Rod Stewart
Sir Roderick David Stewart CBE (born 10 January 1945) is a British rock and pop singer, songwriter, and record producer known for his distinctive raspy singing voice and enduring career spanning over six decades.[1][2] Born in Highgate, London, to Scottish and English parents, Stewart began his professional music career in the mid-1960s as lead vocalist for the Jeff Beck Group, contributing to influential blues-rock albums before co-founding the Faces with guitarist Ron Wood, blending rock, folk, and soul influences.[3][4] His solo breakthrough came in 1971 with the album Every Picture Tells a Story, featuring the chart-topping single "Maggie May," which propelled him to international stardom through a string of hits including "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" and four U.S. Billboard Hot 100 number ones.[5] Stewart's commercial success includes sales of over 120 million records worldwide, ten UK number-one albums, and a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album in 2005 for Stardust... the Great American Songbook, Volume III.[5][6][7] Knighted in 2016 by Prince William for services to music and charity, he has maintained a prolific output, including standards collections and recent tours into his 80s, while facing criticism for performances in apartheid-era South Africa and personal indiscretions such as a 2019 battery plea alongside his son.[8][9]Early life
Childhood and family background
Roderick David Stewart was born on 10 January 1945 at 507 Archway Road, Highgate, North London, as the fifth and youngest child of Robert Stewart and Elsie Gilbart Stewart.[10][11] His father, Robert Joseph Stewart (1904–1990), was a Scottish master builder from Leith, Edinburgh, who had relocated the family to England, while his mother, Elsie, was English and had grown up in Upper Holloway, North London.[3][11] Stewart's four older siblings—two brothers and two sisters—were born in Scotland before the family's move south, making Rod and his mother the only ones born in England, though the household retained strong Scottish ties through the father's heritage and the brothers' affinities.[12][13] Raised in a working-class environment in postwar North London, the family emphasized closeness and cultural roots, with Stewart later recalling a pampered early childhood marked by familial affection.[14][15] This supportive dynamic fostered ambitions from a young age, as Stewart has noted in interviews that his North London upbringing involved a family that encouraged dreaming big amid modest circumstances.[16][17]Education and formative influences
Stewart attended Highgate Primary School in London, where he failed the eleven-plus examination, which determined secondary school placement. He then proceeded to William Grimshaw Secondary Modern School but left at age fifteen without obtaining qualifications, forgoing further formal education to enter the workforce.[18][19] His formative years were shaped by dual passions for football and music amid a working-class upbringing. A devoted supporter of Arsenal F.C., Stewart trialed as a centre-half for Brentford F.C. at age sixteen but failed to secure a contract, redirecting his ambitions despite familial encouragement toward the sport.[18][19][20] Musical interests ignited through his father's renditions of Scottish folk songs and exposure to American rhythm and blues; key early inspirations included hearing Sam Cooke on radio, purchasing Eddie Cochran's "C'mon Everybody" as his first record, and admiring artists such as Little Richard, Otis Redding, and Bob Dylan, prompting a brief beatnik phase with long hair and folk busking alongside Wizz Jones.[21][19][18] By mid-teens, Stewart immersed himself in London's mod subculture, drawn to its sharp tailoring, scooters, and affinity for soul and R&B records, earning the nickname "Rod the Mod" for his distinctive style and attitude. He formed his first group, the skiffle outfit The Kool Kats, at school around age fifteen, reflecting self-taught musical experimentation without institutional training. Post-dropout jobs, including gravedigging, fence erecting, and silk-screen printing wallpapers in Kentish Town, provided modest stability while he honed informal performance skills through small gigs.[20][18][21]Early musical career (1961–1969)
Initial bands and "Rod the Mod" persona
Stewart began his professional musical career in 1963 by joining the rhythm and blues group The Dimensions as a harmonica player and part-time vocalist, initially performing in folk clubs and local venues around London.[20][22] Shortly thereafter, singer Jimmy Powell became the lead vocalist, prompting the band to rebrand as Jimmy Powell and the Five Dimensions; the group toured Scotland and played club dates in England during autumn 1963, though Stewart's vocal opportunities diminished as Powell took prominence.[10][22] By early 1964, following tensions and reduced visibility within the band, Stewart departed and joined Long John Baldry's backing group, the Hoochie Coochie Men, as a full-time singer, marking his first significant exposure to professional R&B circuits; the ensemble made its television debut on the BBC's The Beat Room that year.[23][20] During this period, Stewart cultivated the "Rod the Mod" persona, a nickname derived from his affinity for the mod subculture's emphasis on sharp tailoring, groomed appearance, and enthusiasm for soul and R&B artists like Otis Redding and Sam Cooke.[23][20] The mod style—characterized by slim suits, scooters, and a dandyish flair—reflected Stewart's immersion in London's early 1960s youth scene, where he prioritized image and musical influences over folk roots, often performing with harmonica and raw vocal delivery inspired by American blues.[24][25] This persona, while enhancing his stage presence in mod-favored venues, underscored a transitional phase blending harmonica blues with emerging rock vocalism, setting the stage for his later band affiliations.[20]Jeff Beck Group contributions
In early 1967, following his departure from the Yardbirds, Jeff Beck formed the Jeff Beck Group in London and recruited Rod Stewart as lead vocalist, marking a pivotal step in Stewart's career. The initial lineup consisted of Beck on guitar, Stewart on vocals, Ronnie Wood on rhythm guitar and bass, and Micky Waller on drums, with Nicky Hopkins contributing piano on select recordings. Stewart's raw, raspy delivery complemented Beck's aggressive guitar style, helping define the band's pioneering heavy blues-rock sound.[26][27] The group recorded their debut album, Truth, which Stewart co-wrote tracks including "Let Me Love You Baby" (credited under the pseudonym Jeffrey Rod), "Blues Deluxe" (with Beck, B.B. King, and Johnny Pate), and "Rock My Plimsoul" (with Beck, Curtis Jones, Lil’ Son Jackson, B.B. King, and Joe Josea), often reworking blues standards into amplified arrangements. Released in the United States on July 29, 1968, and in the United Kingdom on October 4, 1968, the album reached the Top 20 on the Billboard 200. The band followed with extensive touring, including their U.S. debut on June 22, 1968, at New York's Fillmore East.[27][28] Their second album, Beck-Ola, arrived in June 1969 in the U.S., featuring Stewart's co-writing on "Spanish Boots" (with Beck and Wood) and continuing the high-energy blues-rock formula. It also charted in the U.S. Top 20. Stewart's vocal contributions emphasized soulful phrasing and intensity, adapting covers like "Jailhouse Rock" and originals to the band's loud, riff-driven aesthetic. The group disbanded later in 1969 amid internal conflicts, having lasted approximately two years and influencing the emerging hard rock genre through their fusion of blues roots with amplified power.[27][29][30]Faces period and parallel solo beginnings (1969–1975)
Band formation and dynamics
The Faces formed in 1969 when the remaining members of the Small Faces—bassist Ronnie Lane, keyboardist Ian McLagan, and drummer Kenney Jones—recruited vocalist Rod Stewart and guitarist Ronnie Wood following the departure of Small Faces frontman Steve Marriott, who left to form Humble Pie.[31] Stewart and Wood had recently exited the Jeff Beck Group after contributing to its albums Truth (1968) and Beck-Ola (1969), seeking a fresh start amid frustrations with Jeff Beck's leadership.[32] The addition of Stewart and Wood transformed the group, blending the Small Faces' mod roots with a rawer, blues-inflected rock sound, and the band adopted the name Faces to reflect their expanded lineup.[33] This lineup solidified on October 18, 1969, marking the official start of the Faces as a performing unit.[34] Internally, the Faces operated with a loose, egalitarian dynamic characterized by collaborative jamming sessions and a party-like atmosphere that fueled their energetic live performances.[35] Wood's invitation to Stewart for an initial jam with the ex-Small Faces members highlighted the informal bonds, with the group's chemistry emerging from shared influences in British R&B and a mutual disdain for rigid structures.[35] Songwriting credits were often collective, though Stewart's distinctive raspy vocals and Wood's slide guitar became central, fostering a symbiotic interplay that defined their sound on albums like First Step (1970).[36] However, underlying tensions arose from the band's hedonistic lifestyle and unequal commitments, as Stewart's parallel solo career—yielding hits like "Maggie May" in 1971—began to overshadow group activities. By the early 1970s, these dynamics strained relations, particularly with Lane, who felt marginalized as Stewart prioritized solo recordings and tours, leading to creative frustrations within the band.[37] Despite the camaraderie between Stewart and Wood, which mirrored a less acrimonious version of rival rock frontman-guitarist pairings, the Faces' lack of a dominant leader allowed individual pursuits to erode cohesion.[38] McLagan later described himself as the band's "true spirit," underscoring his role in maintaining musical glue amid the chaos, though escalating solo successes for Stewart and Wood's eventual move to the Rolling Stones in 1975 precipitated the group's effective dissolution.[39] The Faces' internal relationships thus balanced boisterous collaboration with inevitable conflicts driven by diverging career trajectories.[40]Breakthrough solo hits like "Maggie May"
Rod Stewart's third solo album, Every Picture Tells a Story, released on 28 May 1971 by Mercury Records, propelled his parallel solo career alongside the Faces into mainstream prominence. Recorded primarily in London with contributions from Faces members like Ronnie Wood on guitar and Ian McLagan on keyboards, the album showcased Stewart's gravelly vocals over folk-rock arrangements, including self-penned tracks and covers such as Bob Dylan's "Tomorrow Is a Long Time" and the Temptations' "(I Know) I'm Losing You."[41][42] The album's double A-side single, "(Find a) Reason to Believe" b/w "Maggie May," issued in July 1971, initially gained traction with the Tim Hardin cover "Reason to Believe" as the promoted track. However, radio disc jockeys flipped the record to the B-side "Maggie May," a semi-autobiographical song co-written by Stewart and Faces associate Martin Quittenton, recounting a youthful affair with an older woman inspired by Stewart's experience at the 1961 Beaulieu Jazz Festival. "Maggie May" ascended to number one on the UK Singles Chart dated 9 October 1971, marking Stewart's first UK chart-topper, and simultaneously topped the US Billboard Hot 100 on 2 October 1971, where it held the position for five consecutive weeks.[43][44][45] This success, certified gold in the US by November 1971, overshadowed the Faces' concurrent releases and established Stewart's solo viability, with "Maggie May" earning a Grammy nomination for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance in 1972. The hit's mandolin riff, played by Ray Jackson of Lindisfarne, and Stewart's emotive delivery blended raw energy with narrative intimacy, influencing subsequent solo efforts like the 1972 single "Twistin' the Night Away," a Sam Cooke cover that reached number 14 on the UK chart.[46][47]
Height of solo fame (1975–1990)
Major albums and chart dominance
Rod Stewart's solo output from 1975 to 1990 achieved substantial commercial success, with albums routinely attaining multi-platinum status in the United States and topping charts in the United Kingdom, driven by a mix of original songs and covers emphasizing his raspy vocals and rock-soul blend. This era saw Stewart transition to larger-scale productions, often featuring American session musicians, which broadened his appeal and resulted in over 20 million album units sold across key releases, per aggregated sales data.[48] Atlantic Crossing, released on August 15, 1975, marked Stewart's deliberate shift toward U.S. markets, recorded partly at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio with Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section members; it reached number one on the UK Albums Chart for five weeks and achieved 18 million equivalent album sales globally, including over 1.2 million certified units in the U.S.[49][48] A Night on the Town followed in June 1976, yielding the transatlantic number-one single "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)," which topped the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 for eight non-consecutive weeks and propelled the album to number one in the UK and Australia, with certified sales exceeding 1 million units in the UK alone.[50][51]| Album | Release Year | UK Peak | US Peak | Global Sales (EAS) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atlantic Crossing | 1975 | 1 | - | 18 million[48] |
| A Night on the Town | 1976 | 1 | 2 | - |
| Foot Loose & Fancy Free | 1977 | 2 | 2 | 4.1 million units[52] |
| Blondes Have More Fun | 1978 | 12 | 1 (3 weeks) | 15.2 million[48][53] |
Evolving image and live performances
During the mid-1970s, following the dissolution of the Faces, Stewart's public image retained elements of his earlier "Rod the Mod" persona—characterized by a shaggy mullet hairstyle, casual rock attire, and an affinity for football—but evolved toward a more mature, charismatic frontman role as he prioritized solo material like the 1975 hit "Sailing."[54] This period emphasized his gravelly vocals and everyman appeal, blending British working-class roots with international stardom, though critics noted a shift from band camaraderie to individual showmanship.[55] By the late 1970s, Stewart's image underwent a noticeable transformation influenced by the disco era, exemplified by the 1978 single "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy," which featured a sleeker, more flirtatious presentation with blond-streaked hair and form-fitting outfits, positioning him as a playful sex symbol amid chart success.[56] Into the 1980s, this progressed to a glamorous, polished aesthetic—big hair, flashy stage clothes, and a heightened sense of spectacle—aligning with pop-rock albums like Foolish Behaviour (1980) and Tonight I'm Yours (1981), though some observers viewed it as a departure from his rawer 1970s roots toward commercial appeal.[57][55] His enduring passion for soccer, as a lifelong Celtic supporter, remained a personal anchor, often reflected in off-stage activities rather than overt stage integration.[58] Stewart's live performances during this era scaled up dramatically, transitioning from Faces-era arena gigs to solo stadium and large-venue tours that showcased his enduring audience rapport. In 1975 alone, he completed 63 concerts, including a final Faces outing at Chicago Stadium on October 31, often marked by loose, high-energy sets blending rock anthems with impromptu banter.[59] By the early 1980s, tours like the 1981 shows at the Los Angeles Forum highlighted theatrical elements, with Stewart employing a swinging microphone technique and kicking signed soccer balls into crowds as a signature interactive gimmick, fostering chaos and connection in venues holding tens of thousands.[60][61] The mid-to-late 1980s saw even grander productions, such as the 1986 Every Beat of My Heart Tour with 64 dates across Europe and North America, and the 1988–1989 Out of Order Tour spanning from Puerto Rico to Canada, featuring elaborate staging, horn sections, and medleys of hits that drew massive crowds to arenas like San Diego Sports Arena (1984) and Meadowlands (1989).[62] These shows prioritized spectacle over raw improvisation, with soccer ball kicks becoming a ritual—though later lawsuits over injuries prompted adjustments—underscoring Stewart's evolution into a reliable, crowd-pleasing entertainer capable of sustaining superstardom through physical vigor and vocal stamina into his 40s.[61][63]Mid-to-late career transitions (1990–2010)
Rock efforts and Songbook series launch
Following the commercial peak of his 1980s output, Rod Stewart released Vagabond Heart on March 25, 1991, marking a return to rock-infused songwriting with contributions from producers like Trevor Horn and Bernard Edwards.[64] The album featured singles such as "Rhythm of My Heart," which drew from Celtic influences and peaked at number five on the US Billboard Hot 100, and "The Motown Song," a cover reaching number one in the US.[64] It achieved number two on the UK Albums Chart and number ten on the US Billboard 200, signaling sustained popularity amid Stewart's evolving style.[64] In 1993, Stewart capitalized on the MTV Unplugged trend with Unplugged...and Seated, recorded live on May 24, 1993, blending acoustic renditions of his rock catalog including "Hot Legs" and "Maggie May" alongside seated orchestral arrangements.[65] The album topped the UK charts and reached number two in the US, reinforcing his live draw while adapting rock hits to a more intimate format.[65] Subsequent studio efforts like A Spanner in the Works (May 29, 1995), incorporating rock covers such as Bob Dylan's "Sweetheart Like You," and When We Were the New Boys (May 25, 1998), which updated his sound with tracks covering Oasis's "Cigarettes and Alcohol" and the Sex Pistols' influences, represented deliberate nods to contemporary and classic rock to counter perceptions of stylistic drift.[66][67] The launch of Stewart's Great American Songbook series in 2002 pivoted toward pre-rock standards, prompted by his 2000 thyroid cancer diagnosis and recovery, which shifted his vocal approach and artistic focus.[68] It Had to Be You: The Great American Songbook, released October 22, 2002, debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 and sold over three million copies in the US, featuring lush arrangements of tunes like "The Way You Look Tonight" with Cher.[68] This inaugural volume spawned a multi-platinum series spanning five albums through 2010, prioritizing commercial longevity over new rock material despite critiques of diluting his original raspy rock persona.[68]Commercial strategies versus artistic critiques
During the 1990s, Stewart pursued rock-oriented albums like Vagabond Heart (1991), which included original songs and peaked at No. 10 on the Billboard 200, selling over 2.7 million copies worldwide through a mix of heartfelt ballads and upbeat tracks produced with collaborators like Bernard Edwards.[69] Similarly, Unplugged...and Seated (1993) captured live acoustic performances, achieving multi-platinum status with hits like a cover of "Have I Told You Lately," appealing to fans via MTV's Unplugged format.[70] These efforts represented attempts to sustain his rock identity amid evolving tastes, bolstered by tours and duets, yet sales declined compared to his 1970s peak, prompting strategic pivots toward broader accessibility. The Great American Songbook series, launched in 2002 with It Had to Be You... The Great American Songbook following Stewart's 2000 thyroid cancer diagnosis, exemplified a calculated commercial shift to orchestral standards from pre-1950 composers.[17] Produced by Richard Perry, the initial volume debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and sold millions, with the five-volume series averaging 3.7 million units each by 2010, contributing to over 13 million total sales by 2005 and revitalizing Stewart's market position among older demographics.[48][71] This approach, emphasizing lush big-band arrangements and his raspy timbre on Tin Pan Alley classics, extended to live residencies and compilations, prioritizing enduring appeal over new rock material. Critics, however, lambasted the series for diluting Stewart's rock heritage into formulaic lounge fare. Robert Christgau contended that Stewart did not illuminate the nuances of Gershwin, Rodgers & Hart, or Carmichael, treating songs as vehicles for superficial delivery rather than deep engagement.[72] Bob Dylan, in a 2015 interview reflecting on similar ventures, deemed the albums disappointing, implying a lack of interpretive rigor.[73] Jazz commentator Nate Chinen framed rock veterans like Stewart as hijackers of the Songbook tradition, using it for career prolongation via marketable nostalgia rather than artistic innovation.[74] Such views aligned with broader erosion of critical esteem, as Stewart's focus on commercial viability—evident in interchangeable volumes and pop crossovers—drew accusations of abandoning raw energy for polished predictability.[75]Contemporary career (2011–present)
Return to originals and ongoing tours
In 2013, Stewart released Time, his first album of entirely original compositions since 1998's When We Were the New Boys, ending a period dominated by standards and covers following health challenges including thyroid cancer surgery in 2000 that contributed to a songwriting hiatus.[76] The album, featuring tracks like "She Makes Me Happy" and "Brighton Beach," debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart and number one on the US Billboard Top Rock Albums chart, signaling a deliberate pivot back to rock-oriented songwriting influenced by his Faces-era roots and personal reflections from his 2012 autobiography.[10] This return extended to live performances, with the accompanying Live the Life Tour incorporating several Time songs alongside classics such as "Maggie May" and "Young Turks," as evidenced by setlists from 2013 shows that balanced new material with established hits to re-engage rock audiences.[77] Subsequent releases reinforced this trajectory, including Another Country in 2015, which blended originals with select covers but prioritized Stewart's songwriting, and Blood Red Roses in 2018, a rawer rock effort drawing on blues and Faces influences with tracks like the title song critiquing modern celebrity culture.[78] Tours supporting these albums, such as the 2018-2019 Red Blood Roses Live in Concert outings, featured expanded sets of originals—often 70-80% from his pre-Songbook catalog—performed in stadiums and arenas across Europe and North America, with examples including "Infatuation," "You Wear It Well," and "Forever Young" dominating encores to emphasize his enduring rock identity over crooner material.[79] Stewart's touring has remained prolific, with over 40 dates annually in many years from 2011 onward, spanning venues from the Troubadour in Los Angeles to large-scale European festivals, adapting to his age through shorter sets and occasional co-headlining with acts like Cheap Trick while prioritizing high-energy rock delivery.[80] By the mid-2010s, his shows consistently revived Faces reunion elements, such as guest appearances by Ronnie Wood, underscoring a commitment to original-era authenticity amid sustained commercial viability, with gross earnings exceeding $100 million from North American legs alone in peak years.[81] This ongoing activity, blending fresh originals with catalog staples, has sustained his status as a live draw into his late 70s, though he announced in 2024 a shift away from exhaustive world tours toward more selective regional engagements.[82]2025 activities including Glastonbury and "One Last Time" tour
On 29 June 2025, Rod Stewart headlined the Legends slot on the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury Festival, delivering a set of crowd-pleasing rock and pop standards backed by fiddles, saxophone, and guest appearances from Ronnie Wood, Mick Hucknall, Lulu, and festival organizer Michael Eavis.[83][84] The performance featured songs such as "Sailing," "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy," and "Stay With Me," with Wood joining for the latter, evoking old-school showbiz charm that resonated with audiences despite critiques of its dated style.[85][86] Reviews highlighted Stewart's enduring energy at age 80, blending nostalgia with lively interaction, though some noted the set's teatime timing limited its intensity.[83][87] Earlier in 2025, Stewart launched his "One Last Time" North American tour on 7 March in Austin, Texas, comprising 20 dates across amphitheaters and arenas, with Cheap Trick as special guests for select shows.[88][89] The tour, announced on 18 November 2024, extended through 15 August, marking what some outlets described as his final large-scale road outing, following a pattern of scaled-back touring after decades of high-energy performances.[90] Setlists included staples like "Infatuation," "Tonight I'm Yours," and "Having a Party," maintaining Stewart's raspy delivery and party atmosphere.[91] Additional 2025 engagements encompassed encore residency shows at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, a performance at Movistar Arena in Buenos Aires on 23 October, and European dates in November, such as Hamburg on 25 November.[92][93][94]
Musical style and technique
Raspy vocal delivery and influences
Rod Stewart's vocal delivery is characterized by a distinctive raspy, gravelly timbre that has become a hallmark of his performances across rock, soul, and pop genres.[95] This huskiness stems from a broken nose sustained during his teenage years, which Stewart has described as an accidental factor shaping his sound, rather than a deliberate technique or later health issues like his 2000 thyroid cancer surgery.[96] The rasp allows for emotive phrasing, blending raw energy with interpretive flair, evident in early recordings like his 1965 cover of "Ain't That Loving You Baby" with the Steam Packet.[95] Stewart's style draws heavily from American soul and blues traditions, with Sam Cooke cited as a primary influence for his smooth, expressive delivery that Stewart adapted into a rougher, more urgent edge.[97] Otis Redding's passionate, gospel-infused soul similarly impacted Stewart's phrasing and emotional intensity, as seen in covers like "I've Been Loving You Too Long" and originals echoing Redding's fervor.[98] Additional inspirations include Billie Holiday's interpretive depth and Muddy Waters' blues grit, which informed Stewart's transition from folk-blues roots in the Jeff Beck Group to soul-rock fusion with Faces.[97] These influences, rooted in Black American artists, underscore Stewart's self-described debt to "great black singers," enabling a genre-blending approach that prioritizes vocal swagger over technical polish.[97][21]Approach to covers, songwriting, and genre blending
Rod Stewart's approach to covering songs emphasizes personal interpretation over strict replication, infusing originals with his distinctive raspy timbre and emotional delivery to create fresh renditions across genres. He selects material based on intuition, respect for the source, and a deep personal affinity, as seen in his early blues and soul covers of artists like Sam Cooke and Otis Redding during his time with the Jeff Beck Group in 1968 and the Faces in the late 1960s.[99][100][21] This method extended to his frequent Dylan covers, starting in the early 1970s, where he prioritized raw vocal phrasing over fidelity to arrangements.[101] Later, his Great American Songbook series from 2002 onward reimagined jazz standards like "The Way You Look Tonight" by blending orchestral backing with rock-inflected swagger, demonstrating versatility from folk obscurities to pop staples.[102] In songwriting, Stewart historically collaborated closely with bandmates and producers, co-authoring hits such as "Maggie May" with Ron Wood in 1971, which fused narrative storytelling with acoustic folk-rock elements. His process typically begins with a conceptual title or hook, followed by basic chord progressions, allowing lyrics to emerge organically rather than through rigid structures, as he described in interviews around his 2013 album Time.[103][104] After a 15-year dry spell in original material ending circa 1998, he revived composition via memoir reflection, producing tracks like "She Makes Me Happy" that echoed his 1970s peaks in "You're in My Heart" and "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy," though critics noted a reliance on co-writers for lyrical depth.[105][106] Stewart's genre blending stems from early immersion in American R&B and soul during the 1950s–1960s, which he merged with British rock in albums like Every Picture Tells a Story (1971), combining folk acoustics, soulful grit, and electric riffs. This eclecticism evolved into experiments like the disco-rock fusion of "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy" in 1978 and later standards albums that overlaid swing-era melodies with his husky rock delivery, transcending silos to incorporate folk, soul, and pop without diluting core influences.[107][21][108] Such integration, rooted in blues-garage foundations, enabled commercial longevity by appealing to diverse audiences while maintaining a cohesive vocal identity.[109][110]Commercial achievements
Record sales and chart records
Rod Stewart has achieved substantial commercial success, with estimated worldwide record sales exceeding 120 million units across his solo career and contributions to bands like the Faces. In the United States, his recordings have earned certifications for over 38 million units from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) as of 2018, encompassing albums, singles, and compilations. Key albums such as Every Picture Tells a Story (1971) have certified multi-platinum status, reflecting strong enduring demand.[111] In the United Kingdom, Stewart holds 10 number-one albums on the Official Charts Company's UK Albums Chart, tying for the sixth-most chart-topping albums by any artist; his tenth, You're in My Heart: Rod Stewart with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (2019), made him the oldest male solo artist to reach number one at age 74. He has secured six UK number-one singles, including "Maggie May" (1971) and "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (1978). Additionally, the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) has certified numerous releases, with compilations like The Story So Far... The Very Best of Rod Stewart (2001) achieving multi-platinum awards for over 1.2 million units shipped.[112][113][114] On the US Billboard Hot 100, Stewart has four number-one singles—"Maggie May/Reason to Believe" (1971), "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (1976), "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (1978), and the collaboration "All for Love" (1993)—along with 16 top-ten entries overall. His Great American Songbook series (2002–2010) earned a Guinness World Record as the most successful album series by a single artist, with all five volumes peaking in the Billboard 200 top five and the UK Albums Chart top ten, driving certifications including double platinum for volumes like It Had to Be You... The Great American Songbook (2002). These milestones underscore his longevity, spanning over five decades of consistent chart presence.[115][116][117]Business ventures and longevity factors
In addition to his music career, Stewart has pursued several business investments. In February 2024, he sold his publishing catalog, recorded music interests, and certain name and likeness rights to Iconic Artists Group for approximately $100 million.[118][119] He launched Wolfie's Whisky, a blended Scotch brand, in partnership with businessman Duncan Frew and Loch Lomond Distilleries, with the first release occurring in late 2023; Stewart, despite not being a whisky enthusiast personally, positioned it as a premium product drawing on his Scottish heritage.[120][121] Real estate forms a core component of his portfolio, including a Beverly Hills mansion listed at $80 million in the mid-2010s (sold below asking price) and properties in high-demand areas like California suburbs and historic UK estates, selected for their appreciation potential and rental income stability.[122][123] Stewart's career longevity, spanning over six decades, stems from a combination of disciplined health management and adaptive professional strategies. Diagnosed with thyroid cancer in 2000, he underwent surgery and radiation, resuming touring within months; a prostate cancer diagnosis in 2019 was treated with radiotherapy, enabling continued performances without interruption.[124][125] Regular medical checkups and a fitness routine incorporating cardio, strength training, and moderation in diet—avoiding excesses while enjoying occasional indulgences like cigarettes historically—have sustained his vocal and physical stamina into his 80s.[126][127] Professionally, Stewart attributes endurance to relentless touring, which generated over $100 million in revenue from 2002 to 2012 alone, and diversification into standards albums that appealed to broader audiences while preserving core rock elements.[128] His refusal to retire, stated publicly in 2024 as "I shall never retire," reflects a commitment to evolving performances, including relearning vocal techniques post-cancer to maintain his raspy delivery.[129] These factors, alongside name recognition from 120 million records sold worldwide, have enabled sustained commercial viability without reliance on trends.[123]Critical reception and legacy
Praises for raw energy and adaptability
Critics have frequently commended Rod Stewart's raw energy, particularly evident in his early collaborations with the Jeff Beck Group and the Faces, where his performances captured an authentic, unpolished rock intensity that defined late-1960s and early-1970s British blues-rock.[130] This vitality extended to live recordings, such as the 1982 album Absolutely Live, praised for its unfiltered stage presence and immediate, overdub-free capture of Stewart's charismatic delivery, evoking the immediacy of being in the audience.[131] Reviews of his concerts, including a 2019 Manchester Arena show, highlighted his "raucous energy" that built from an initially gravelly rasp to fuller power, sustaining audience engagement through dynamic shifts.[132] Stewart's adaptability has drawn equal acclaim for enabling a career spanning over six decades, marked by fearless genre shifts from rock and soul to swing standards in the Great American Songbook series starting in 2004, which revitalized his commercial standing while demonstrating vocal versatility.[21] Observers note his reinvention as key to relevance, transitioning from raw rock roots to polished pop interpretations without diluting his signature rasp, as seen in adaptations that preserved core appeal amid evolving trends.[133] Even into his 80s, performances like his June 2025 Glastonbury set showcased nuanced flexibility in his voice—powerful yet controlled—maintaining high energy levels that belied his age and health challenges.[134] This blend of enduring vigor and stylistic evolution has been attributed to his strategic adjustments, such as modifying phrasing to counter age-related vocal changes while retaining identifiable timbre.[135]Criticisms of commercialization and vocal decline
In the late 1970s, Rod Stewart encountered substantial criticism from rock critics for pivoting toward disco-influenced pop tracks, most notably with the 1978 single "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" from the album Blondes Have More Fun, which peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 but was derided as a commercial sell-out that abandoned his earlier raw, blues-rooted style.[136][137] Critics, including Greil Marcus, lambasted Stewart for betraying his distinctive talent, with Marcus writing in a 1979 review that "rarely has a singer had as full and unique a talent as Rod Stewart; rarely has anyone betrayed his talent so completely," pointing to a perceived dilution of artistic integrity in favor of market-driven hits like Foolish Behaviour (1980).[138][104] This shift intensified during the punk and new wave era, where reviewers branded him a "hack and has-been" for chasing trends amid excessive partying and lifestyle excesses that, by his own admission, eroded creative focus.[17][139] Stewart's later embrace of pre-rock standards via the Great American Songbook series, starting with It Had to Be You... The Great American Songbook (2002), amplified accusations of commercialization, as the albums—selling millions despite minimal original songwriting—prioritized orchestral arrangements and broad appeal over rock authenticity.[17] Critics like Robert Christgau argued that Stewart failed to illuminate the nuances of composers such as the Gershwins or Hoagy Carmichael, treating the material as superficial vehicles rather than interpretive endeavors.[72] Some observers framed these releases as career-revitalizing moves akin to "hijacking" the canon for sales, especially post his 2000 thyroid cancer diagnosis, though the series' multi-platinum status underscored its market viability over critical acclaim.[74] Regarding vocal decline, Stewart's signature raspy timbre, once praised for its gritty expressiveness, has drawn scrutiny for deterioration linked to decades of heavy touring, smoking, alcohol consumption, and medical interventions, including vocal cord surgery that sidelined him for nine months and thyroid removal in 2000, which he described as cutting through neck muscles and altering his range.[140][141] As he aged into his 70s and 80s, reviewers and fans noted reduced power and control, attributing it to vocal wear rather than stylistic evolution, with some forums citing a specific tour where he "blew out" his voice without full recovery.[142] Recent performances, such as his June 2025 Glastonbury Festival set, elicited concerns over strained delivery and health implications, with audiences observing lower energy levels that improved only after brief absences, prompting speculation of permanent damage risks if overexerted.[143][144][145] Despite adaptations like underwater swimming training to preserve lung capacity, these critiques highlight a consensus on age-related limitations impacting live reliability.[146][147]Personal life
Marriages, relationships, and children
Rod Stewart fathered his first child, daughter Sarah Streeter (born February 1963), with girlfriend Susannah Boffey during his late teenage years; the child was placed for adoption at birth, and Stewart reconnected with her in the early 2000s after she sought him out.[148][149] He had a brief early relationship with Jennie Rylance in the 1960s, followed by others including Dee Harrington (1971–1975), but no additional children resulted from these.[150] Stewart's first marriage was to American model and actress Alana Hamilton (née Stewart) on April 6, 1979, after dating since the mid-1970s; they had daughter Kimberly (born August 20, 1979) prior to the wedding and son Sean (born September 1, 1980) during the marriage, which ended in divorce in 1984.[151][152] He then dated Swedish actress Britt Ekland from 1975 to 1977 and American model Kelly Emberg from 1983 to 1990, with whom he had daughter Ruby (born June 1, 1987).[153][154] His second marriage, to New Zealand model Rachel Hunter, occurred in 1990 and produced daughter Renee (born February 1, 1993) and son Liam (born December 1994); the couple separated in 1999 and divorced in 2006 amid reports of Stewart's infidelity and the age gap (Hunter was 21 at marriage).[155][156] Stewart began dating model Penny Lancaster in 1999 while still married to Hunter; they wed on June 8, 2007, in Italy and have two sons: Alastair Wallace (born November 27, 2005) and Aiden Patrick (born February 16, 2011).[151][157] This marriage remains ongoing as of 2025, with Stewart crediting Lancaster's stability for his family cohesion despite his prior relationships yielding eight children total across five mothers.[148][158]- Sarah Streeter (b. 1963): Works in property; reconnected with Stewart in adulthood.
- Kimberly Stewart (b. 1979): Model and fashion designer; mother to Stewart's granddaughter Delilah (b. 2011) with actor Benicio del Toro.
- Sean Stewart (b. 1980): Reality TV personality and restaurateur.
- Ruby Stewart (b. 1987): Singer in band The Sisterhood; married to photographer Sierra Leret.
- Renee Stewart (b. 1993): Singer-songwriter.
- Liam Stewart (b. 1994): Real estate agent; married to Sofía Engels since 2024.
- Alastair Wallace Stewart (b. 2005): Aspiring footballer.
- Aiden Patrick Stewart (b. 2011): Youngest child, occasionally appears in family media.