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Home / Rotorua Daily Post / Lifestyle

Album reviews: Cat Stevens / Yusuf

By Kim Gillespie
Rotorua Daily Post·
6 Sep, 2010 09:26 PM2 mins to read

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There may be few fans not already driven by nostalgia to seek these songs out after Cat Stevens' recent New Zealand concerts, but it's also a great introduction to those who have always found the music too cheesy or too 70s.

And it is the 60s tracks that appeal
the most here, especially Matthew And Son with its fantastic orchestration, but also The First Cut Is The Deepest and Here Comes My Baby, both of which were famously covered by others.

Check out the end of the DVD for the Spike Milligan-voiced short film Teaser And The Firecat, based on Stevens' children's book.

Stevens, having already changed his name early in his career, became Yusuf Islam in 1978 and now records as just Yusuf.

His most recent album, Roadsinger, is not a million miles from the music of his feline days, if not the sound of a man more worldly, wise and weary.

Included is the slightly odd, show tune-ish-with-touches-of-Tom-Petty bonus track Boots and Sand, written by Yusuf after he was denied entry to the United States in 2004 because his name was on a watchlist.
The title track is good enough to merit a place on the above compilation, but the highlight of Roadsinger is Everytime I Dream, a blues-infused, evocative track with Grand Canyon-deep brass rumblings and a sweet mix of guitars under nightmarish lyrics.
A Cat by any other name can, it seems, sound as sweet.
4/5
3/5

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