support)? Or is it Lane's? Whatever - without "Stay With Me", this album doesn't really warrant a listen. 

Released17 November 1971[1]
RecordedMarch–September 1971
Olympic StudiosLondon
Length35:56
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerFaces and Glyn Johns

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocalsLength
1."Miss Judy's Farm"Rod Stewart3:38
2."You're So Rude"Ronnie Lane3:41
3."Love Lives Here"
  • Lane 
  • Stewart 
  • Wood
Stewart3:04
4."Last Orders Please"LaneLane2:33
5."Stay with Me"
  • Stewart 
  • Wood
Stewart4:37
Total length:17:33
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocalsLength
1."Debris"LaneLane (with Stewart on harmony vocal)4:36
2."Memphis"Chuck BerryStewart5:29
3."Too Bad"
  • Stewart 
  • Wood
Stewart (with Lane, McLagan and Wood backing)3:12
4."That's All You Need"
  • Stewart 
  • Wood
Stewart5:06
Total length:18:23

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 10 
Score: 4 1/2 

Never a Dull Moment  (July 1972)
Solo

Stewart's follow up solo album to Picture contains the usual mix of well chosen covers and a handful of songs co-written by Stewart. A nice album with some good songs - "You Wear It Well" being the standout track. 


Released21 July 1972
RecordedMarch–May 1972
StudioMorgan and Olympic, London
Genre Folk rock
Length32:55
LabelMercury
ProducerRod Stewart

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."True Blue"Rod StewartRonnie Wood3:32
2."Lost Paraguayos"Stewart, Wood3:57
3."Mama, You Been on My Mind"Bob Dylan4:29
4."Italian Girls"Stewart, Wood4:54
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Angel"Jimi Hendrix4:04
2."Interludings"Art Wood0:40
3."You Wear It Well"Stewart, Martin Quittenton4:22
4."I'd Rather Go Blind"Billy Foster, Ellington Jordan3:53
5."Twistin' the Night Away"Sam Cooke3:13
Total length:32:55
  • Rod Stewart – vocals, acoustic guitar
  • Ronnie Wood – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, slide guitar, pedal steel guitar, bass guitar
  • Ronnie Lane – bass guitar on "True Blue", and "Angel"
  • Micky Waller – drums all songs except "True Blue"
  • Kenney Jones – drums on "True Blue"
  • Ian McLagan – Hammond organ, piano
  • Neemoi "Speedy" Aquaye – congas
  • Pete Sears – piano on “Italian Girls”, “What Made Milwaukee Famous” (single), bass guitar on “I’d Rather Go Blind”.
  • Brian – piano
  • Spike Heatley – upright bass
  • Dick Powell – violin
  • Martin Quittenton – acoustic guitar
  • Gordon Huntley – steel guitar
  • Ray Jackson – mandolin

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 10
Score: 6  

Ooh La La 
April 1973 - Faces

The last studio album by the Faces as the difficulties of remaining a proper band after Stewart's solo success proved too much, and the band broke up after releasing a live album to meet contractual obligations. Stewart was delayed for two weeks at the start of recording so three tracks are made without him. There were some tensions, though none of this comes across in the album, which is tight, accomplished and very professional. More professional and tight that previous albums, so perhaps the tensions helped them all focus on the job in hand rather than slouch off in their typical drunken laddish manner. Stewart only does solo lead on five of the ten tracks. It's a decent album. The title track is one of the best tracks, though has no involvement from Stewart. Scores well as a Faces album, slightly less so as a Stewart album. 


ReleasedMarch 1973
RecordedSeptember 1972 – January 1973
StudioOlympic, London
GenreRock and roll[1]
Length30:22
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerGlyn Johns

Side one
  1. "Silicone Grown" (Rod StewartRonnie Wood) – 3:05
  2. "Cindy Incidentally" (Ian McLagan, Stewart, Wood) – 2:37
  3. "Flags and Banners" (Ronnie Lane, Stewart) – 2:00 (lead singer: Ronnie Lane)
  4. "My Fault" (McLagan, Stewart, Wood) – 3:05 (lead singers: Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood)
  5. "Borstal Boys" (McLagan, Stewart, Wood) – 2:52
Side two
  1. "Fly in the Ointment" (instrumental) (Kenney Jones, Lane, McLagan, Wood) – 3:49
  2. "If I'm on the Late Side" (Lane, Stewart) – 2:36
  3. "Glad and Sorry" (Lane) – 3:04 (lead singers: Ronnie Lane, Ronnie Wood, Ian McLagan)
  4. "Just Another Honky" (Lane) – 3:32
  5. "Ooh La La" (Lane, Wood) – 3:30 (lead singer: Ronnie Wood)

  • Rod Stewart – lead vocal (tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 7 & 9), banjo & secondary electric guitar (track 3) - not present on tracks 6, 8 & 10
  • Ronnie Wood – lead electric, slide, acoustic and rhythm guitars, electric bouzouki, co-lead vocal (track 4 & 8) & lead vocal (track 10)
  • Ian McLagan – piano, organ, harmonium, backing vocals & co-lead vocal (track 8)
  • Ronnie Lane – bass, rhythm and acoustic guitars, percussion, tambourine & lead vocal (tracks 3 & 8)
  • Kenney Jones – drums & percussion

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 9
Score: 5 

Coast to Coast: Overture and Beginners
Jan 1974 - Faces live

I suspect this album was released to cover contract requirements. Stewart's fame and success meant that the Faces were no longer a band, and Ronnie Lane, who had clearly (and clearly erroneously) felt himself at least Stewart's equal (presumably due to the success of the songs he had co-written with Marriot in the Small Faces), had left the band to start his own indifferent and largely ignored solo career. He was replaced on bass by Tetsu Yamauchi.  The album was presented as a Faces / Rod Stewart album and given a dual release in America by Mercury (Stewart's label) and Warner (the band's label, and Stewart's future label). There isn't much effort shown by anyone. Yes, it's professional, and everyone does their bit, but nobody's going the extra yard, and there's a cold feel about the whole thing.  The band broke up after the tour.  The album has not been released on CD. 

Released10 January 1974[1]
Recorded17 October 1973 at Anaheim Arena (Anaheim, CA)
Genre Boogie rock
Length49:48
LabelMercury
Warner Bros. 
ProducerFaces

Side one

  1. "It's All Over Now" (Bobby Womack, Shirley Womack) - 4:38
  2. "Cut Across Shorty" (Wayne Walker, Marijohn Wilkin) - 3:45
  3. "Too Bad" / "Every Picture Tells a Story" (Rod StewartRonnie Wood) - 7:34
  4. "Angel" (Jimi Hendrix) - 4:28
  5. "Stay With Me" (Stewart, Wood) - 4:50

Side two

  1. "I Wish It Would Rain" (Roger PenzabeneBarrett StrongNorman Whitfield) - 4:20
  2. "I'd Rather Go Blind" (Billy FosterEllington Jordan) - 5:55
  3. "Borstal Boys" (Ian McLagan, Stewart, Wood) / "Amazing Grace" (Traditional, arr. D. Throat) - 9:52
  4. "Jealous Guy" (John Lennon) - 4:25


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4 
Score: 4

Smiler
Oct 1974 - Solo

Though in the same style and approach as the previous solo albums, this is a little loose and rough as though quickly thrown together. No stand out tracks. The magic that was Picture did not visit this album. 


Released27 September 1974
RecordedMorgan Studios, London and The Wick, Richmond November 1973-May 1974
GenreRock and rollfolk rockblue-eyed soul
Length42:24
LabelMercury
ProducerRod Stewart

  1. "Sweet Little Rock 'n' Roller" (Chuck Berry) – 3:43
  2. "Lochinvar" (Pete Sears) – 0:25
  3. "Farewell" (Rod Stewart, Martin Quittenton) – 4:34
  4. "Sailor" – (Stewart, Ronnie Wood) 3:35
  5. "Bring It On Home to Me/You Send Me" (Sam Cooke) – 3:57
  6. "Let Me Be Your Car" (Elton JohnBernie Taupin) – 4:56
  7. "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Man" (Gerry GoffinCarole KingJerry Wexler) – 3:54
  8. "Dixie Toot" – (Stewart, Ronnie Wood) 3:27
  9. "Hard Road" (Harry VandaGeorge Young) – 4:27
  10. "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face" Instrumental (Alan Jay LernerFrederick Loewe) – 1:32
  11. "Girl from the North Country" (Bob Dylan) – 3:52
  12. "Mine for Me" (Paul McCartneyLinda McCartney) – 4:02


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4 
Score: 4 


Atlantic Crossing (Aug 1975)

This album marks a significant change in Stewart's life and approach to music. He'd switched record labels, moved to America, left behind his association with the musicians he's previously worked with such as Ronnie Wood and Pete Sears, and employed Tom Doyd as producer. The result is a greater focus on the slick aspects of Stewart's style, which had always been there, but were contained within the other more laddish and looser rocky elements.  The album was his fourth UK number one, and contained the No. 1 hit  "I Don't Want to Talk About It” and the international bestseller  "Sailing".  This album, though still having one foot in Stewart's previous solo albums, marked a change in attitude toward Stewart. His fan base changed, critics started to become more critical, and the media presentation became less friendly and more mocking. 

All in all it's a pleasant album, and not quite as trivial as I remembered (and I can endure "Sailing" better now than I could at the time), though it doesn't really touch me.  


Released15 August 1975
RecordedApril–June 1975
Studio
GenrePop rock
Length44:27
LabelRivaWarner Bros.
ProducerTom Dowd

Fast Side (Side One)

  1. "Three Time Loser" (Rod Stewart) – 4:03
  2. "Alright for an Hour" (Stewart, Jesse Ed Davis) – 4:17
  3. "All in the Name of Rock 'N' Roll" (Stewart) – 5:02
  4. "Drift Away" (Mentor Williams) – 3:43
  5. "Stone Cold Sober" (Stewart, Steve Cropper) – 4:12

Slow Side (Side Two)

  1. "I Don't Want to Talk About It" (Danny Whitten) – 4:47
  2. "It's Not the Spotlight" (Barry GoldbergGerry Goffin) – 4:21
  3. "This Old Heart of Mine" (Lamont Dozier, Brian Holland, Eddie HollandSylvia Moy) – 4:04
  4. "Still Love You" (Stewart) – 5:08
  5. "Sailing" (Gavin Sutherland) – 4:37


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 9
Score: 5 

A Night on the Town (June 1976)

This contains "Tonight's the Night", which is a somewhat sleazy seductive song, though with elements of the feel on Every Picture, so it repels and attracts me at the same time. It has Stewart's folky rock and soul approach, but dressed in a greasy production. It also has one of Stewart's excellent covers - Cat Steven's "The First Cut Is The Deepest". And one of Stewart's best songs not on Every Picture: "The Killing of Georgie". It's a shame his image at this point was deteriorating because of his overall sleazy behaviour and dress, and his false manner of delivering these excellent songs. 

I don't think on the whole this is an album that holds together, and despite those three outstanding songs, is not an album I'd want in my collection. 

Released18 June 1976
RecordedDecember 1975-April 1976
Studio
GenreRock
Length41:19
LabelRivaWarner Bros.
ProducerTom Dowd

Side one – Slow Side
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)"Rod Stewart3:54
2."The First Cut Is the Deepest"Cat Stevens4:31
3."Fool for You"Stewart3:49
4."The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)"Stewart6:28
Side two – Fast Side
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."The Balltrap"Stewart4:37
2."Pretty Flamingo"Mark Barkan3:27
3."Big Bayou"Gib Guilbeau3:54
4."The Wild Side of Life"Arlie Carter, William Warren5:09
5."Trade Winds"Ralph MacDonald, William Salter5:16


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 9
Score: 4 

Foot Loose & Fancy Free (Nov 1977)

Moving further in the wrong direction. 

Released4 November 1977
Recorded1976–1977
GenreRock
Length44:06
LabelRivaWarner Bros.
ProducerTom Dowd

All tracks are written by Rod Stewart and Gary Grainger unless noted otherwise.

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Hot Legs" 5:14
2."You're Insane"Stewart, Phil Chen4:48
3."You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)"Stewart4:30
4."Born Loose"Stewart, Grainger, Jim Cregan6:02
Total length:20:34
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."You Keep Me Hangin' On" (The Supremes cover)Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier, Eddie Holland7:28
2."(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right" (Luther Ingram cover)Homer Banks, Carl Hampton, Raymond Jackson5:23
3."You Got a Nerve" 4:59
4."I Was Only Joking" 6:07
Total length:23:57

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4
Score: 3 

Blondes Have More Fun  (Nov 1978) 

More superficial than  the previous album. But only just. Listenable, but borderline tedious and boring. 


Released24 November 1978[1]
Recorded1978
GenreRockrock and rolldisco
Length43:09
LabelRivaWarner Bros.
ProducerTom Dowd

Side one

  1. "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (Rod Stewart, Carmine Appice, Duane Hitchings) – 5:31[a]
  2. "Dirty Weekend" (Stewart, Gary Grainger) – 2:36
  3. "Ain't Love a Bitch" (Stewart, Grainger) – 4:39
  4. "The Best Days of My Life" (Stewart, Jim Cregan) – 4:21
  5. "Is That the Thanks I Get?" (Stewart, Cregan) – 4:32

Side two

  1. "Attractive Female Wanted" (Stewart, Grainger) – 4:17
  2. "Blondes (Have More Fun)" (Stewart, Cregan) – 3:46
  3. "Last Summer" (Stewart, Philip Chen) – 4:05
  4. "Standin' in the Shadows of Love" (Lamont DozierEddie HollandBrian Holland) – 4:28
  5. "Scarred and Scared" (Stewart, Grainger) – 4:54


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 6
Score: 3

Foolish Behaviour  (Nov 1980 

Superficial, trivial. But the album sold, and so did five singles, two of which reached the charts. There's nothing new or interesting here. Just someone who is successful going through the moments to keep the money flowing in. It's not crap, but it's getting close to it. "Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight" is listenable, and harks back to the Every Picture sound.  

Released21 November 1980
RecordedNovember–December 1979; February–September 1980
GenreRockpop rock
Length41:01
LabelWarner Bros.Riva
ProducerHarry the Hook
The Rod Stewart Group, 
Jeremy Andrew Johns 
(except "She Won’t Dance With Me" – Tom Dowd)

All tracks written by Rod Stewart, Phil Chen, Kevin Savigar, Jim Cregan and Gary Grainger; except where noted.

Side one

  1. "Better off Dead" (Stewart, Chen, Savigar, Carmine Appice) – 3:07
  2. "Passion" – 5:29
  3. "Foolish Behaviour" – 4:24
  4. "So Soon We Change" – 3:44
  5. "Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight" – 5:02

Side two

  1. "Gi' Me Wings" – 3:47
  2. "My Girl" (Stewart, Chen, Savigar, Cregan, Grainger, Appice) – 4:27
  3. "She Won’t Dance with Me" (Stewart, Jorge Ben) – 2:30
  4. "Somebody Special" (Stewart, Steve Harley, Chen, Savigar, Cregan, Grainger) – 4:29
  5. "Say It Ain’t True" – 4:02


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4 
Score: 3 

Tonight I'm Yours (Nov 1981)

Full on synth disco Eighties sound. Commercial pop and not ashamed of it. This is professional, accomplished, well produced, but completely lacking in significance or heart. This is a long long way from Every Picture.  "Young Turks" is probably the best song on the album. On the whole not a good album, but better than the previous three. 

Released6 November 1981
RecordedNovember 1980 – June 1981
StudioRecord Plant, Los Angeles
Genre
Length41:29
LabelWarner Bros. Riva
ProducerJim Cregan, Rod Stewart

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)"Stewart, Jim CreganKevin Savigar4:09
2."How Long"Paul Carrack4:12
3."Tora, Tora, Tora (Out With The Boys)"Stewart4:29
4."Tear It Up"Dorsey BurnetteJohnny Burnette, David Burlinson2:29
5."Only a Boy"Stewart, Cregan, Savigar4:09
6."Just Like a Woman"Bob Dylan3:55
7."Jealous"Stewart, Carmine Appice, Jay Davis, Danny Johnson4:30
8."Sonny"Stewart, Cregan, Savigar, Bernie Taupin4:01
9."Young Turks"Stewart, Appice, Duane Hitchings, Savigar5:04
10."Never Give Up on a Dream"Stewart, Cregan, Taupin4:20



Wikipedia
AllMusic: 8
Score: 4 


  
Absolutely Live (Nov 1982) 

Double live album.  Not one of the greatest live albums ever made, but it's approachable and entertaining, and a good summary of Stewart live.  He includes songs from the full range of his solo career. Decent enough. 

ReleasedNovember 1982
VenueThe Forum, Los Angeles
Long Beach Arena
San Diego Sports ArenaCalifornia
Wembley Stadium, London
The NEC, Birmingham, England
GenreRockpopfolk rock
Length84:26 LP
75:36 CD
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerRod Stewart

Side A
  1. "The Stripper" – 0:10
  2. "Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)" – 4:10
  3. "Sweet Little Rock and Roller" – 4:25
  4. "Hot Legs" – 4:52
  5. "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" – 4:23
  6. "The Great Pretender" – 3:34 
Side B
  1. "Passion" – 5:04
  2. "She Won't Dance with Me / Little Queenie" – 4:34
  3. "You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)" – 4:34
  4. "Rock My Plimsoul" – 4:24
Side C
  1. "Young Turks" – 5:28
  2. "Guess I'll Always Love You" – 4:51
  3. "Gasoline Alley" – 2:15
  4. "Maggie May" – 5:08
  5. "Tear It Up" – 3:26
Side D
  1. "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" – 6:04
  2. "Sailing" – 4:45
  3. "I Don't Want to Talk About It" – 4:34
  4. "Stay with Me" – 5:34

Guest musicians


Wikipedia 
AllMusic: 2 
Score: 4 1/2 


Body Wishes (June 1982)

I find my attention drifting a lot while listening to this album. It's not awful, it's just empty and boring. 

Released10 June 1983
Recorded1982
GenreRockpop rock
Length41:19
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerTom Dowd

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Dancin' Alone"Rod Stewart, Robin Le Mesurier4:03
2."Baby Jane"Stewart, Jay Davis4:44
3."Move Me"Stewart, Tony Brock, Jay Davis, Wally StockerKevin Savigar3:36
4."Body Wishes"Stewart, Jim Cregan, Kevin Savigar, Robin Le Mesurier4:41
5."Sweet Surrender"Stewart, Le Mesurier4:00
6."What Am I Gonna Do (I'm So in Love with You)"Stewart, Davis, Brock4:19
7."Ghetto Blaster"Stewart, Cregan, Savigar4:07
8."Ready Now"Stewart, Stocker3:34
9."Strangers Again"Stewart, Cregan, Savigar4:10
10."Satisfied"Stewart, Bernie Taupin, Cregan, Savigar4:08


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 3 
Score: 3 

Camouflage  (June 1984)

Not just boring and superficial but a little irritating as well. I suspect this is Stewart's worse album - I can't imagine it getting worse than this for someone who can sing so well, and when he puts his mind to it can interpret other's songs beautifully. 

Released8 June 1984[1]
StudioLion Share Recording Studios (Los Angeles, California)
GenreRock
Length36:33
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerMichael Omartian

  1. "Infatuation" (Rod Stewart, Duane Hitchings, Rowland Robinson) – 5:13
  2. "All Right Now" (Andy FraserPaul Rodgers) – 4:41
  3. "Some Guys Have All the Luck" (Jeff Fortang [sic][8]) – 4:33
  4. "Can We Still Be Friends" (Todd Rundgren) – 3:46
  5. "Bad For You" (Stewart, Kevin Savigar, Jim Cregan) – 5:17
  6. "Heart Is on the Line" (Stewart, Jay Davis) – 4:02
  7. "Camouflage" (Stewart, Savigar, Michael Omartian) – 5:19
  8. "Trouble" (Stewart, Omartian) – 4:42


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4
Score: 2 1/2 

Every Beat of My Heart  (June 1986)

Wallpaper paste music. Very Eighties. It exists, its professional, and Stewart has an attractive voice, but it all washes over me making no impression at all, other than hearing echoes and memories of past Stewart songs, which kinda makes the experience even sadder. The creative spark has gone, but while his albums still reach the Top Five in several countries around the world, I doubt if Stewart is that bothered. He probably thinks this stuff is acceptable. 


  1. "Here to Eternity" (Rod Stewart, Kevin Savigar) – 5:58
  2. "Another Heartache" (Bryan AdamsJim Vallance, Stewart, Randy Wayne) – 4:29
  3. "A Night Like This" (Stewart) – 4:06
  4. "Who's Gonna Take Me Home" (Stewart, Savigar, Jay Davis) – 4:38
  5. "Red Hot in Black" (Stewart, Jim Cregan, Kevin Savigar) – 3:30
  6. "Love Touch" (Mike Chapman, Gene Black, Holly Knight) – 3:59
  7. "In My Own Crazy Way" (Stewart, Frankie MillerTroy Seals, Eddie Setser) – 3:17
  8. "Every Beat of My Heart" (Stewart, Kevin Savigar) – 5:18
  9. "Ten Days of Rain" (Stewart, Savigar, Tony Brock) – 5:21
  10. "In My Life" (John LennonPaul McCartney) – 2:00


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4
Score: 3 

Out of Order  (May 1988)

This is more energetic and alive than previous albums. Perhaps Stewart was bothered that previous albums sounded tired, cliched, superficial, plastic, and boring. Not that the new vigour and rigour has resulted in a good album, it's just not as bad as the rest of his Eighties albums. The lyrics to "Forever Young" are so close to Dylan's song that Stewart was advised to inform Dylan who not surprisingly said that he should be listed as a songwriter. 


Released23 May 1988
Recorded1987–1988
StudioRecord Plant and Ocean Way Recording (Los Angeles, CA).
GenrePop rock
Length51:30
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerRod StewartAndy TaylorBernard Edwards

  1. "Lost in You" (Stewart, Andy Taylor) – 4:59
  2. "The Wild Horse" (Stewart, Taylor) – 4:58
  3. "Lethal Dose of Love" (Taylor, Stewart, Tony Brock) – 4:38
  4. "Forever Young" (Jim Cregan, Kevin Savigar, Bob Dylan, Stewart) – 4:03
  5. "My Heart Can't Tell You No" (Simon ClimieDennis Morgan) – 5:12
  6. "Dynamite" (Taylor, Stewart) – 4:16
  7. "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out" (Jimmy Cox) – 3:50
  8. "Crazy About Her" (Duane Hitchings, Cregan, Stewart) – 4:53
  9. "Try a Little Tenderness" (Jimmy Campbell, Reginald Connelly, Harry M. Woods) – 4:27
  10. "When I Was Your Man" (Savigar, Stewart) – 5:14
  11. "Almost Illegal" (Stewart, Taylor) – 4:27


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 5
Score: 4 

The Best of (Nov 1989)

Useful compilation album, released at the same time as the comprehensive Storyteller anthology album. Both releases contain "Downtown Train", which was simultaneously released as a single.

For me this compilation could have more of Stewarts early songs, but as they were released by a different record company, it's clear that Warner wished to stick to their own songs. However, they, of course, had to include "Maggie May" and "You Wear It Well", otherwise this wouldn't be a proper Best of.  This isn't what I'd personally select as the best of Stewart up to 1989, but it's acceptable. 

Released27 November 1989
Genre
Length70:18
LabelWarner Bros.
Producer

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Maggie May" (from the album Every Picture Tells a Story)4:56
2."You Wear It Well" (from Never a Dull Moment)
  • Stewart
  • Quittenton
4:20
3."Baby Jane" (from Body Wishes)
  • Stewart
  • Jay Davis
4:42
4."Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (from Blondes Have More Fun)4:26
5."I Was Only Joking" (from Foot Loose & Fancy Free)4:48
6."This Old Heart of Mine" (with Ronald Isley; new version)4:27
7."Sailing" (from Atlantic Crossing)Gavin Sutherland4:21
8."I Don't Want to Talk About It" (from Atlantic Crossing)Danny Whitten4:48
9."You're in My Heart" (from Foot Loose & Fancy Free)Stewart4:28
10."Young Turks" (from Tonight I'm Yours)
4:35
11."What Am I Gonna Do (I'm So in Love with You)" (from Body Wishes)
3:36
12."The First Cut Is the Deepest" (from A Night on the Town)Cat Stevens3:52
13."The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)" (from A Night on the Town)Stewart6:13
14."Tonight's the Night" (from A Night on the Town)Stewart3:34
15."Every Beat of My Heart" (from Every Beat of My Heart)
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
4:39
16."Downtown Train" (new track)Tom Waits4:30

Wikipedia
AllMusic: - 
Score: 5 


Storyteller (Nov 1989) 
The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990
 

This is a very weighty anthology for someone who, lets be honest, has not actually released that many worthy tracks.  Stewart has a great voice, and an instinctive understanding of songs which enables him to often give new emotion to covers, so even at his worse it can be a reasonably pleasant listen. However, 65 tracks over four discs, amounting to something like five hours of often fairly limited songs in a narrow profile, is rather too much.  The following year, March 1990, Warners released what they called Downtown Train – Selections from the Storyteller Anthology, an album of 12 tracks almost identical to The Best of, minus four tracks, which must have made Tom Waits happy that his song was released in four different formats by one of the world's best selling artists in the space of a few months.

Not quite sure who this album was aimed at, but it sold well enough.  

ReleasedNovember 1989
Recorded1964–1989
GenreRockpoprock and roll
Length291:54
LabelWarner Bros.

Disc One
No.TitleWriter(s)Original appearanceLength
1."Good Morning, School Girl" (Blues standard cover)Sonny Boy Williamson I1964 – Non-album single2:06
2."Can I Get a Witness" (Marvin Gaye cover)Holland-Dozier-Holland1977 – Rod Stewart & Steampacket3:34
3."Shake" (Sam Cooke cover)Sam Cooke1966 – Non-album single2:48
4."So Much to Say"Rod Stewart1968 – B-side to non-album single3:13
5."Little Miss Understood"Stewart1968 – Non-album single3:37
6."I've Been Drinking"Stewart, Jeff Beck1968 – B-side to non-album single3:17
7."I Ain't Superstitious" (Howlin' Wolf cover)Willie Dixon1968 – Truth4:53
8."Shapes of Things" (The Yardbirds cover)Jim McCartyKeith RelfPaul Samwell-Smith1968 – Truth3:18
9."In a Broken Dream"Dave Bentley1972 – In a Broken Dream3:39
10."Street Fighting Man" (Rolling Stones cover)Keith RichardsMick Jagger1969 – An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down5:05
11."Handbags and Gladrags" (Mike d'Abo cover)Mike d'Abo1969 – An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down4:23
12."Gasoline Alley"Stewart, Ronald Wood1970 – Gasoline Alley4:02
13."Cut Across Shorty" (Eddie Cochran cover)Marijohn Wilkin, Wayne P. Walker1970 – Gasoline Alley6:31
14."Country Comfort" (Elton John cover)Elton John, Bernie Taupin1970 – Gasoline Alley4:43
15."It's All Over Now" (The Valentinos cover)Bobby Womack, Shirley Womack1970 – Gasoline Alley6:22
16."Sweet Lady Mary" (with Faces)Stewart, Wood, Ronald Lane1971 – Long Player5:48
17."Had Me a Real Good Time" (with Faces)Stewart, Wood, Lane1971 – Long Player5:54
Disc Two
No.TitleWriter(s)Original appearanceLength
1."Maggie May"Stewart, Martin Quittenton1971 – Every Picture Tells a Story5:45
2."Mandolin Wind"Stewart1971 – Every Picture Tells a Story5:30
3."(I Know) I'm Losing You" (The Temptations cover)Cornelius GrantEddie HollandNorman Whitfield1971 – Every Picture Tells a Story5:22
4."Reason to Believe" (Tim Hardin cover)Tim Hardin1971 – Every Picture Tells a Story4:07
5."Every Picture Tells a Story"Stewart, Wood1971 – Every Picture Tells a Story5:58
6."Stay With Me" (with Faces)Stewart, Wood1971 – A Nod Is as Good as a Wink...To a Blind Horse4:37
7."True Blue"Stewart, Wood1972 – Never a Dull Moment3:33
8."Angel" (Jimi Hendrix cover)Jimi Hendrix1972 – Never a Dull Moment4:04
9."You Wear It Well"Stewart, Quittenton1972 – Never a Dull Moment4:20
10."I'd Rather Go Blind" (Etta James cover)Ellington JordanEtta James, Billy Foster1972 – Never a Dull Moment3:53
11."Twistin' the Night Away" (Sam Cooke cover)Cooke1972 – Never a Dull Moment3:14
12."What's Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me)" (Jerry Lee Lewis cover)Glenn Sutton1972 – Double A-side with Angel2:52
13."Oh No Not My Baby" (Maxine Brown cover with Faces members Wood, Kenny Jones, Ian McLagan)Gerry GoffinCarole King1973 – Non-album single3:38
14."Pinball Wizard" (The Who cover)Pete Townshend1972 – Tommy3:40
15."Sweet Little Rock 'N Roller" (Chuck Berry cover)Chuck Berry1974 – Smiler3:46
16."Let Me Be Your Car" (Elton John cover)John1974 – Smiler4:58
17."You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything (Even Take the Dog for a Walk, Mend a Fuse, Fold Away the Ironing Board, or Any Other Domestic Shortcomings)" (with Faces)Stewart, Wood, Ian McLagan1974 – Non-album single4:23
Disc Three
No.TitleWriter(s)Original appearanceLength
1."Sailing" (Sutherland Brothers cover)Gavin Sutherland1975 – Atlantic Crossing4:38
2."I Don't Want to Talk About It" (Crazy Horse cover)Danny Whitten1975 – Atlantic Crossing4:49
3."Stone Cold Sober"Stewart, Steve Cropper1975 – Atlantic Crossing4:12
4."To Love Somebody" (Bee Gees cover with Booker T. & the M.G.'s)Barry GibbRobin Gibb1975 – Atlantic Crossing4:30
5."Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)"Stewart1976 – A Night on the Town3:54
6."The First Cut Is the Deepest" (Cat Stevens cover)Cat Stevens1976 – A Night on the Town4:26
7."The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)"Stewart1976 – A Night on the Town6:31
8."Get Back" (The Beatles cover)Paul McCartneyJohn Lennon1976 – All This and World War II4:24
9."Hot Legs"Stewart, Gary Grainger1977 – Foot Loose & Fancy Free5:11
10."I Was Only Joking"Stewart, Grainger1977 – Foot Loose & Fancy Free6:02
11."You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)"Stewart1977 – Foot Loose & Fancy Free4:28
12."Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"Stewart, Carmine Appice, Duane Hitchings1978 – Blondes Have More Fun5:28
13."Passion"Stewart, Grainger, Phil ChenJim CreganKevin Savigar1980 – Foolish Behaviour5:30
14."Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight"Stewart, Grainger, Chen, Cregan, Savigar1980 – Foolish Behaviour5:01
15."Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)"Stewart, Cregan, Savigar1981 – Tonight I'm Yours4:10
Disc Four
No.TitleWriter(s)Original appearanceLength
1."Young Turks"Stewart, Appice, Hitchings, Savigar1981 – Tonight I'm Yours5:01
2."Baby Jane"Stewart, Jay Davis1982 – Body Wishes4:43
3."What Am I Gonna Do (I’m so in Love with you)"Stewart, Davis, Tony Brock1982 – Body Wishes4:17
4."People Get Ready" (The Impressions cover, with Jeff Beck)Curtis Mayfield1985 – Flash4:52
5."Some Guys Have All the Luck" (The Persuaders cover)Jeff Fortgang1984 – Camouflage4:32
6."Infatuation"Stewart, Hitchings, Rowland Robinson1984 – Camouflage5:12
7."Love Touch"Michael ChapmanHolly Knight1986 – Every Beat of My Heart4:03
8."Every Beat of My Heart"Stewart, Savigar1986 – Every Beat of My Heart5:18
9."Lost in You"Stewart, Andy Taylor1988 – Out of Order4:57
10."My Heart Can't Tell You No"Simon ClimieDennis Morgan1988 – Out of Order5:11
11."Dynamite"Stewart, Taylor1988 – Out of Order4:15
12."Crazy About Her"Stewart, Cregan, Hitchings1988 – Out of Order4:54
13."Forever Young"Stewart, Cregan, Savigar, Dylan1988 – Out of Order4:03
14."I Don't Want to Talk About It" (Crazy Horse cover)Whitten1989 rerecording4:52
15."This Old Heart of Mine"" (The Isley Brothers cover, duet with Ronald Isley)Holland–Dozier–Holland1989 rerecording4:12
16."Downtown Train" (Tom Waits cover)Tom WaitsNew release4:39


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 9
Score: 5

Vagabond Heart  (March 1991)


This is the fourth album in a row by Stewart which contains Tom Waits' "Downtown Train".  Stewart joked that his sales of "Downtown Train" bought Waits a swimming pool. It probably bought him more than that.  There are more covers on this album than has been the case for some years. That is probably as the result of the cover of "Downtown Train", and this is probably the start of Stewart's journey to the Great American Songbook albums.  It's a professional and accomplished collection of songs, but for me doesn't hold together (the list of producers, and the huge list of session or guest musicians, indicate the way the album was constructed). There are some attractive MOR tracks,  such as "The Motown Song", and of course "Downtown Train", which are perfectly listenable while they are on, but I wouldn't seek them out, let alone seek out an entire album of such wallpaper mush, no matter how pleasant it all sounds. Music to hum along to when it comes on the radio, yeah, but no more than that.  

Note "Downtown Train" is not on all versions, including the Spotify one. 



No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Rhythm of My Heart"Marc JordanJohn CapekTrevor Horn4:15
2."Rebel Heart"Rod Stewart, Jeff Golub, Chuck Kentis, Carmine RojasRod Stewart, Bernard Edwards4:10
3."Broken Arrow"Robbie RobertsonPatrick LeonardLenny Waronker[a]4:26
4."It Takes Two" (duet with Tina Turner)William "Mickey" StevensonSylvia MoyStewart, Edwards4:14
5."When a Man's in Love"Stewart, Golub, Kentis, RojasStewart, Edwards5:34
6."You Are Everything"Thom BellLinda CreedStewart, Edwards4:09
7."The Motown Song"Larry John McNallyRichard Perry4:00
8."Go Out Dancing"Stewart, Golub, KentisStewart, Edwards4:20
9."No Holding Back"Stewart, Jim Cregan, Kevin SavigarStewart, Edwards5:47
10."Have I Told You Lately"Van MorrisonStewart, Edwards4:01
11."Moment of Glory"Stewart, Golub, Kentis, RojasStewart, Edwards4:47
12."Downtown Train"Tom WaitsTrevor Horn4:41
13."If Only"Stewart, Cregan, SavigarStewart, Edwards4:56

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 6
Score: 4 1/2 


 
Lead Vocalist (Feb 1993)

Compilation album released after Stewart got a Lifetime Achievement award at The Bits.   Not available on Spotify or YouTube. Shame, because it has some interesting tracks. 

Released22 February 1993
GenreRockpop
Length55:00
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerTrevor Horn

  1. "I Ain't Superstitious" (Willie Dixon) (Previously released on Truth by The Jeff Beck Group) – 4:53
  2. "Handbags and Gladrags" (Mike d'Abo) (Previously released on An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down) – 4:25
  3. "Cindy Incidentally" [Rod Stewart, Ron WoodIan McLagan) (Previously released on Ooh La La by Faces) – 2:37
  4. "Stay with Me" (Rod Stewart, Ron Wood) (Previously released on A Nod Is as Good as a Wink...To a Blind Horse by Faces) – 4:37
  5. "True Blue" (Rod Stewart, Ron Wood) (Previously released on Never a Dull Moment) – 3:32
  6. "Sweet Lady Mary" (Ronnie Lane, Rod Stewart, Ron Wood) (Previously released on Long Player by Faces) – 5:48
  7. "Hot Legs" (Rod Stewart, Gary Grainger) (Previously released on Foot Loose & Fancy Free) – 5:15
  8. "Stand Back" (Stevie Nicks) – 5:44
  9. "Ruby Tuesday" (Mick JaggerKeith Richards) – 4:04
  10. "Shotgun Wedding" (Roy C) – 3:30
  11. "First I Look at the Purse" (Smokey RobinsonBobby Rogers) – 4:23
  12. "Tom Traubert's Blues" (Tom Waits) –6:12


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 
Score:

 
Unplugged and Seated (May 1992)

Pleasant enough, but unremarkable, and not worth listening to more than once. The DVD is better as you see what is going on, but even that is limited because of the format. Stewart clearly feels restricted by the sitting down aspect of unplugged. 
 
Released24 May 1993
Recorded5 February 1993, Universal Studios, Los Angeles, California
GenreRockpop
Length69:57
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerPatrick Leonard

  1. "Hot Legs" (Rod Stewart, Gary Grainger) – 4:25
  2. "Tonight's the Night" (Stewart) – 4:04
  3. "Handbags and Gladrags" (Mike d'Abo) – 4:25
  4. "Cut Across Shorty" (Wayne Walker, Marijohn Wilkin) – 4:58
  5. "Every Picture Tells A Story" (Stewart, Ron Wood) – 4:45
  6. "Maggie May" (Stewart, Martin Quittenton) – 5:45
    • (studio version previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story)
  7. "Reason to Believe" (Tim Hardin) – 4:07
    • (studio version previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story)
  8. "People Get Ready" (Curtis Mayfield) – 4:59
    • (studio version previously released as a single with Jeff Beck)
  9. "Have I Told You Lately" (Van Morrison) – 4:08
  10. "Tom Traubert's Blues (Waltzing Matilda)" (Tom Waits) – 4:40
  11. "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (Cat Stevens) – 4:12
  12. "Mandolin Wind" (Stewart) – 5:23
    • (studio version previously released on Every Picture Tells a Story)
  13. "Highgate Shuffle" (arrangement by Stewart) – 3:54
    • (previously unreleased)
  14. "Stay with Me" (Stewart, Wood) – 5:27
  15. "Having a Party" (Sam Cooke) – 4:44
    • (previously unreleased)
  16. "Gasoline Alley" (Stewart, Wood)
    • (bonus track on the "Unplugged…and Seated Collector’s Edition")
    • (studio version previously released on Gasoline Alley)
  17. "Forever Young" (Stewart, Jim Cregan, Kevin Savigar)
    • (bonus track on the "Unplugged…and Seated Collector’s Edition")
    • (studio version previously released on Out of Order)



Wikipedia 
AllMusic: 6
Score: 4 

A Spanner in the Works  (May 1995)


There is an attractive warmth to this album, especially the first track. There's a sense that Stewart knows what people not just like, but also respect about his work -which is the casual folky touch coupled with the laddish and loose excitement of his classic Seventies albums, and he's done his best to focus on that. The production, as with all his stuff since he moved to Warners, is slick, smooth, and overdone, so it's difficult to get at the immediacy and authenticity of Stewart's classic Seventies albums. But on the whole this is a listenable and attractive mature album that I wouldn't mind returning to, though I doubt if I'll come close to respecting and enjoying it as much as I do the classic Seventies albums. This is gently aging Stewart, rather than peak Stewart - see it as part of his story, rather than a standalone album. 

Released29 May 1995
Recorded1993–95
StudioWoodstock House Co. (Wicker, Ireland); A&M Studios and Ocean Way Recording (Los Angeles, CA); Herschel House (Hollywood, CA).
GenreRockpop rock
Length57:15
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerTrevor Horn, Rod Stewart, James Newton-Howard, Michael Ostin, Lenny WaronkerBernard EdwardsAndy Taylor.

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Windy Town"Chris ReaTrevor Horn5:12
2."The Downtown Lights"Paul BuchananTrevor Horn6:33
3."Leave Virginia Alone"Tom PettyJames Newton Howard, Michael Ostin, Lenny Waronker4:07
4."Sweetheart Like You"Bob DylanHorn4:54
5."This"John Capek, Marc JordanHorn5:19
6."Lady Luck"Carmine Rojas, Jeff GolubKevin Savigar, Rod StewartHorn4:25
7."You're the Star"Billy LivseyFrankie MillerGraham LyleHorn, Bernard Edwards4:39
8."Muddy, Sam and Otis"Stewart, SavigarHorn4:42
9."Hang on St. Christopher"Tom WaitsHorn4:04
10."Delicious"Stewart, Andy Taylor, Robin LeMesurierEdwards, Andy Taylor4:43
11."Soothe Me"Sam CookeEdwards3:33
12."Purple Heather"Traditional; arranged by StewartHorn4:58

Various session musicians

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 6
Score: 5


 
If We Fall in Love Tonight (Nov 1996)

Almost all covers, and a curious mix of  material - some previously unreleased, some stuff from recent Stewart albums, a remix, a new recorded version, a song from a tribute album, and one from a soundtrack. Not sure what the motivation was. The record company wanted an album, and without enough new material, some old stuff was thrown in? Anyway, it's not a great album. 


Released4 November 1996 [1]
GenreRockpop
Length67:32 (U.S. version)
73:51 (International version)
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerArnold Stiefel (exec.)

  1. "If We Fall in Love Tonight" (new original song; previously unreleased) (Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis) – 5:39
  2. "For the First Time" (new cover song; previously unreleased) (Jud Friedman, Allan Rich, James Newton Howard) – 4:01
  3. "When I Need You" (new cover song; previously unreleased) (Carole Bayer SagerAlbert Hammond) – 4:50
  4. "So Far Away" (previously released on the Carole King tribute album, Tapestry Revisited) (Carole King) – 4:20
  5. "Have I Told You Lately (Studio Version Remix)" (new remixed version; previously unreleased) (Van Morrison) – 3:58
  6. "My Heart Can't Tell You No" (previously released on Stewart's Out of Order) – 5:16
  7. "You're in My Heart" (previously released on Stewart's Foot Loose & Fancy Free) – 4:28
  8. "First Cut Is the Deepest" (previously released on Stewart's A Night on the Town) – 3:50
  9. "I Don't Want to Talk About It (1989)" (original version on Stewart's Atlantic Crossing; this version taken from Stewart's Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990) – 4:50
  10. "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (previously released on Stewart's A Night on the Town) – 3:33
  11. "Sometimes When We Touch" (new cover song; previously unreleased) (Barry MannDan Hill) – 4:24
  12. "Downtown Train" (previously released on Stewart's Storyteller – The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990) (Tom Waits) – 4:40
  13. "Broken Arrow" (previously released on Stewart's Vagabond Heart) (Robbie Robertson) – 4:21
  14. "Forever Young (1996)" (new re-recorded version; previously unreleased) (Stewart, Jim Cregan, Kevin Savigar) – 4:52
  15. "All for Love" (with Bryan Adams & Sting, previously released on the The Three Musketeers Soundtrack) (Bryan Adams, Robert LangeMichael Kamen) – 4:41


AllMusic: 6
Score: 4 


When We Were the New Boys (May 1998)

Very appealing album. Mostly covers of fairly contemporary material, including a brave though weak cover of Cigarettes and Alcohol by Oasis, this feels like Stewart not quite accepting that he is now older and wider. This is him, acknowledging that fact, but also suggesting that he can still rock as when he was one of the new boys. He does it with some vim and vigour. It's not a great album, but - to be fair - it's not half bad, and I'd be happy to play this a few times more. 


Released29 May 1998
Recorded1997
Studio
Various
GenreRockpop rock
Length41:51
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerRod Stewart, Kevin Savigar

  1. "Cigarettes and Alcohol" (Noel Gallagher) – 4:03
  2. "Ooh La La" (Ron WoodRonnie Lane) – 4:15
  3. "Rocks" (Bobby GillespieAndrew InnesRobert Young) – 4:45
  4. "Superstar" (Joseph McAlinden) – 4:21
  5. "Secret Heart" (Ron Sexsmith) – 4:07
  6. "Hotel Chambermaid" (Graham Parker) – 3:49
  7. "Shelly My Love" (Nick Lowe) – 3:38
  8. "When We Were the New Boys" (Rod Stewart, Kevin Savigar) – 4:39
  9. "Weak" (Deborah Dyer, Martin Kent, Robbie France, Richard Lewis) – 4:38
  10. "What Do You Want Me to Do?" (Mike Scott) – 3:36
  11. "Careless With Our Love" (Rod Stewart) (bonus track on Japanese release) - 4:28

Various session musicians

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 6
Score: 6

Human  (March 2001)

There are no Stewart songs on this album. The last Stewart song released was on the 1998 album. And there would be no new Stewart song until 2013. Stewart is now about to enter his American Songbook period. This album is the typical professionally done and listenable material we've come to expect from Rod the Mod. It's not rubbish. But it's little more than wallpaper muzak.  

Released12 March 2001
Recorded2000
Studio
  • Various
Genre
Length45:23
LabelAtlantic
Producer
    Various

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Human"Karl GordonConner ReevesGordon, Octave[a], Michelle Escoffery[b]3:48
2."Smitten"Macy Gray, Dave Wilder, Jeremy Ruzuma, Arik MarshallDennis Charles, Danny Kortchmar[c]5:00
3."Don't Come Around Here" (with Helicopter Girl)Jackie Joyce, Paul Berry, Mark TaylorKenny ThomasTaylor3:49
4."Soul on Soul"Marc Jordan, John CapekCharles, Christopher Neil[c]4:30
5."Loveless"Reeves, David FrankNeil4:00
6."If I Had You"Andrew Davis, Sergei RachmaninoffNeil4:18
7."Charlie Parker Loves Me"Jordan, CapekCharles, Neil[c]4:41
8."It Was Love That We Needed"Curtis MayfieldNeil4:11
9."To Be with You"Raul MaloJames HouseRod Stewart3:56
10."Run Back into Your Arms"Graham StackJohn ReidBrian RawlingTaylor, Rawling, Stack3:26
11."I Can't Deny It"Gregg AlexanderRick NowelsAlexander, Nowels[b]Danielle Brisebois[b]3:44

Various musicians including Slash on title track and Knopfler on "If I Had You" 

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 2
Score: 4

The Great American Songbook I
It Had to Be You
Oct 2002

Stewart now enters the third major period of his career. Each period has been marked by a change in record label. His classic Seventies period was on Mercury Records, his popular commercial period was on Warner, and this American Songbook period is on J Records (later taken over by Sony).  

This album has the smooth pop-jazz feel of Madeleine Peyroux's Careless Love album. But Stewart's album is two years earlier, so if there is an influence, it's from Stewart to Peyroux. Or from Richard Perry to Larry Klein, as the producers are the ones mainly responsible for the sound and feel of those albums. 

I like this album - moderately, and I'm not sure how much I'd play it, but play it I will. Perry creates a warm, enchanting sound, and Stewart knocks off these songs with ease - his age worn voice suiting the mood perfectly. It's not in the same league as Cash's last albums, where something genuinely significant and artistic was happening, but as a warm, attractive sound, it is very comfortable and appealing. 

Released22 October 2002[1]
RecordedVarious American studios
GenreTraditional pop
LabelJ
ProducerClive DavisRichard Perry,
Phil Ramone

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."You Go to My Head"John Frederick CootsHaven GillespieRichard Perry4:17
2."They Can't Take That Away from Me"George GershwinIra GershwinPerry3:25
3."The Way You Look Tonight"Dorothy FieldsJerome KernPerry3:49
4."It Had to Be You"Isham JonesGus KahnPhil Ramone3:24
5."That Old Feeling"Lew BrownSammy FainRamone2:54
6."These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)"Harry LinkHolt MarvellJack StracheyRamone3:48
7."The Very Thought of You"Ray NoblePerry3:20
8."Moonglow"Eddie DeLange, Will Hudson, Irving MillsRamone3:32
9."I'll Be Seeing You"Fain, Irving KahalRamone3:51
10."Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye"Cole PorterRamone3:27
11."The Nearness of You"Hoagy CarmichaelNed WashingtonPerry3:00
12."For All We Know"Coots, Sam M. LewisRamone3:24
13."We'll Be Together Again"Carl T. FischerFrankie LainePerry3:54
14."That's All"Alan Brandt, Bob HaymesRamone3:03

Rod Stewart and various session musicians

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 5
Score: 4 1/2

The Great American Songbook II
As Time Goes By
Oct 2003

A little goes a long way, and a second album of  these unremarkable recordings is a little too much. The modest charm of the first album has not lingered here. This album starts weak, and never improves, so it really starts to drag after a while. The first Songbook at least had the charm of being pleasant background music - this album is too thin and "off" to remain unobtrusive in the background - it calls attention to itself by its awkwardness. Still, hey, it sold, and everyone involved made money. 

Released14 October 2003
Studio
    Various studios, mostly America, 
    one in London, one in France
GenreTraditional pop
Length45:57
LabelJ
ProducerRichard PerryPhil RamoneCarl Sturken and Evan RogersClive Davis.

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Time After Time"Sammy CahnJule StynePhil Ramone2:58
2."I'm in the Mood for Love"Dorothy FieldsJimmy McHughRichard Perry3:07
3."Don't Get Around Much Anymore"Duke EllingtonBob RussellRamone2:48
4."Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered" (duet with Cher)Richard RodgersLorenz HartPerry4:14
5."Till There Was You"Meredith WillsonEvan Rogers, Carl SturkenRob Mathes[a]2:51
6."Until the Real Thing Comes Along"Cahn, Saul ChaplinL.E. FreemanMann HolinerAlberta NicholsPerry3:38
7."Where or When"Rodgers, HartRogers, Sturken3:10
8."Smile"Charlie ChaplinGeoffrey Claremont ParsonsJohn TurnerPerry3:13
9."My Heart Stood Still"Rodgers, HartRamone3:03
10."Someone to Watch Over Me"George GershwinIra GershwinPerry3:30
11."As Time Goes By" (duet with Queen Latifah)Herman HupfeldPerry3:48
12."I Only Have Eyes for You"Al DubinHarry WarrenRamone3:06
13."Crazy She Calls Me"Bob RussellCarl SigmanPerry3:27
14."Our Love Is Here to Stay"G. Gershwin, I. GershwinPerry2:57

Various session musicians

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4
Score: 3 1/2

The Great American Songbook III
Stardust
Oct 2004

More of the same. I thought I'd like these albums more than I am. This, for me, falls somewhere between the first and second. I think Stewart is getting more into the mood of the songs, with better phrasing, but the production is thinner. Perry has little involvement here.

Released19 October 2004
Studio
    Various studios in America and London
GenreTraditional pop
LabelJ
ProducerClive DavisRichard PerrySteve Tyrell, Lauren Wild

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Embraceable You"George GershwinIra GershwinSteve TyrellClive Davis3:30
2."For Sentimental Reasons"William Best, Deek WatsonTyrell, Davis3:02
3."Blue Moon" (featuring Eric Clapton)Richard RodgersLorenz HartTyrell, Davis4:05
4."What a Wonderful World" (featuring Stevie Wonder)Bob ThieleGeorge David WeissTyrell, Davis4:30
5."Stardust"Hoagy CarmichaelMitchell ParishRichard Perry, Davis, Lauren Wild[a]4:01
6."Manhattan" (duet with Bette Midler)Rodgers, HartTyrell, Davis2:53
7."'S Wonderful"G. Gershwin, I. GershwinTyrell, Davis3:24
8."Isn't It Romantic?"Rodgers, HartTyrell, Davis3:50
9."I Can't Get Started"Vernon Duke, I. GershwinTyrell, Davis3:23
10."But Not for Me"G. Gershwin, I. GershwinTyrell, Davis3:22
11."A Kiss to Build a Dream on"Oscar Hammerstein IIBert KalmarHarry RubyTyrell, Davis3:13
12."Baby, It's Cold Outside" (duet with Dolly Parton)Frank LoesserTyrell, Davis3:51
13."Night and Day"Cole PorterPerry, Davis, Wild[a]3:08
14."A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square"Eric MaschwitzManning SherwinTyrell, Davis4:03

Various session musicians. Clapton plays on Blue Moon, Stevie Wonder, Bette Midler, and Dolly Parton also join in on other songs.

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 5
Score: 4

The Great American Songbook IV
Thanks for the Memory
Oct 2005

I've really had enough of these albums now. I'm wondering if it's possible to group together the best songs in a decent compilation. But I don't think I'd have the willingness to go through these songs again. Stewart calls in more artists, such as Diana Ross, Chaka Khan, and Elton John,  to help him out. No doubt their involvement helped sales, but they do little to improve the quality. 

Released18 October 2005
Studio
GenreTraditional popjazz
LabelJ
ProducerClive DavisBob MannSteve Tyrell

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."I've Got a Crush on You" (duet with Diana Ross)George GershwinIra Gershwin3:08
2."I Wish You Love"Léo ChauliacCharles Trenet, Albert A. Beach3:38
3."You Send Me" (duet with Chaka Khan)Sam Cooke3:36
4."Long Ago and Far Away"Jerome Kern, I. Gershwin3:11
5."Makin' Whoopee" (duet with Elton John)Walter DonaldsonGus Kahn3:44
6."My One and Only Love" (featuring Roy Hargrove)Guy WoodRobert Mellin3:25
7."Taking a Chance on Love"Vernon DukeJohn LatoucheTed Fetter3:27
8."My Funny Valentine"Richard RodgersLorenz Hart2:49
9."I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm"Irving Berlin3:09
10."Nevertheless (I'm in Love with You)" (featuring Dave Koz)Harry RubyBert Kalmar3:50
11."Blue Skies"Berlin2:43
12."Let's Fall in Love" (featuring George Benson)Harold ArlenTed Koehler3:15
13."Thanks for the Memory"Leo RobinRalph Rainger3:11



Wikipedia
AllMusic: 4
Score: 3 1/2 


Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time
(Oct 2006)

Stewart seems to feel more comfortable with this sort of music. He certainly sounds better.  It's not a great album, but is pleasant enough, and is growing on me. 

Released10 October 2006
Recorded2006 at Henson Recording StudiosLos Angeles
GenreRock
LabelJ
ProducerJohn ShanksClive Davis

  1. "Have You Ever Seen the Rain?" (John Fogerty) – 3:12
  2. "Fooled Around and Fell in Love" (Elvin Bishop) – 3:48
  3. "I'll Stand by You" (Chrissie HyndeThomas KellyWilliam Steinberg) – 4:29
  4. "Still the Same" (Bob Seger) – 3:38
  5. "It's a Heartache" (Ronnie Scott, Steve Wolfe) – 3:32
  6. "Day After Day" (Peter Ham) – 3:07
  7. "Missing You" (Mark Leonard, Charles Sandford, John Waite) – 4:18
  8. "Father and Son" (Cat Stevens) – 3:36
  9. "The Best of My Love" (Don HenleyGlenn FreyJ. D. Souther) – 3:44
  10. "If Not for You" (Bob Dylan) – 3:36
  11. "Love Hurts" (Boudleaux Bryant) – 3:47
  12. "Everything I Own" (David Gates) – 3:06
  13. "Crazy Love" (Van Morrison) – 2:42
  14. "Lay Down Sally" (UK Bonus Track) (Eric ClaptonMarcy LevyGeorge Terry) – 4:00

Sessions musicians, but largely used as a single unit. 

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 5
Score: 5 1/2 


 
Soulbook (Oct 2009)

Stewart has been blessed with a beautiful voice - raspy, rocky, soulful, intimate, down to Earth. He could sing a bus timetable and it would make women swoon and men nod their heads in grim appreciation. And this album has a great choice of classic soul numbers. So why does it feel so plastic, empty, and boring? Ho hum. 


Released17 October 2009
Recorded2009
Studio
    Various in America
GenreSoul
LabelJ
ProducerSteve TyrellSteven Jordan,
Chuck Kentis

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."It's the Same Old Song"Lamont DozierBrian HollandEddie HollandSteve Jordan4:15
2."My Cherie Amour" (featuring Stevie Wonder)Henry CosbySylvia Moy, Stevie WonderJordan3:10
3."You Make Me Feel Brand New" (duet with Mary J. Blige)Thom BellLinda EpsteinSteve Tyrell4:36
4."(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher"Gary Jackson, Raynard Miner, Carl SmithJordan3:21
5."Tracks of My Tears" (featuring Smokey Robinson)Warren Moore, Smokey Robinson, Marvin TarplinTyrell3:36
6."Let It Be Me" (duet with Jennifer Hudson)Gilbert BécaudManny CurtisPierre DelanoëJordan, Harvey Mason Jr.[a]3:16
7."Rainy Night in Georgia"Tony Joe WhiteTyrell4:13
8."What Becomes of the Broken Hearted"James Dean, Paul Riser, William WeatherspoonJordan3:19
9."Love Train"Kenneth Gamble, Leon HuffChuck Kentis, Jordan, Tyrell3:03
10."You've Really Got a Hold on Me"RobinsonJordan3:17
11."Wonderful World"Lou AdlerHerb AlpertSam CookeJordan3:33
12."If You Don't Know Me by Now"Gamble, HuffTyrell3:59
13."Just My Imagination"Barrett StrongNorman WhitfieldTyrell3:35

Various session musicians

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 5 
Score: 3 1/2


The Great American Songbook V
Fly Me to the Moon...
Oct 2010

Probably the best of Songbook series. Doesn't quite have the charm of the first, but this is more accomplished and less awkward.

Released19 October 2010
StudioWestlake Studios and Reagan's Garage (Los Angeles, CA); Conway Studios and EastWest Studios (Hollywood, CA).
Genre
Length39:43
LabelJ
ProducerRichard Perry, Rod Stewart, Clive Davis, Lauren Wild

  1. "That Old Black Magic" (Harold ArlenJohnny Mercer) – 4:35
  2. "Beyond the Sea" (Jack LawrenceCharles Trenet) – 3:25
  3. "I've Got You Under My Skin" (Cole Porter) – 3:50
  4. "What a Difference a Day Makes" (Stanley AdamsMaría Grever) – 3:21
  5. "I Get a Kick Out of You" (Porter) – 3:32
  6. "I've Got the World on a String" (Arlen, Ted Koehler) – 2:52
  7. "Love Me or Leave Me" (Walter DonaldsonGus Kahn) – 3:07
  8. "My Foolish Heart" (Ned WashingtonVictor Young) – 3:37
  9. "September in the Rain" (Al DubinHarry Warren) – 2:55
  10. "Fly Me to the Moon" (Bart Howard) – 2:45
  11. "Sunny Side of the Street" (Dorothy FieldsJimmy McHugh) – 2:56
  12. "Moon River" (Henry Mancini, Mercer) – 2:48

Various session musicians

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 8
Score: 5 1/2


Merry Christmas, Baby (2012) 


Oh grief.  This continues the crooning style of the Songbook series, though with lesser songs, and lesser effort. And there's no sense of the fun of Christmas. 


Released30 October 2012
GenreChristmassouljazz
Length46:04
LabelVerve
ProducerDavid Foster, Rod Stewart, 
Kevin Savigar

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"Hugh MartinRalph Blane4:31
2."Santa Claus Is Coming to Town"J. Fred CootsHaven Gillespie2:48
3."Winter Wonderland" (featuring Michael Bublé)Felix BernardRichard B. Smith2:26
4."White Christmas"Irving Berlin3:49
5."Merry Christmas, Baby" (featuring CeeLo Green & Trombone Shorty)Johnny Moore, Lou Baxter3:53
6."Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" (featuring Dave Koz)Sammy CahnJule Styne2:51
7."What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?" (featuring Ella Fitzgerald & Chris Botti)Frank Loesser3:43
8."Blue Christmas"Billy Hayes, Jay W. Johnson3:30
9."Red-Suited Super Man" (featuring Trombone Shorty)Rod Stewart, David Foster, Amy Foster3:11
10."When You Wish upon a Star"Leigh HarlineNed Washington3:47
11."We Three Kings" (featuring Mary J. Blige)John Henry Hopkins Jr.3:27
12."Silent Night"Franz Xaver GruberJoseph Mohr4:24
13."Auld Lang Syne"Traditional, Robert Burns3:45
Total length:46:04


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 5
Score: 2 1/2 


Time  (May 2013)


After many years of just walking into a studio and knocking off a few songs written by other people, Stewart actually got it together to write an entire album. And it's a good one. It was the first time I'd really paid attention to something Stewart had done for so long it hurt. And it's a great mature album, looking back on the past but in the context of today. There are a number of writing collaborators, and I'd be interested to know how that worked. I assume Stewart's main focus was the lyrics, but there's a sense of classic Stewart in the music, so it seems he had some input into that as well. There's really good stuff here - without a doubt it's the most creative, most committed, most authentic album he's done since - gosh, when? 


Released3 May 2013[1]
RecordedApril 2011–January 2013 at Various in America, and 1 in London
GenreRock
Length50:10
LabelCapitolDeccaUCJ[2]
ProducerRod Stewart, Kevin Savigar

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."She Makes Me Happy"Rod Stewart, Chuck Kentis, Don Kirkpatrick, Conrad Korsch, David Palmer, Paul Warren3:44
2."Can't Stop Me Now"Stewart, Kevin Savigar4:26
3."It's Over"Stewart, Savigar, John 54:19
4."Brighton Beach"Stewart, Jim Cregan4:25
5."Beautiful Morning"Stewart, Savigar, Kentis, Kirkpatrick, Korsch, Palmer, Warren3:58
6."Live the Life"Stewart, Kentis, Kirkpatrick, Jessica Rousseau4:26
7."Finest Woman"Stewart, Savigar, Emerson Swinford3:54
8."Time"Stewart, Savigar, Swinford4:26
9."Picture in a Frame"Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan2:53
10."Sexual Religion"Stewart, Savigar4:45
11."Make Love to Me Tonight"Stewart, Kentis, Kirkpatrick, Korsch, Palmer, Warren3:44
12."Pure Love"Stewart, Savigar5:10


Wikipedia
AllMusic:
Score: 7 1/2 


Another Country (2015)

Has a similar sound and feel to Time, but lacks that album's authenticity, love and nostalgia. This feels like a follow up.  Some of the song's are a little awkward and embarrassing, especially for a former rock star - pushing religion and jingoism. An uncomfortable listen, both in terms of lyrical content, and the blatant failure to recapture the feel of Time, despite an obvious hard effort. 


Released23 October 2015
Recorded2014–15
StudioThe Celtic House, Los Angeles; Woodhouse Studio, Epping; Satinwood Studios, Santa Clarita, California
Length50:10
LabelCapitol
Producer

Another Country 
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Love Is"3:55
2."Please"
  • Stewart 
  • Savigar
4:22
3."Walking in the Sunshine"
  • Stewart 
  • Savigar
4:31
4."Love and Be Loved"
  • Stewart 
  • Savigar
2:55
5."We Can Win"
5:00
6."Another Country"
  • Stewart 
  • Savigar
3:29
7."Way Back Home"
  • Stewart 
  • Savigar
4:35
8."Can We Stay Home Tonight?"
  • Stewart 
  • Savigar
4:04
9."Batman Superman Spiderman"
  • Stewart 
  • Kentis 
  • Kirkpatrick
3:34
10."The Drinking Song"
3:38
11."Hold the Line"
4:05
12."A Friend for Life"4:42

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 7
Score: 3 

   
Blood Red Roses (2018)

Another attempt to recreate Time. This one is more successful, and also doesn't contain the embarrassing songs of Another Country, but the attempt is somewhat more blatant, and so makes me miss Time even more.  It is so much more pleasant and rewarding to just play Time again, than it is to play this album.  The title song is the freshest and brightest. A lively Irish jig - a few more like that, and this might have become a worthwhile album. There is some vigour to this album - there's a rollicking version of the blues standard "Rollin' & Tumblin'". 


Released28 September 2018
Length51:32
Label
Producer

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Look in Her Eyes"4:12
2."Hole in My Heart"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:27
3."Farewell"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
4:16
4."Didn't I" (featuring Bridget Cady)
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
4:01
5."Blood Red Roses"
3:41
6."Grace"
4:53
7."Give Me Love"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
4:08
8."Rest of My Life"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:28
9."Rollin' & Tumblin'"3:38
10."Julia"
  • Stewart
  • Jon McLaughlin
  • Dave Thomas Junior
3:36
11."Honey Gold"4:44
12."Vegas Shuffle"
  • Stewart
  • Swinford
3:47
13."Cold Old London"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:42


Wikipedia
AllMusic: 6 
Score: 4 1/2 


You're in My Heart (2019)
Rod Stewart with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra

Most of the tracks are Stewart's original vocals overdubbed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. It sucks. There's one new song, "Stop Loving Her Today", and a cover of "It Takes Two" with Robbie Williams.  Plus an updated intro to "Maggie May".  But it sucks. 

Released22 November 2019
StudioAbbey Road & Angel, London
GenreSymphonic rock
Length1:11:39
LabelWarner
Producer
 
Disc 2
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."It Takes Two" (with Robbie Williams)
 
2."Stay with Me" 
3."Young Turks"
 
4."What Am I Gonna Do (I'm So in Love with You)"
 
5."Every Beat of My Heart"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
 
6."Forever Young"
 
7."Downtown Train"Tom WaitsHorn 
8."Rhythm of My Heart"Horn 
9."Have I Told You Lately"Van Morrison
  • Horn
  • Stewart
  • Edwards
 
10."Tom Traubert's Blues (Waltzing Matilda)"WaitsHorn 
11."If We Fall in Love Tonight"Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
  • Horn
  • Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
 
12."Stop Loving Her Today"
  • Horn
  • Savigar

Wikipedia
AllMusic: 3 
Score: 2 1/2 

The Tears of Hercules (2021)

For a 76 year old this is not a bad album. But it's not a particularly good album for anyone of any age. It is what it is. Slick, well done, and admirable for the warmth and vigour in Stewart's voice, but beyond that. No.  

Released12 November 2021
Length44:31
Label
Producer

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."One More Time"3:58
2."Gabriella"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:33
3."All My Days"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:37
4."Some Kind of Wonderful"John Ellison3:02
5."Born to Boogie (A Tribute to Marc Bolan)"3:43
6."Kookooaramabama"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:43
7."I Can't Imagine"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
  • Swinford
3:35
8."The Tears of Hercules"4:10
9."Hold On"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
4:19
10."Precious Memories"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:59
11."These Are My People"Johnny Cash2:57
12."Touchline"
  • Stewart
  • Savigar
3:55

Wikipedia
AllMusic:
Score: 4 1/2 


Main collaborators


Long John Baldry

Jeff Beck

Ronnie Wood 

Ronnie Lane 

  • Anymore for Anymore with Slim Chance (1974) UK No. 48 - Spotify  - (AllMusic: 9)  "The Poacher" is a decent song, but mostly the album comes across as underperforming country folk. Score: 4 
  • Ronnie Lane's Slim Chance with Slim Chance (1975) -  Spotify -  (AllMusic: 9)   More of the same. Score: 4 
  • One for the Road with Slim Chance (1976) - Spotify - (AllMusic: 8)  More of the same. It's OK. Score: 4 
  • Mahoney's Last Stand with Ronnie Wood (1976)  - Spotify - (AllMusic: 7) 1972 film-score by Lane and Wood. Delayed release. Wood's involvement raises the game, but it feels unfinished. More like sketches toward music. Score: 3 
  • Rough Mix with Pete Townshend (1977) US No. 45 UK No. 44 - Spotify -  (AllMusic: 8)  A collaboration between Lane and Pete Townshend. Songs are by each of them, with only the instrumental title song being written by both. Townshend's involvement seems to have perked up Lane, who writes much crisper and rockier songs than he has for a while. Acceptable. Score: 5 
  • See Me (1979) - Spotify - (AllMusic: 6)  A little more poppy and rocky than Lane's first solo albums. Score: 4 
  • The Legendary Majik Mijits with Steve Marriott (2000) - Spotify -  (AllMusic: - )  Marriott is a significant talent who never got the recognition he deserved. He stands out on this album, and - as with the other collaborations Lane steps up, but never gets close let alone matches Marriott. Still, I think these two together could have done something much more significant than they did alone after the break up of the Faces and Humble Pie. Score: 5 



Singles
1960s–1970s
YearSingleChart positionsCertificationsAlbum
UK
[1]
US
[2]
1964"Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" / "I'm Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town(Decca Records)[3]Non-album single
1965"The Day Will Come"/"Why Does It Go On" (Columbia Records)[4]
1966"Shake"/"I Just Got Some" (Columbia Records)[4]
1968"Little Miss Understood"/"So Much to Say" (Immediate Records)[5]
1969"Street Fighting Man"An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down
1970"It's All Over Now" (The Roundhouse)Gasoline Alley
1971"Dirty Old Town" (single)An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down
"Reason to Believe" (single) b/w
"Maggie May (TOTP)
11Every Picture Tells a Story
"(I Know) I'm Losing You"24
1972"Every Picture Tells a Story" / "Reason to Believe"
"Handbags and Gladrags"42An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down
"You Wear It Well"113Never a Dull Moment
"In a Broken Dream"
(with Python Lee Jackson) 2
356In a Broken Dream
"Angel"440Never a Dull Moment
"What's Made Milwaukee Famous
(Has Made a Loser Out of Me)
3
71Non-album single
1973"I've Been Drinking"
(with the Jeff Beck Group)
27
"Twistin' the Night Away"59Never a Dull Moment
"Oh! No Not My Baby"659Non-album single
1974"Farewell" / "Bring It On Home to Me/You Send Me"7Smiler
"Mine for Me"91
"You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything (Even Take the Dog for a Walk, Mend a Fuse, Fold Away the Ironing Board, or Any Other Domestic Shortcomings)"
(with Faces) 4
12Snakes and Ladders
1975"Sailing5158
  • BPI: Silver
Atlantic Crossing
"This Old Heart of Mine"483
1976"Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)"51
  • RIAA: Gold
A Night on the Town
"The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)"230
"Get Back"11All This and World War II [Soundtrack]
"Maggie May(1976 release)31The Best of Rod Stewart
1977"I Don't Want to Talk About It6146
  • BPI: Silver
Atlantic Crossing
"The First Cut Is the Deepest6


21
  • BPI: Silver
A Night on the Town
"Mandolin Wind"The Best of Rod Stewart Vol. 2
"You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim)"34
  • BPI: Silver
  • RIAA: Gold
Foot Loose & Fancy Free
1978"Hot Legs"528
  • BPI: Silver
"I Was Only Joking"


22
  • BPI: Silver
"Ole Ola (Mulher Brasileira)"
(feat. The Scottish World Cup Football Squad '78)
4Non-album single
"Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"11
  • BPI: Gold
  • RIAA: Platinum
Blondes Have More Fun
1979"Ain't Love a Bitch"1122
  • BPI: Silver
"Blondes (Have More Fun)"63
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.
1980s
YearSingleChart positionsAlbum
UK
[1]
US
[2]
1980"(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right"23


Foot Loose & Fancy Free
"Passion"175Foolish Behaviour
"My Girl"32
1981"Somebody Special"71
"Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight"
"Gi' Me Wings"
"Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)"
- b/w "Tora, Tora, Tora"
8
20
Tonight I'm Yours
"Young Turks"115
1982"How Long"
- b/w "Jealous"
41
49
"Just Like a Woman"
"The Great Pretender(live)Absolutely Live
"Guess I'll Always Love You" (live)
"I Don't Want to Talk About It(live) 6

1983"Baby Jane"114Body Wishes
"What Am I Gonna Do (I'm So in Love with You)"335
"Sweet Surrender"23
1984"Infatuation"276Camouflage
"Some Guys Have All the Luck"1510
"All Right Now"72
"Trouble"95
1985"People Get Ready"
(with Jeff Beck)
48Flash (Jeff Beck)
1986"Love Touch"276Every Beat of My Heart
"Every Beat of My Heart"283
"Another Heartache"5452
"In My Life"80
1987"Twistin' the Night Away(1987 version)80Innerspace Soundtrack
1988"Lost in You"2112Out of Order
"Forever Young"5712
"My Heart Can't Tell You No"494
1989"Crazy About Her"11
"Dynamite" [US promo]
"This Old Heart of Mine"
(with Ronald Isley)
5110Storyteller /
The Best of Rod Stewart
"Downtown Train"103
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.
1990s
YearSingleChart positionsCertificationsAlbum
UK
[1]
US
[2]
1990"I Don't Want to Talk About It(re-recording) 6Storyteller
"It Takes Two"
(with Tina Turner)
5Vagabond Heart
1991"Rhythm of My Heart"35
  • ARIA: Gold
"The Motown Song"1010
"Broken Arrow"5420
"Rebel Heart"
"You Are Everything"
"My Town"
(Glass Tiger feat. Rod Stewart)
33Simple Mission (Glass Tiger album)
1992"People Get Ready(1992 version)
(with Jeff Beck)
49Storyteller
"Your Song"41Two Rooms (Elton John Tribute)
"Broken Arrow"Vagabond Heart
"Tom Traubert's Blues (Waltzing Matilda)"6Lead Vocalist
1993"Ruby Tuesday"11
"Shotgun Wedding"21
"Maggie May(live)Unplugged...and Seated
"Have I Told You Lately(live)51
"Reason to Believe(live)5119
"People Get Ready(live)45
"Cut Across Shorty(live)
"All for Love"
(with Bryan Adams and Sting)
24
  • ARIA: Platinum[6]
  • RIAA: Platinum[7]
The Three Musketeers Soundtrack
"Having a Party" (live)36Unplugged...and Seated
1995"You're the Star"19A Spanner in the Works
"Leave Virginia Alone"52
"Lady Luck"56
"This"
1996"So Far Away"Tapestry Revisited: A Tribute to Carole King
"Purple Heather"
(with The Scottish Euro '96 Squad)
16A Spanner in the Works
"If We Fall in Love Tonight"5854If We Fall in Love Tonight
1997"When I Need You"
"Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"
(N-Trance feat. Rod Stewart)
7
  • ARIA: 2× Platinum[6]
Happy Hour (N-Trance album)
1998"Ooh La La"1639When We Were the New Boys
"Cigarettes and Alcohol"
"Rocks"55
"When We Were the New Boys"
"Superstar"
1999"Faith of the Heart"60Patch Adams Soundtrack
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.
2000s
YearSingleChart positionsAlbum
UK
[1]
US
AC

[8]
2000"Run Back into Your Arms"Human
2001"I Can't Deny It"2618
"Don't Come Around Here"
(with Helicopter Girl)
7930
2002"These Foolish Things"13It Had to Be You: the Great American Songbook
2003"They Can't Take That Away from Me"27
"Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered"
(with Cher)
17As Time Goes By: the Great American Songbook Volume II
"I Only Have Eyes for You"
(with Ana Belén)
2004"Time After Time"21
"Smile"
"What a Wonderful World"
(feat. Stevie Wonder)
13Stardust: The Great American Songbook Volume III
"Baby, It's Cold Outside"
(with Dolly Parton)
2
2005"Blue Moon"
(feat. Eric Clapton)
23
"I've Got a Crush on You"
(with Diana Ross)
19Thanks for the Memory: The Great American Songbook Volume IV
"I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm"22
2006"Have You Ever Seen the Rain?"6Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time
2007"Fooled Around and Fell in Love"13
"It's a Heartache"
2009"It's the Same Old Song"Soulbook
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.
2010s
YearSingleChart positionsCertificationsAlbum
UK
[1]
US
[2]
2010"My Cherie Amour"
(feat. Stevie Wonder)
Soulbook
"Everybody Hurts"
(as part of Helping Haiti)
1Charity single
"I've Got You Under My Skin"Fly Me to the Moon... The Great American Songbook Volume V
"Beyond the Sea"
2012"Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!"Merry Christmas, Baby
"Merry Christmas, Baby"
(with Cee Lo Green & Trombone Shorty)
111
"Winter Wonderland"
(with Michael Bublé)
"We Three Kings"
(with Mary J. Blige)
"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"51
2013"She Makes Me Happy"Time
"It's Over"91
"Brighton Beach"
"Can't Stop Me Now"199
"Forever Young" [A]55Time - Special Edition
2014"Beautiful Morning"Time
2015"Everyday"
(with ASAP RockyMiguel and Mark Ronson)
5692
  • BPI: Platinum[9]
At. Long. Last. ASAP
"Love Is"Another Country
"Please"
2017"Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"
(featuring DNCE)
Non-album single
2018"Didn't I" (Feat. Bridget Cady)Blood Red Roses
"Look in Her Eyes"
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.
2020s
YearSingleChart positionsAlbum
US
AC

[8]
2021"One More Time"19The Tears of Hercules
"Hold On"
"I Can't Imagine"
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.



Discography





Best albums

Every Picture Tells A Story 5, 1, 3, 5, 5, 5, 3 =  27 
Never A Dull Moment 2, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 5 = 18 
Gasoline Alley 3,1, 2,  2, 2, 2 = 12
A Nod's As Good As A Wink 5, 3 = 8 
A Night On The Town 2, 1, 2, 2, 1 = 8 
An Old Raincoat Will Never Let You Down 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 = 6
Atlantic Crossing 2, 1,  1, 1 = 5
Ooh La La 2, 2 = 4 
Vagabond Heart 1, 1, 1 = 3 
Tonight I'm Yours 1, 2 = 3  

Foot Loose 1, 2 = 3  
Smiler 1, 1 = 2 
Out of Order 2 = 2 
Time 1 = 1 
Long Player 1 = 1  
First Step 1 = 1 
Soulbook 1 = 1
Fly Me To The Moon 1 = 1
Every Beat of My Heart 1 = 1
Another Country 1 = 1 


Sources:
Truth Jeff Beck Group (August 1968) [8]
Time (2013) [7 1/2]
Beck-Ola Jeff Beck Group (April 1969) [7]
Never a Dull Moment (1972) [6]
Gasoline Alley (1970) [6]
Long Player Faces (Feb 1971)  [6]
When We Were the New Boys (1998) [6]
Fly Me to the Moon... The Great American Songbook Volume V (2010) [5 1/2]
An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (1969) [5]
Atlantic Crossing (1975) [5]



Best Rod Stewart tracks

Maggie May
Every Picture Tells A Story
Gasoline Alley
Handbags and Gladrags
Mandolin Wind
The Killing of Georgie (Part I and II)
Downtown Train
Its All Over Now
Tomorrow Is a Long Time
The First Cut Is The Deepest
Reason to Believe
Brighton Beach
You Wear It Well
Stay With Me
Picture In A Frame
Tonight's The Night
Make Love To Me Tonight
You're In My Heart
Young Turks
In A Broken Dream
You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything
Have I Told You Lately
Its Over
Beautiful Morning
Three Button Hand Me Down
Time
Shapes of Things
I Don't Want To Talk About It
The Motown Song


Links
* Robert Christgau
* AllMusic

Summary 

[Note: Aspects which go toward final score are given a rough percentage figure of how much that aspect may have influenced the overall score. However, some bands may well exceed that percentage, particularly if their main focus is in that area.]

Voice/Musicianship (15%)
Great voice. 
Image/Star quality (5%) 
A little naff, but has character and charisma which gives him star quality - which he had maintained. 
Lyrics/Music (20%)
When he makes the effort he can write the most telling and evocative lyrics. He mostly has not made the effort over the years. But when he does- blimey it's good. 
Impact/Influence (10%)
He was involved in Jeff Beck's landmark album. He's not been invisible.
Popularity (5%)
Hugely popular - even when not warranted. 
Emotional appeal (5%)
Gosh, when he gets it right - he has a voice to die for. And when he gets the lyrics and voice working in harmony he is one of the goats.  
Authenticity (15%)
His best work has a laddish immediacy and honestly that is totally disarming. But the bulk of his output has been annoyingly trivial. 
Art (5%)
No. I don't think he's interested. 
Classic albums/songs (5%)
Every Picture - "Maggie May"
Originality/Innovation (5%)
He was involved with Jeff Beck. Other than that - no. He's just about singing a good song. 
Legacy (10%)
Possibly. The Jeff Beck work has been sadly overlooked, but it is there. The early Seventies with the Faces has a lasting charm.  The bulk of his output, though, is an embarrassment rather than a legacy. 

Total: 48/ 100
 ***


91 April 2019  225 Nov 2023