Yusuf Islam (born Steven Demetre Georgiou, 21 July 1948), best known by his former stage name Cat Stevens,  is a British musician. He is a singer-songwriter,  multi-instrumentalist, educator, philanthropist, and prominent convert  to Islam.
His albums Tea for the Tillerman and Teaser and the Firecat were both certified as Triple Platinum by the RIAA in the United States; his album Catch Bull at Four sold half a million copies in the first two weeks of release alone, and was Billboard's  number-one LP for three consecutive weeks. He has also earned two ASCAP  songwriting awards in consecutive years, for "The First Cut Is the  Deepest", which has been a hit single for four different artists.
Stevens  converted to Islam at the height of his fame in December, 1977, and  adopted his Muslim name, Yusuf Islam, the following year. In 1979, he  auctioned all his guitars away for charity and left his music career to  devote himself to educational and philanthropic causes in the Muslim  community. He has been given several awards for his work in promoting  peace in the world, including 2003's World Award, the 2004 Man for Peace  Award and the 2007 Mediterranean Prize for Peace. In 2006, he returned  to pop music, with his first album of new pop songs in 28 years,  entitled An Other Cup. He now goes by the single name Yusuf.
He currently lives with his wife and children in London, and spends part of each year in Dubai.
His newest album, Roadsinger, was released on May 5, 2009.
Early life (1948?1965)
Steven  Georgiou was the third child of a Greek-Cypriot father, Stavros  Georgiou (b. 1900) and a Swedish mother, Ingrid Wickman (b. 1915). He  has an older sister, Anita, and brother, David. The family lived above  Moulin Rouge, the restaurant that his parents operated on Shaftesbury  Avenue, a few steps from Piccadilly Circus in the Soho theatre district  of London. All family members worked in the restaurant. His parents  divorced when he was about 8 years old, but they continued to maintain  the family restaurant and live above it.
Although his father  was Greek Orthodox and his mother a Swedish Lutheran Protestant,  Georgiou was sent to a Catholic school, St. Joseph Roman Catholic  Primary School in Macklin Street, which was closer to his father's  business on Drury Lane. Georgiou developed an interest in piano at a  fairly young age, eventually using the family baby grand piano to work  out the chords, since no one else there played well enough to teach him.  With the popularity of The Beatles, at age 15, he extended his interest  to the guitar, and convinced his father to pay ?8 for his first  instrument, and began playing it and writing songs. He would escape at  times from his family responsibilities to the rooftop above their home,  and listen to the tunes of the musicals drifting from just around the  corner; from Denmark Street, which was then the centre of the British  music industry. Later, Stevens has emphasized that the advent of West Side Story in particular affected him, giving him a "different view of life", he said in 2000, on a VH1 Behind the Music  programme. With interests in both art and music, he and his mother  travelled to G?vle, Sweden, where he started developing his drawing  skills after being influenced by his uncle Hugo Wickman, a painter.
He  attended other local West End schools, where he says he was constantly  in trouble, and did poorly in everything but art. He was called "the  artist boy" and mentions that "I was beat up, but I was noticed". He  went on to take a one-year course of study at Hammersmith School of Art,  as he considered a career as a cartoonist. Though he enjoyed art (his  later record albums would feature his original artwork on his album  covers), he wanted to establish a musical career and began to perform  originally under the stage name "Steve Adams" in 1965 while at  Hammersmith. At that point, his goal was to become a songwriter. Among  the musicians who influenced him were Bob Dylan, Nina Simone, blues  artists Leadbelly and Muddy Waters, John Lennon, Biff Rose (who played  on his first album), Leo Kottke, and Paul Simon. He also wanted to  emulate composers who wrote musicals, like Ira Gershwin and Leonard  Bernstein. In 1965 he signed a publishing deal with Ardmore &  Beechwood and cut several demos, including "The First Cut Is the  Deepest".
Musical career (1966?1970)
Early musical career
Georgiou  began to perform his songs in coffee houses and pubs. At first he tried  forming a band, but soon realised he preferred performing solo.  Thinking that his given name might not be memorable to prospective fans,  he chose a stage name Cat Stevens, in part because a girlfriend  said he had eyes like a cat, but mainly because he said, "I couldn't  imagine anyone going to the record store and asking for 'that Steven  Demetre Georgiou album'. And in England, and I was sure in America, they  loved animals." In 1966, at age 18, he impressed manager/producer Mike  Hurst, formerly of British vocal group The Springfields, with his songs  and Hurst arranged for him to record a demo and then helped him get a  record deal. The first singles were hits. "I Love My Dog" charted at  #28, and "Matthew and Son", the title song from his debut album, went to  #2. "I'm Gonna Get Me a Gun" reached Britain's Top 10, and the album Matthew and Son  itself began charting. The original version of the The Tremeloes cover  hit, "Here Comes My Baby", was written and recorded by Stevens.
"The First Cut is the Deepest" (1967)
Sample of "The First Cut is the Deepest", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on New Masters.
Over  the next two years, Stevens recorded and toured with artists ranging  from Jimi Hendrix to Engelbert Humperdinck. The music business hadn't  yet begun targeting specific audiences, so he frequently toured with  what now would be considered an unusual array of celebrities. Stevens  was considered a fresh-faced teen star, placing several single releases  in the British pop music charts. Some of that success was attributed to  the pirate radio station Wonderful Radio London, which gained him fans  by playing his records. In August 1967, he went on the air with other  recording artists who had benefited from the station to mourn its  closure.
His December 1967 album New Masters failed to  chart in the United Kingdom. The album is now most notable for his song  "The First Cut Is the Deepest", a song he sold for ?30 to P.P. Arnold  that was to become a massive hit for her, and an international hit for  Keith Hampshire, Rod Stewart, James Morrison, and Sheryl Crow. Forty  years after he recorded the first demo of the song, it earned him two  back-to-back ASCAP "Songwriter of the Year" awards, in 2005 and 2006.
Tuberculosis
"Trouble" (1969-1970)
Sample of "Trouble", performed by Cat Stevens. Written between 1969-1970 during hospitalization for tuberculosis.
Stevens  was living the fast-moving life of a pop star, and in early 1968 at the  age of 19, he became very ill with tuberculosis and a collapsed lung.  Near death, at the time of his admittance to the King Edward VII  Hospital, Midhurst, he spent months recuperating in hospital and a year  of convalescence. During this time Stevens began to question aspects of  his life, and spirituality. He later said, "to go from the show business  environment and find you are in hospital, getting injections day in and  day out, and people around you are dying, it certainly changes your  perspective. I got down to thinking about myself. It seemed almost as if  I had my eyes shut."
He took up meditation, yoga, metaphysics  read about other religions, and became a vegetarian. As a result of his  serious illness and long convalescence, and as a part of his spiritual  awakening and questioning, he wrote as many as 40 songs, which were much  more introspective than his previous work. Many of those songs would  appear on his albums in years to come.
Changes in musical sound after illness
The  lack of success of Stevens' second album mirrored a difference of  personal tastes in musical direction, and a growing resentment at  producer Mike Hurst's attempts to re-create another album like that of  his debut, with heavy-handed orchestration, and over-production, rather  than the folk sound Stevens was attempting to produce. He admits having  purposefully sabotaged his own contract with Hurst, making outlandishly  expensive orchestral demands and threatening legal action, which  resulted in his goal: release from his contract with Deram Records, a  sub-label of major Decca Records. Upon regaining his health at home  after his release from the hospital, Stevens recorded some of his  newly-written songs on his tape recorder, and played his changing sound  for a few new record executives. After hiring agent Barry Krost, who had  arranged for an audition with Chris Blackwell of Island Records,  Blackwell offered him a "chance to record  whenever and with whomever he  liked, and more importantly to Cat, however he liked". With Krost's  recommendation, Stevens signed with Paul Samwell-Smith, previously the  bassist of the Yardbirds, to be his new producer.
Musical career (1970?1978)
Height of popularity
Healthy,  sporting a new beard, Stevens was armed with a catalogue of new songs  that reflected his new perspective on what he wanted to bring to the  world with his music. His previous work had sold in the United Kingdom,  but Stevens was still relatively unknown by the public across the  Atlantic. To rectify this, after signing with Island Records in 1970, an  American distribution deal was arranged with A&M Records' Jerry  Moss in North America. Stevens began work on Mona Bone Jakon, a  folk-rock based album that was quite different from his earlier "pop"  style records, drawing on his new, introspective work. Producer Paul  Samwell-Smith paired guitarist Alun Davies, who was currently working as  a session musician, with Stevens. Alun was the more experienced veteran  of two albums which already had begun to explore the emerging genres of  skiffle and folk rock music. Davies was also thought a perfect fit in  particular for his "fingerwork" on the guitar, harmonizing and  contributing backing vocals with Stevens. They originally met just to  record Mona Bone Jakon, but developed a fast friendship; Davies,  like Stevens, was a perfectionist, appearing after all the sound checks  had been completed, just to be sure that all the equipment and sound  were prepared for each concert. He recorded on all but two of the  succeeding pop music albums Stevens released, and continued performing  and recording with him until Stevens' retirement. The two remained  friends, however, and years later, when Stevens re-emerged as Yusuf  Islam after 27 years, Davies appeared again performing at his side, and  has remained there.
"Wild World" (1971)
Sample of "Wild World", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on Tea for the Tillerman.
The first single released from Mona Bone Jakon  was "Lady D'Arbanville", which Stevens wrote about his young American  girlfriend Patti D'Arbanville. The record, with a madrigal sound unlike  most music played on pop radio, with sounds of djembes and bass in  addition to Stevens' and Davies' guitars, soared to #8 in the UK. It was  the first of his hits to get real airplay in the United States. Other  songs written for her included "Maybe You're Right", and "Just Another  Night". In addition, the song, "Pop Star", about his experience as a  teen star, and "Katmandu", featuring Genesis frontman Peter Gabriel  playing flute, were featured. Mona Bone Jakon was an early example of the solo singer-songwriter album format that was becoming popular for other artists as well.
Mona Bone Jakon was the precursor for Stevens' international breakthrough album, Tea for the Tillerman, which became a top-10 Billboard  hit. Within 6 months of its release, it had sold over 500,000 copies,  reaching gold record status in the United States and in Britain. The  combination of Stevens' new folk-rock style and accessible lyrics which  spoke of everyday situations and problems, mixed with the beginning of  spiritual questions about life, would remain in his music from then on.  The album features the top 20 single "Wild World"; a parting song after  D'Arbanville moved on. "Wild World" has been credited as the song that  gave Tea for the Tillerman 'enough kick' to get it played on FM  radio; and the head of Island Records, Chris Blackwell, was quoted as  calling it "the best album we?ve ever released". Other album cuts  include "Hard-Headed Woman", and "Father and Son", a song sung both in  baritone and tenor, about the struggle between fathers and their sons  who are faced with their own personal choices in life. In 2001, this  album was certified by the RIAA as a Multi-Platinum record, having sold 3  million copies in the United States at that time. It is ranked at #206  in Rolling Stone Magazine's 2003 list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time".
"Father and Son" (1970)
Sample of "Father and Son", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on Tea for the Tillerman.
After the end of his relationship with D'Arbanville, Stevens noted the effect it had on writing his music, saying,
"Everything  I wrote while I was away was in a transitional period and reflects  that. Like Patti. A year ago we split; I had been with her for two  years. What I write about Patti and my family... when I sing the songs  now, I learn strange things. I learn the meanings of my songs late..."
Stevens  later was romantically linked to popular singer Carly Simon while both  were produced by Samwell-Smith. Stevens and Simon had a love affair from  1971 to 1972, during which time both wrote songs for and about one  another. Simon wrote and recorded at least two top 50 songs, "Legend in  Your Own Time" and "Anticipation" about Stevens. He reciprocated in his  song to her, after their romance, entitled, "Sweet Scarlet".
"Peace Train" (1976)
Sample of "Peace Train", performed by Cat Stevens live on the "Earth Tour".
Having established a signature sound, Stevens enjoyed a string of successes over the following years. 1971's Teaser and the Firecat  album reached number two and achieved gold record status within three  weeks of its release in the United States. It yielded several hits,  including "Peace Train", "Morning Has Broken" (a Christian hymn with  lyrics by Eleanor Farjeon), and "Moon Shadow". This album was also  certified by the RIAA as a Multi-Platinum record in 2001, with over  three million US sales through that time. When interviewed on a Boston  radio station, Stevens said about Teaser and the Firecat:
"I  get the tune and then I just keep on singing the tune until the words  come out from the tune. It's kind of a hypnotic state that you reach  after a while when you keep on playing it where words just evolve from  it. So you take those words and just let them go whichever way they  want... 'Moonshadow'? Funny, that was in Spain, I went there alone,  completely alone, to get away from a few things. And I was dancin' on  the rocks there... right on the rocks where the waves were, like,  blowin' and splashin'. Really, it was so fantastic. And the moon was  bright, ya know, and I started dancin' and singin' and I sang that song  and it stayed. It's just the kind of moment that you want to find when  you're writin' songs."
His next album, Catch Bull at Four,  released in 1972, was his most rapidly successful album in the United  States, reaching gold record status in 15 days, and holding the  number-one position on the Billboard charts for three weeks. This  album continued the introspective and spiritual lyrics that he was  known for, combined with a rougher-edged voice and a less acoustic sound  than his previous records, utilizing synthesizers and other  instruments. Although the sales of the album indicated Stevens'  popularity, the album did not produce any real hits, with the exception  of the single "Sitting", which charted at #16. Catch Bull at Four was Platinum certified in 2001.
Exploration with movie soundtracks
In July 1970, Stevens recorded one of his songs, "But I Might Die Tonight", for the Jerzy Skolimowski film Deep End, which featured Jane Asher.
In 1971, Stevens provided nine songs to the soundtrack of the film Harold and Maude.  Two of the songs, "Don't Be Shy" and "If You Want to Sing Out, Sing  Out", were not featured on any album until their inclusion on a second  "greatest hits" collection: Footsteps in the Dark: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2, in 1984. Harold and Maude,  a black comedy starring Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort, became a popular cult  movie celebrating the free spirit, and brought Stevens' music to a  wider audience, continuing to do so long after he stopped recording in  the late 1970s. Among other songs included were "Where Do the Children  Play?", "Trouble", and "I Think I See the Light".
After his  religious conversion in the late 1970s, Stevens stopped granting  permission for his songs to be used in films. Eventually, however,  almost twenty years later, in 1997, the movie Rushmore was  allowed to use his songs "Here Comes My Baby" and "The Wind", showing a  new willingness on his part to release his music from his Western "pop  star" days. This was followed in 2000 by the inclusion of "Peace Train"  in the movie Remember the Titans, in 2000 by Cameron Crowe's use in Almost Famous  of the song "The Wind". and in 2006 the inclusion of "Peace Train" on  the soundtrack to 'We Are Marshall' ".. In 2007, an excerpt of "If You  Want To Sing Out, Sing Out" is sung by characters in Charlie Bartlett as an apparent reference to Harold and Maude:; the character of Charlie bares a considerable resemblence to the character of Harold.
Later Cat Stevens recordings
Subsequent  releases in the 1970s also did well on the charts and in ongoing sales,  although they did not touch the success he had from 1970 to 1973. In  1973, Stevens moved to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to avoid taxation from  the United Kingdom.
"Later" (1973)
Sample of "Later", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on Foreigner.
During that time he created the album Foreigner,  an album which was a departure from the music that had brought him to  the height of his fame. It differed in several respects: entirely  written by Stevens, he dropped his band and produced the record without  the assistance of Samwell-Smith, who had played a large role in  catapulting him to fame, and instead of guitar, he played keyboards  throughout the album. It was intended to show the funk/soul element that  he had come to appreciate. One side of Foreigner was continuous,  much different than the radio friendly pop tunes fans had come to  expect. He performed the album on an uninterrupted ABC network  television broadcast titled the "Moon and Star" concert. The album  produced a couple of singles including "The Hurt", but did not reach the  heights he had once enjoyed.
The follow-up to Foreigner was Buddha and the Chocolate Box, largely a return to the instrumentation and styles employed in Teaser and the Firecat and Tea for the Tillerman. Featuring the return of Alun Davies and best known for "Oh Very Young", Buddha and the Chocolate Box reached platinum status in 2001. However, Stevens' next album was the concept album Numbers, a less successful departure for him.
The 1977 Izitso  included his last chart hit, "(Remember the Days of the) Old  Schoolyard", a duet with fellow UK singer Elkie Brooks. Linda Lewis  appears in the song's video, with Cat Stevens singing to her, as they  play former schoolmates, singing to each other on a schoolyard  "merry-go-round". This is one of few videos that Stevens made, other  than simple videos of concert performances.
His final original album under the name Cat Stevens was Back to Earth,  released in late 1978, which was also the first album produced by  Samwell-Smith since his peak in single album sales in the early 1970s.
Several  compilation albums were released before and after he stopped recording.  After Stevens left Decca Records they bundled his first two albums  together on their label as a set, hoping to ride the commercial tide of  his early success; later his newer labels did the same, and he himself  released compilations. The most successful of the compilation albums was  the 1975 Greatest Hits which has sold over 4 million copies in  the United States. In May 2003 he received his first Platinum Europe  Award from the IFPI for Remember Cat Stevens, The Ultimate Collection, indicating over one million European sales.
Religious conversion
Yusuf in 2008
While  vacationing in Marrakech, Morocco, Stevens was intrigued by the sound  of the A?h?n, the Islamic ritual call to prayer, which was explained to  him as "music for God". Stevens said, "I thought, music for God? I?d  never heard that before ? I?d heard of music for money, music for fame,  music for personal power, but music for God!" 
In 1976 Stevens  nearly drowned off the coast of Malibu, California and claims to have  shouted: ?Oh God! If you save me I will work for you.? He says that  right afterward a wave appeared and carried him back to shore. This  brush with mortality intensified his long-held quest for spiritual  truth. He had looked into "Buddhism, Zen, I Ching, Numerology, tarot  cards and Astrology". Stevens' brother David Gordon brought him a copy  of the Qur'an as a birthday gift from a trip to Jerusalem. Stevens took  to it right away, and began to find peace with himself and began his  transition to Islam.
During the time he was studying the  Qur'an, he began to identify more and more with the name of Joseph, a  man bought and sold in the market place, which is how he says he had  increasingly felt within the music business. Regarding his conversion,  in his 2006 interview with Alan Yentob, he stated, "to some people, it  may have seemed like an enormous jump, but for me, it was a gradual move  to this." And, in a Rolling Stone Magazine interview, he  reaffirmed this, saying, "I had found the spiritual home I'd been  seeking for most of my life. And if you listen to my music and lyrics,  like "Peace Train" and "On The Road To Find Out", it clearly shows my  yearning for direction and the spiritual path I was travelling." Stevens  had been seeking inner peace and spiritual answers throughout his  career, and now believed he had found what he had been seeking.
Stevens  formally converted to the Islamic religion on , taking the name Yusuf  Islam in 1978. Yusuf is the Arabic rendition of the name Joseph. He  stated that he "always loved the name Joseph" and was particularly drawn  to the story of Joseph in the Qur'an. Although he discontinued his pop  career, he was persuaded to perform one last time before what would  become his twenty-five year musical hiatus. Appearing with his hair  freshly shorn and an untrimmed beard, he headlined a charity concert on  22 November 1979 in Wembley Stadium to benefit UNICEF's International  Year of the Child. The concert closed with a performance by Stevens,  David Essex, Alun Davies, and Stevens's brother, David, who wrote the  song that was the finale, "Child for a Day".
Yusuf married  Fauzia Mubarak Ali on 7 September, 1979, at Regent's Park Mosque in  London. It was the 1,000th such ceremony to take place at the mosque.  They have five children.
Life as Yusuf Islam (1978?present)
Muslim faith and musical career
Following  his conversion, Yusuf abandoned his career as a pop star. When he  became a Muslim in 1977, he said, the Imam at the mosque was told that  he was a pop star, and he told Yusuf that it was fine to continue as a  musician, so long as the songs were morally acceptable. But Yusuf says  he knew there were aspects of the music business, such as vanity and  temptations, that did go against the teachings of the Qu'ran, and this  was the primary reason he gave for retreating from the pop spotlight. In  his first performance on the television show Later... with Jools Holland,  27 years after leaving the "pop" music business, and in other  interviews, he gave other reasons for leaving the pop stage. "A lot of  people would have loved me to keep singing," he said. "You come to a  point where you have sung, more or less ... your whole repertoire and  you want to get down to the job of living. You know, up until that  point, I hadn't had a life. I'd been searching, been on the road."
Estimating  in January 2007 that he continues to earn approximately $1.5 million  USD a year from his Cat Stevens music, he decided to use his accumulated  wealth and continuing earnings from his music career on philanthropic  and educational causes in the Muslim community of London and elsewhere.  In 1981, he founded the Islamia Primary School in Salusbury Road in the  north London area of Kilburn and, soon after, founded several Muslim  secondary schools and devoted his energy to providing an Islamic  education to children and to donate the rest to charitable causes. He is  the founder and chairman of the Small Kindness charity, which  initially assisted famine victims in Africa and now supports thousands  of orphans and families in the Balkans, Indonesia, and Iraq. He served  as chairman of the charity Muslim Aid from 1985 to 1993.
In  1985, Yusuf decided to return to the public spotlight for the first time  since his religious conversion, at the historic Live Aid concert,  concerned with the famine threatening Ethiopia. Though he had written a  song especially for the occasion, his appearance was skipped when Elton  John's set ran too long.
Salman Rushdie controversy
Main article: Cat Stevens' comments about Salman Rushdie
The  singer attracted controversy in 1989, during an address to students at  London's Kingston University, where he was asked about the fatwa calling  for the death of author Salman Rushdie. Newspapers quickly interpreted  his response as support for the fatwa, but he released a statement the  following day which said that he had not been supporting vigilantism,  and was merely explaining the legal Islamic punishment for blasphemy. In  a BBC interview, he displayed a newspaper clipping from that time  period, which quotes from his statement. Subsequent comments made by him  in 1989 on a British television programme were also seen as being in  support of the fatwa, but in a statement in the FAQ section of his web  site  he says that he was joking and that the show was improperly  edited. In the years since these comments, he has strongly denied ever  calling for the death of Rushdie or supporting the fatwa. 
September 11 attacks
Immediately following the 11 September 2001, attacks on the United States, he said:
I wish to express my heartfelt horror at the indiscriminate terrorist attacks committed against innocent people of the United States yesterday. While it is still not clear who carried out the attack, it must be stated that no right-thinking follower of Islam could possibly condone such an action. The Qur'an equates the murder of one innocent person with the murder of the whole of humanity. We pray for the families of all those who lost their lives in this unthinkable act of violence as well as all those injured; I hope to reflect the feelings of all Muslims and people around the world whose sympathies go out to the victims of this sorrowful moment.
He appeared on videotape on a  VH1 pre-show for the October 2001 Concert for New York City, condemning  the attacks and singing his song "Peace Train" for the first time in  public in more than 20 years, as an a cappella version. He also  donated a portion of his box-set royalties to the September 11 Fund for  victims' families, and the rest to orphans in underdeveloped countries.
Denial of entry into the United States
On  21 September 2004, Yusuf was on a United Airlines flight from London to  Washington, travelling to a meeting with singer Dolly Parton, who had  recorded "Peace Train" several years earlier and was planning to include  another Cat Stevens song on an upcoming album. While the plane was in  flight, the Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System flagged his  name as being on a no fly list. Customs agents alerted the United States  Transportation Security Administration, which then diverted his flight  to Bangor, Maine, where he was detained by agents from the Department of  Homeland Security.
The following day, Yusuf was deported back  to the United Kingdom. The Transportation Security Administration  claimed there were "concerns of ties he may have to potential  terrorist-related activities". The Israeli government had deported Yusuf  in 2000 over allegations that he provided funding to the Palestinian  organisation Hamas; he denied doing so knowingly. "I have never  knowingly supported or given money to Hamas," says Yusuf, who repeatedly  has condemned terrorism and Islamic extremism. "At the time I was  reported to have done it, I didn't know such a group existed. Some  people give a political interpretation to charity. We were horrified at  how people were suffering in the Holy Land." However, the United States  Department of Homeland Security added him to their FBI watchlist. The US  deportation provoked a small international controversy, and led British  Foreign Secretary Jack Straw to complain personally to US Secretary of  State Colin Powell at the United Nations. Powell responded by stating  that the watchlist was under review, adding, "I think we have that  obligation to review these matters to see if we are right".
Yusuf  believed his inclusion on the watch list may have simply been an error:  a mistaken identification of him for a man with the same name, but  different spelling. On 1 October 2004 Yusuf requested the removal of his  name, "I remain bewildered by the decision of the US authorities to  refuse me entry to the United States". According to a statement by  Yusuf, the man on the list was named "Youssef Islam", indicating that  Yusuf himself was not the suspected terrorism supporter. Romanization of  Arabic names can easily result in different spellings: the  transliteration of the Islamic name for Joseph (Yusuf's chosen name)  lists a dozen spellings.
Two years later, in December 2006,  Yusuf was admitted without incident into the United States for several  radio concert performances and interviews to promote his new record.  Yusuf said of the incident at the time, that, "No reason was ever given,  but being asked to repeat the spelling of my name again and again, made  me think it was a fairly simple mistake of identity. Rumours which  circulated after made me imagine otherwise."
Yusuf has written  a song about the 2004 deportation experience, entitled "Boots and  Sand", recorded in the summer of 2008 and featuring Paul McCartney,  Alison Krauss, Dolly Parton, and Terry Sylvester.
Libel cases
British reports regarding deportation
In October 2004 the British newspapers The Sun and The Sunday Times  voiced their support for Yusuf's deportation by the US government,  claiming that he had supported terrorism. Yusuf successfully sued for  libel and received a substantial out-of-court financial settlement and  apologies from the newspapers stating that he had never supported  terrorism and acknowledging that he had recently been given a Man of  Peace award from the private Nobel Peace Prize Laureates Committee.  However The Sunday Times managing editor Richard Caseby said that  while there was an "agreed settlement", they "always denied liability"  and "disagreed with Cat Stevens' lawyers interpretation", but took a  "pragmatic view" of the lawsuit.
Yusuf responded that he was  "...delighted by the settlement  helps vindicate my character and good  name... It seems to be the easiest thing in the world these days to make  scurrilous accusations against Muslims, and in my case it directly  impacts on my relief work and damages my reputation as an artist. The  harm done is often difficult to repair", and added that he intended to  donate the financial award given to him by the court to help orphans of  the tsunami in the Indian Ocean.
Yusuf wrote about the experience in a newspaper article titled "A Cat in a Wild World".
False rumour regarding veiled women
On  18 July 2008, Yusuf received substantial undisclosed damages from the  World Entertainment News Network following their distribution of the  false rumour that the singer did not speak to unveiled women. The  allegations first surfaced in German newspaper B.Z. after Yusuf's trip  to Berlin in March 2007 to collect the ECHO award for "life achievements  as musician and ambassador between cultures". Once again he was awarded  damages after the World Entertainment News Network allowed an article  to be published on Contactmusic.com, a "website said to have 2.2 million  page views a month", alleging that Yusuf would not speak to unveiled  women with the exception of his wife. His solicitor was reported as  having said that "he was made out to be 'so sexist and bigoted that he  refused at an awards ceremony to speak to or even acknowledge any women  who were not wearing a veil,'". The offending news agency apologized,  admitting that Yusuf has never had any problem in working with women  and, contrary to the article in question, never has needed a third party  as an intermediary to function at work. The money from this lawsuit  will go to Yusuf's Small Kindness Charity.
Yusuf  himself discusses this topic on his website, saying, "It?s true that I  have asked my manager to respectfully request lady presenters from  embracing me when giving awards or during public appearances, but that  has nothing to do with my feelings or respect for them. Islam simply  requires me to honour the dignity of ladies or young girls who are not  closely related to me, and avoid physical intimacy, however innocent it  may be." He adds, "My four daughters all follow the basic wearing of  clothes which modestly cover their God-given beauty. They?re extremely  well educated; they do not cover their faces and interact perfectly well  with friends and society.."
Return to music
Yusuf in recording studio, 2006
Yusuf  gradually resumed his musical career in the 1990s. His initial  recordings had not included any musical instruments other than  percussion, and featured lyrics about Islamic themes. He invested in  building his own recording studio which he named Mountain of Light  Studios in the late 1990s, and he was featured as a guest singer on "God  Is the Light", a song on an album of nasheeds by the group Raihan. In  addition, he invited and collaborated with other Muslim singers,  including Canadian artist Dawud Wharnsby Ali. After Yusuf's friend,  Irfan Ljubijankic, the Foreign Minister of Bosnia-Herzegovina, was  killed by a Serbian rocket attack, Yusuf appeared at a 1997 benefit  concert in Sarajevo and recorded a benefit album named after a song  written by Ljubijankic, I Have No Cannons That Roar.
"A is for Allah" (2000)
Sample of "A is for Allah", performed by Yusuf Islam. Appears on A is for Allah
Realizing  there were few educational resources designed to teach children about  the Islamic religion, Yusuf wrote and produced a children's album, A Is for Allah,  in 2000 with the assistance of South African singer-songwriter Zain  Bhikha. The title song was one Yusuf had written years before to  introduce his first child to both the religion and the Arabic alphabet.  He also established his own record label, "Jamal Records", and Mountain  of Light Productions, and he donates a percentage of his projects'  proceeds to his Small Kindness charity, whose name is taken from the Qur'an.
On  the occasion of the 2000 re-release of his Cat Stevens albums, he  explained that he had stopped performing in English due to his  misunderstanding of the Islamic faith. "This issue of music in Islam is  not as cut-and-dried as I was led to believe ... I relied on heresy , that was perhaps my mistake."
Yusuf  has discussed feeling that his decision to leave the Western pop music  business was perhaps one that was too quick with too little  communication for his fans. For most, it was a surprise, and even his  guitarist, Alun Davies said in later interviews that he hadn't believed  that Stevens would actually go through with it, after his many forays  into other religions throughout their relationship. Yusuf himself has  said the "cut" between his former life and his life as a Muslim might  have been too quick, too severe, and that more people might have been  better informed about Islam, and given an opportunity to better  understand it, and himself, if he had simply removed those items that  were considered har?m, in his performances, allowing him to  express himself musically and educate listeners through his music  without violating any religious constraints.
In 2003, after  repeated encouragement from within the Muslim world, Yusuf once again  recorded "Peace Train" for a compilation CD, which also included  performances by David Bowie and Paul McCartney. He performed "Wild  World" in Nelson Mandela's 46664 concert with his former session player  Peter Gabriel, the first time he had publicly performed in English in 25  years. In December 2004, he and Ronan Keating released a new version of  "Father and Son": the song entered the charts at number two, behind  Band Aid 20's "Do They Know It's Christmas?". They also produced a video  of the pair walking between photographs of fathers and sons, while  singing the song. The proceeds of "Father and Son" were donated to the  Band Aid charity. Keating's former group, Boyzone, had a hit with the  song a decade earlier. As he had been persuaded before, Yusuf  contributed to the song, because the proceeds were marked for charity.  However, this marked a point in his artistic career where he entertained  the concept of using more than simply voice and drums.
"Tala'a Al-Badru Alayna" (2005)
Sample of "Tala'a Al-Badru Alayna", performed by Yusuf Islam.
On  21 April 2005 Yusuf gave a short talk before a scheduled musical  performance in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on the anniversary of  Muhammad's birthday. He said, "There is a great deal of ignorance in the  world about Islam today, and we hope to communicate with the help of  something more refined than lectures and talks. Our recordings are  particularly appealing to the young, having used songs as well as Qur'an  verses with pleasing sound effects..." Yusuf explained that while there  had been no real guidelines about instruments in the Qur'an, and no  reference about the business of music, it had been Muslim travellers who  first brought the guitar to Moorish Spain. He noted that Muhammad was  fond of celebrations, as in the case of the birth of a child, or a  traveller arriving after a long journey. Thus, Yusuf concluded that  healthy entertainment was acceptable within limitations, and that he now  felt that it was no sin to perform with the guitar. Music, he now felt,  is uplifting to the soul; something sorely needed in troubled times. At  that point, he was joined by several young male singers who sang  backing vocals and played a drum, with Yusuf as lead singer and  guitarist. They performed two songs, both half in Arabic, and half in  English; "Tala'a Al-Badru Alayna", an old song in Arabic which Yusuf  recorded with a folk sound to it, and another song, "The Wind East and  West", which was newly written by Yusuf and featured a distinct R&B  sound.
With this performance, Yusuf began slowly to integrate  instruments into both older material from his Cat Stevens era (some with  slight lyrical changes) and new songs, both those known to the Muslim  communities around the world and some that have the same Western flair  from before with a focus on new topics and another generation of  listeners.
In a 2005 press release, he explained his revived recording career:
After  I embraced Islam, many people told me to carry on composing and  recording, but at the time I was hesitant, for fear that it might be for  the wrong reasons. I felt unsure what the right course of action was. I  guess it is only now, after all these years, that I've come to fully  understand and appreciate what everyone has been asking of me. It's as  if I've come full circle; however, I have gathered a lot of knowledge on  the subject in the meantime.
"In Islam there is something called the principle of common good. What that means is that whenever one is confronted by something that is not mentioned in the scriptures, one must observe what benefit it can bring. Does it serve the common good, does it protect the spirit, and does it serve God? If the scholars see that it is something positive, they may well approve of what I'm doing."
?Yusuf Islam
"Indian Ocean" (2005)
Sample of "Indian Ocean", performed by Yusuf Islam. Released as a charity single.
In  early 2005, Yusuf released a new song entitled "Indian Ocean" about the  2004 tsunami disaster. The song featured Indian composer/producer A. R.  Rahman, a-ha keyboard player Magne Furuholmen and Travis drummer Neil  Primrose. Proceeds of the single went to help orphans in Banda Aceh, one  of the areas worst affected by the tsunami, through Yusuf's Small Kindness  charity. At first, the single was released only through several online  music stores but later featured on the compilation album Cat Stevens: Gold.  "I had to learn my faith and look after my family, and I had to make  priorities. But now I've done it all and there's a little space for me  to fill in the universe of music again."
On 28 May 2005, Yusuf  delivered a keynote speech and performed at the Adopt-A-Minefield Gala  in D?sseldorf. The Adopt-A-Minefield charity, under the patronage of  Paul McCartney, works internationally to raise awareness and funds to  clear landmines and rehabilitate landmine survivors. Yusuf attended as  part of an honorary committee which also included George Martin, Richard  Branson, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Klaus Voormann, Christopher Lee and  others.
In mid-2005, Yusuf played guitar for the Dolly Parton album, Those Were the Days, on her version of his "Where Do the Children Play?". (Parton had also covered "Peace Train" a few years earlier.)
In  May 2006, in anticipation of his forthcoming new pop album, the BBC1  programme "Imagine" aired a 49-minute documentary with Alan Yentob  called Yusuf: The Artist formerly Known as Cat Stevens. This  documentary film features rare audio and video clips from the late 1960s  and 1970s, as well as an extensive interview with Yusuf, his brother  David Gordon, several record executives, Bob Geldof, Dolly Parton, and  others outlining his career as Cat Stevens, his conversion and emergence  as Yusuf Islam, and his return to music in 2006. There are clips of him  singing in the studio when he was recording An Other Cup as well  as a few 2006 excerpts of him on guitar singing a few verses of Cat  Stevens songs including "The Wind" and "On the Road to Find Out".
Yusuf  has credited his then 21-year-old son Muhammad Islam, also a musician  and artist, for his return to secular music, when the son brought a  guitar back into the house, which Yusuf began playing. Muhammad's  professional name is "Yoriyos" and his debut album was released in  February 2007. Yoriyos created the art on Yusuf's album An Other Cup, something that Cat Stevens did for his albums in the 1970s.
Starting in 2006, the Cat Stevens song "Tea for The Tillerman" was used as the theme tune for the Ricky Gervais BBC-HBO sitcom Extras.  A Christmas-season television commercial for gift-giving by the diamond  industry aired in 2006 with Cat Power's cover of "How Can I Tell You".  That song is also covered by John Frusciante of the Red Hot Chili  Peppers frequently in concert.
In December 2006, Yusuf was one  of the artists who performed at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo,  Norway, in honour of the prize winners, Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank.  He performed the songs "Midday (Avoid City After Dark)", "Peace Train",  and "Heaven/Where True Love Goes". He also gave a concert in New York  City that month as a Jazz at Lincoln Center event, recorded and  broadcast by KCRW-FM radio, along with an interview by Nic Harcourt.  Accompanying him, as he had in the Cat Stevens days, was Alun Davies, on  guitar and vocals.
"I Think I See the Light" (2007)
Sample of "I Think I See the Light", performed by Yusuf Islam at BBC Sessions
In April 2007, BBC1 broadcast a concert given at the Porchester Hall by Yusuf as part of BBC Sessions,  his first live performance in London in 28 years (the previous one  being the UNICEF "Year of the Child" concert in 1979). He played several  new songs along with some old ones like "Father and Son", "The Wind",  "Where Do the Children Play?", "Don't Be Shy", "Wild World", and "Peace  Train".
In July 2007, he performed at a concert in Bochum,  Germany, in benefit of Archbishop Desmond Tutu's Peace Centre in South  Africa and the Milagro Foundation of Deborah and Carlos Santana. The  audience included Nobel Laureates Mikhail Gorbachev, Desmond Tutu and  other prominent global figures. He later appeared as the final act in  the German leg of Live Earth in Hamburg performing some classic Cat  Stevens songs and more recent compositions reflecting his concern for  peace and child welfare. His set included Stevie Wonder's "Saturn",  "Peace Train", "Where Do the Children Play?", "Ruins", and "Wild World".  He performed at the Peace One Day concert at the Royal Albert Hall on  21 September 2007. In 2008 Yusuf contributed the song "Edge of  Existence" to the Survival International charity album Songs for Survival.
In  January 2009, Yusuf released a charity song in aid of children in Gaza.  He recorded a rendition of the George Harrison song "The Day the World  Gets Round", along with the German bassist and former Beatles  collaborator Klaus Voorman. Yusuf said that all proceeds from the song  will be donated to the U.N. agency in charge of Palestinian refugees,  UNRWA, and to the nonprofit group Save the Children to be directed to  aiding Gaza residents. Israeli Consul David Saranga criticized Yusuf for  not dedicating the song to all the children who are victims of the  violence, including Israeli children.
An Other Cup
Main article: An Other Cup
In March 2006, Yusuf finished recording his first all-new pop album since 1978. The album, An Other Cup,  was released internationally in November 2006 on his own label, Ya  Records (distributed by Polydor Records in the UK and internationally by  Atlantic Records) ? the 40th anniversary of his first album, Matthew and Son. A single, called Heaven/Where True Love Goes,  was simultaneously released. The album was produced with Rick Nowels,  who has worked with Dido and Rod Stewart. The performer is noted as  "Yusuf", with a cover label identifying him as "the artist formerly  known as Cat Stevens". The art on the album is credited to Yoriyos.  Yusuf wrote all of the songs except "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood", and  recorded it in the United States and the United Kingdom.
Yusuf  actively promoted this album, appearing on radio, television and in  print interviews. In November, 2006, he told the BBC, "It's me, so it's  going to sound like that of course ... This is the real thing... . When  my son brought the guitar back into the house, you know, that was the  turning point. It opened a flood of, of new ideas and music which I  think a lot of people would connect with." Originally, Yusuf began to  return only to his acoustic guitar as he had in the past, but his son  encouraged him to "experiment", which resulted in the purchase of a  Stevie Ray Vaughan Fender Stratocaster in 2007.
Also in November 2006, Billboard  magazine was curious as to why the artist is credited as just his first  name, "Yusuf" rather than "Yusuf Islam". His response was "Because  'Islam' doesn't have to be sloganized. The second name is like the  official tag, but you call a friend by their first name. It's more  intimate, and to me that's the message of this record." As for why the  album sleeve says "the artist formerly known as Cat Stevens", he  responded, "That's the tag with which most people are familiar; for  recognition purposes I'm not averse to that. For a lot of people, it  reminds them of something they want to hold on to. That name is part of  my history and a lot of the things I dreamt about as Cat Stevens have  come true as Yusuf Islam."
Yusuf was asked by the Swiss periodical Das Magazin why the title of the album was An Other Cup, rather than "Another Cup". The answer was that his breakthrough album, Tea for the Tillerman  in 1970, was decorated with Yusuf's painting of a peasant sitting down  to a cup of steaming drink on the land. Yusuf commented that the two  worlds "then, and now, are very different". His new album shows a  steaming cup alone on this cover. His answer was that this was actually  an other cup; something different; a bridge between the East and  West, which Yusuf explained was his own perceived role. He added that,  through him, "Westerners might get a glimpse of the East, and  Easterners, some understanding of the West. The cup, too, is important;  it's a meeting place, a thing meant to be shared."
On CBS Sunday Morning  in December 2006, he said, "You know, the cup is there to be filled ...  with whatever you want to fill it with. For those people looking for  Cat Stevens, they'll probably find him in this record. If you want to  find  Islam, go a bit deeper, you'll find him."
Yusuf has since described the album as being too "over-produced" and refers to An Other Cup as being a necessary hurdle he had to overcome before he could release his new album, Roadsinger. Yusuf compares the relationship between An Other Cup and Roadsinger to the relationship between the Cat Stevens albums Mona Bone Jakon and the landmark Tea for the Tillerman with the latter being superior in quality to the former.
2008 and 2009 projects
Main article: Roadsinger
In  January 2009, Yusuf recorded a George Harrison song, "The Day the World  Gets Round", collaborating with Klaus Voormann. Proceeds from the song  were donated to a charity to help the people of war-torn Gaza. To  promote the new single, Voormann re-designed his famous Beatles Revolver album cover, drawing a picture of a young Cat Stevens along with himself and George Harrison.
28 May 2009 in London at Shepherds Bush Empire, Yusuf performing for Island Records' 50th Anniversary Photo: Izzy
A new pop album, Roadsinger,  was released on May 5, 2009. The lead track, "Thinking 'Bout You",  received its debut radio play on a BBC programme on March 23, 2009.  Unlike An Other Cup, Yusuf promoted the new album with  appearances on American television as well as in the U.K.. He appeared  on the first episode of the Chris Isaak Show on the A&E  network in April, 2009, performing live versions of his new songs,  "World O'Darkness", "Boots and Sand", and "Roadsinger". On 13 May he  appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in Los Angeles, and on 14 May, on The Colbert Report in New York City, performing the title song from the Roadsinger album. On 15th May, he appeared on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon,  performing "Boots and Sand" and "Father and Son". On May 24 he appeared  on the BBC's The Andrew Marr Show, where he was interviewed and  performed the title track of Roadsinger. On August 15, he was one  of many guests at Fairport Convention's annual Cropredy Convention. He  performed five songs with Fairport Convention as his backing band,  including "Peace Train" and "Roadsinger".
A world tour was  announced on his web site to promote the new album. He was scheduled to  perform at an invitation-only concert at New York City's Highline  Ballroom on May 3 and to go on to Los Angeles, Chicago and Toronto, as  well as some to-be-announced European venues. However, the New York  appearance was postponed due to issues regarding his work visa. He was  scheduled to appear with his son Yoriyos later in May at Island Records'  50th Anniversary concert in London.
Awards
Philanthropic and humanitarian awards
2003 World Award also known as the "World Social Award" for "humanitarian relief work helping children and victims of war".
2004 Man for Peace Award presented by Mikhail Gorbachev for his "dedication to promote peace, the reconciliation of people and to condemn terrorism", the ceremony was held in Rome, Italy and attended by five Nobel Peace Prize laureates.
(2005) Honorary Doctorate by the University of Gloucestershire for services to education and humanitarian relief.
(2007) The Mediterranean Prize for Peace in Naples, Italy. He received the award "as a result of the work he has done to increase peace in the world".
10 July 2007, honorary doctorate (LLD) by the University of Exeter, in recognition of "his humanitarian work and improving understanding between Islamic and Western cultures". The ceremony was attended by esteemed personalities including Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu and guitarist Brian May.
Music awards and recognition
2005 Nominated for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
20 October 2005, ASCAP named Songwriter of the Year and Song of the Year for "The First Cut Is the Deepest"
8 June 2006, listed as #49 in Paste magazine's "100 Best Living Songwriters".
11 October 2006, awarded Songwriter of the Year for the second year running, for the same song "The First Cut Is the Deepest".
25 March 2007, received the German ECHO "special award for life achievements as musician and ambassador between cultures", Europe's Grammy, in Berlin
2008 Nominated for induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame
Yusuf Islam (born Steven Demetre Georgiou, 21 July 1948), best known by his former stage name Cat Stevens,  is a British musician. He is a singer-songwriter,  multi-instrumentalist, educator, philanthropist, and prominent convert  to Islam.
His albums Tea for the Tillerman and Teaser and the Firecat were both certified as Triple Platinum by the RIAA in the United States; his album Catch Bull at Four sold half a million copies in the first two weeks of release alone, and was Billboard's  number-one LP for three consecutive weeks. He has also earned two ASCAP  songwriting awards in consecutive years, for "The First Cut Is the  Deepest", which has been a hit single for four different artists.
Stevens  converted to Islam at the height of his fame in December, 1977, and  adopted his Muslim name, Yusuf Islam, the following year. In 1979, he  auctioned all his guitars away for charity and left his music career to  devote himself to educational and philanthropic causes in the Muslim  community. He has been given several awards for his work in promoting  peace in the world, including 2003's World Award, the 2004 Man for Peace  Award and the 2007 Mediterranean Prize for Peace. In 2006, he returned  to pop music, with his first album of new pop songs in 28 years,  entitled An Other Cup. He now goes by the single name Yusuf.
He currently lives with his wife and children in London, and spends part of each year in Dubai.
His newest album, Roadsinger, was released on May 5, 2009.
Early life (1948?1965)
Steven  Georgiou was the third child of a Greek-Cypriot father, Stavros  Georgiou (b. 1900) and a Swedish mother, Ingrid Wickman (b. 1915). He  has an older sister, Anita, and brother, David. The family lived above  Moulin Rouge, the restaurant that his parents operated on Shaftesbury  Avenue, a few steps from Piccadilly Circus in the Soho theatre district  of London. All family members worked in the restaurant. His parents  divorced when he was about 8 years old, but they continued to maintain  the family restaurant and live above it.
Although his father  was Greek Orthodox and his mother a Swedish Lutheran Protestant,  Georgiou was sent to a Catholic school, St. Joseph Roman Catholic  Primary School in Macklin Street, which was closer to his father's  business on Drury Lane. Georgiou developed an interest in piano at a  fairly young age, eventually using the family baby grand piano to work  out the chords, since no one else there played well enough to teach him.  With the popularity of The Beatles, at age 15, he extended his interest  to the guitar, and convinced his father to pay ?8 for his first  instrument, and began playing it and writing songs. He would escape at  times from his family responsibilities to the rooftop above their home,  and listen to the tunes of the musicals drifting from just around the  corner; from Denmark Street, which was then the centre of the British  music industry. Later, Stevens has emphasized that the advent of West Side Story in particular affected him, giving him a "different view of life", he said in 2000, on a VH1 Behind the Music  programme. With interests in both art and music, he and his mother  travelled to G?vle, Sweden, where he started developing his drawing  skills after being influenced by his uncle Hugo Wickman, a painter.
He  attended other local West End schools, where he says he was constantly  in trouble, and did poorly in everything but art. He was called "the  artist boy" and mentions that "I was beat up, but I was noticed". He  went on to take a one-year course of study at Hammersmith School of Art,  as he considered a career as a cartoonist. Though he enjoyed art (his  later record albums would feature his original artwork on his album  covers), he wanted to establish a musical career and began to perform  originally under the stage name "Steve Adams" in 1965 while at  Hammersmith. At that point, his goal was to become a songwriter. Among  the musicians who influenced him were Bob Dylan, Nina Simone, blues  artists Leadbelly and Muddy Waters, John Lennon, Biff Rose (who played  on his first album), Leo Kottke, and Paul Simon. He also wanted to  emulate composers who wrote musicals, like Ira Gershwin and Leonard  Bernstein. In 1965 he signed a publishing deal with Ardmore &  Beechwood and cut several demos, including "The First Cut Is the  Deepest".
Musical career (1966?1970)
Early musical career
Georgiou  began to perform his songs in coffee houses and pubs. At first he tried  forming a band, but soon realised he preferred performing solo.  Thinking that his given name might not be memorable to prospective fans,  he chose a stage name Cat Stevens, in part because a girlfriend  said he had eyes like a cat, but mainly because he said, "I couldn't  imagine anyone going to the record store and asking for 'that Steven  Demetre Georgiou album'. And in England, and I was sure in America, they  loved animals." In 1966, at age 18, he impressed manager/producer Mike  Hurst, formerly of British vocal group The Springfields, with his songs  and Hurst arranged for him to record a demo and then helped him get a  record deal. The first singles were hits. "I Love My Dog" charted at  #28, and "Matthew and Son", the title song from his debut album, went to  #2. "I'm Gonna Get Me a Gun" reached Britain's Top 10, and the album Matthew and Son  itself began charting. The original version of the The Tremeloes cover  hit, "Here Comes My Baby", was written and recorded by Stevens.
"The First Cut is the Deepest" (1967)
Sample of "The First Cut is the Deepest", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on New Masters.
Over  the next two years, Stevens recorded and toured with artists ranging  from Jimi Hendrix to Engelbert Humperdinck. The music business hadn't  yet begun targeting specific audiences, so he frequently toured with  what now would be considered an unusual array of celebrities. Stevens  was considered a fresh-faced teen star, placing several single releases  in the British pop music charts. Some of that success was attributed to  the pirate radio station Wonderful Radio London, which gained him fans  by playing his records. In August 1967, he went on the air with other  recording artists who had benefited from the station to mourn its  closure.
His December 1967 album New Masters failed to  chart in the United Kingdom. The album is now most notable for his song  "The First Cut Is the Deepest", a song he sold for ?30 to P.P. Arnold  that was to become a massive hit for her, and an international hit for  Keith Hampshire, Rod Stewart, James Morrison, and Sheryl Crow. Forty  years after he recorded the first demo of the song, it earned him two  back-to-back ASCAP "Songwriter of the Year" awards, in 2005 and 2006.
Tuberculosis
"Trouble" (1969-1970)
Sample of "Trouble", performed by Cat Stevens. Written between 1969-1970 during hospitalization for tuberculosis.
Stevens  was living the fast-moving life of a pop star, and in early 1968 at the  age of 19, he became very ill with tuberculosis and a collapsed lung.  Near death, at the time of his admittance to the King Edward VII  Hospital, Midhurst, he spent months recuperating in hospital and a year  of convalescence. During this time Stevens began to question aspects of  his life, and spirituality. He later said, "to go from the show business  environment and find you are in hospital, getting injections day in and  day out, and people around you are dying, it certainly changes your  perspective. I got down to thinking about myself. It seemed almost as if  I had my eyes shut."
He took up meditation, yoga, metaphysics  read about other religions, and became a vegetarian. As a result of his  serious illness and long convalescence, and as a part of his spiritual  awakening and questioning, he wrote as many as 40 songs, which were much  more introspective than his previous work. Many of those songs would  appear on his albums in years to come.
Changes in musical sound after illness
The  lack of success of Stevens' second album mirrored a difference of  personal tastes in musical direction, and a growing resentment at  producer Mike Hurst's attempts to re-create another album like that of  his debut, with heavy-handed orchestration, and over-production, rather  than the folk sound Stevens was attempting to produce. He admits having  purposefully sabotaged his own contract with Hurst, making outlandishly  expensive orchestral demands and threatening legal action, which  resulted in his goal: release from his contract with Deram Records, a  sub-label of major Decca Records. Upon regaining his health at home  after his release from the hospital, Stevens recorded some of his  newly-written songs on his tape recorder, and played his changing sound  for a few new record executives. After hiring agent Barry Krost, who had  arranged for an audition with Chris Blackwell of Island Records,  Blackwell offered him a "chance to record  whenever and with whomever he  liked, and more importantly to Cat, however he liked". With Krost's  recommendation, Stevens signed with Paul Samwell-Smith, previously the  bassist of the Yardbirds, to be his new producer.
Musical career (1970?1978)
Height of popularity
Healthy,  sporting a new beard, Stevens was armed with a catalogue of new songs  that reflected his new perspective on what he wanted to bring to the  world with his music. His previous work had sold in the United Kingdom,  but Stevens was still relatively unknown by the public across the  Atlantic. To rectify this, after signing with Island Records in 1970, an  American distribution deal was arranged with A&M Records' Jerry  Moss in North America. Stevens began work on Mona Bone Jakon, a  folk-rock based album that was quite different from his earlier "pop"  style records, drawing on his new, introspective work. Producer Paul  Samwell-Smith paired guitarist Alun Davies, who was currently working as  a session musician, with Stevens. Alun was the more experienced veteran  of two albums which already had begun to explore the emerging genres of  skiffle and folk rock music. Davies was also thought a perfect fit in  particular for his "fingerwork" on the guitar, harmonizing and  contributing backing vocals with Stevens. They originally met just to  record Mona Bone Jakon, but developed a fast friendship; Davies,  like Stevens, was a perfectionist, appearing after all the sound checks  had been completed, just to be sure that all the equipment and sound  were prepared for each concert. He recorded on all but two of the  succeeding pop music albums Stevens released, and continued performing  and recording with him until Stevens' retirement. The two remained  friends, however, and years later, when Stevens re-emerged as Yusuf  Islam after 27 years, Davies appeared again performing at his side, and  has remained there.
"Wild World" (1971)
Sample of "Wild World", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on Tea for the Tillerman.
The first single released from Mona Bone Jakon  was "Lady D'Arbanville", which Stevens wrote about his young American  girlfriend Patti D'Arbanville. The record, with a madrigal sound unlike  most music played on pop radio, with sounds of djembes and bass in  addition to Stevens' and Davies' guitars, soared to #8 in the UK. It was  the first of his hits to get real airplay in the United States. Other  songs written for her included "Maybe You're Right", and "Just Another  Night". In addition, the song, "Pop Star", about his experience as a  teen star, and "Katmandu", featuring Genesis frontman Peter Gabriel  playing flute, were featured. Mona Bone Jakon was an early example of the solo singer-songwriter album format that was becoming popular for other artists as well.
Mona Bone Jakon was the precursor for Stevens' international breakthrough album, Tea for the Tillerman, which became a top-10 Billboard  hit. Within 6 months of its release, it had sold over 500,000 copies,  reaching gold record status in the United States and in Britain. The  combination of Stevens' new folk-rock style and accessible lyrics which  spoke of everyday situations and problems, mixed with the beginning of  spiritual questions about life, would remain in his music from then on.  The album features the top 20 single "Wild World"; a parting song after  D'Arbanville moved on. "Wild World" has been credited as the song that  gave Tea for the Tillerman 'enough kick' to get it played on FM  radio; and the head of Island Records, Chris Blackwell, was quoted as  calling it "the best album we?ve ever released". Other album cuts  include "Hard-Headed Woman", and "Father and Son", a song sung both in  baritone and tenor, about the struggle between fathers and their sons  who are faced with their own personal choices in life. In 2001, this  album was certified by the RIAA as a Multi-Platinum record, having sold 3  million copies in the United States at that time. It is ranked at #206  in Rolling Stone Magazine's 2003 list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time".
"Father and Son" (1970)
Sample of "Father and Son", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on Tea for the Tillerman.
After the end of his relationship with D'Arbanville, Stevens noted the effect it had on writing his music, saying,
"Everything  I wrote while I was away was in a transitional period and reflects  that. Like Patti. A year ago we split; I had been with her for two  years. What I write about Patti and my family... when I sing the songs  now, I learn strange things. I learn the meanings of my songs late..."
Stevens  later was romantically linked to popular singer Carly Simon while both  were produced by Samwell-Smith. Stevens and Simon had a love affair from  1971 to 1972, during which time both wrote songs for and about one  another. Simon wrote and recorded at least two top 50 songs, "Legend in  Your Own Time" and "Anticipation" about Stevens. He reciprocated in his  song to her, after their romance, entitled, "Sweet Scarlet".
"Peace Train" (1976)
Sample of "Peace Train", performed by Cat Stevens live on the "Earth Tour".
Having established a signature sound, Stevens enjoyed a string of successes over the following years. 1971's Teaser and the Firecat  album reached number two and achieved gold record status within three  weeks of its release in the United States. It yielded several hits,  including "Peace Train", "Morning Has Broken" (a Christian hymn with  lyrics by Eleanor Farjeon), and "Moon Shadow". This album was also  certified by the RIAA as a Multi-Platinum record in 2001, with over  three million US sales through that time. When interviewed on a Boston  radio station, Stevens said about Teaser and the Firecat:
"I  get the tune and then I just keep on singing the tune until the words  come out from the tune. It's kind of a hypnotic state that you reach  after a while when you keep on playing it where words just evolve from  it. So you take those words and just let them go whichever way they  want... 'Moonshadow'? Funny, that was in Spain, I went there alone,  completely alone, to get away from a few things. And I was dancin' on  the rocks there... right on the rocks where the waves were, like,  blowin' and splashin'. Really, it was so fantastic. And the moon was  bright, ya know, and I started dancin' and singin' and I sang that song  and it stayed. It's just the kind of moment that you want to find when  you're writin' songs."
His next album, Catch Bull at Four,  released in 1972, was his most rapidly successful album in the United  States, reaching gold record status in 15 days, and holding the  number-one position on the Billboard charts for three weeks. This  album continued the introspective and spiritual lyrics that he was  known for, combined with a rougher-edged voice and a less acoustic sound  than his previous records, utilizing synthesizers and other  instruments. Although the sales of the album indicated Stevens'  popularity, the album did not produce any real hits, with the exception  of the single "Sitting", which charted at #16. Catch Bull at Four was Platinum certified in 2001.
Exploration with movie soundtracks
In July 1970, Stevens recorded one of his songs, "But I Might Die Tonight", for the Jerzy Skolimowski film Deep End, which featured Jane Asher.
In 1971, Stevens provided nine songs to the soundtrack of the film Harold and Maude.  Two of the songs, "Don't Be Shy" and "If You Want to Sing Out, Sing  Out", were not featured on any album until their inclusion on a second  "greatest hits" collection: Footsteps in the Dark: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2, in 1984. Harold and Maude,  a black comedy starring Ruth Gordon and Bud Cort, became a popular cult  movie celebrating the free spirit, and brought Stevens' music to a  wider audience, continuing to do so long after he stopped recording in  the late 1970s. Among other songs included were "Where Do the Children  Play?", "Trouble", and "I Think I See the Light".
After his  religious conversion in the late 1970s, Stevens stopped granting  permission for his songs to be used in films. Eventually, however,  almost twenty years later, in 1997, the movie Rushmore was  allowed to use his songs "Here Comes My Baby" and "The Wind", showing a  new willingness on his part to release his music from his Western "pop  star" days. This was followed in 2000 by the inclusion of "Peace Train"  in the movie Remember the Titans, in 2000 by Cameron Crowe's use in Almost Famous  of the song "The Wind". and in 2006 the inclusion of "Peace Train" on  the soundtrack to 'We Are Marshall' ".. In 2007, an excerpt of "If You  Want To Sing Out, Sing Out" is sung by characters in Charlie Bartlett as an apparent reference to Harold and Maude:; the character of Charlie bares a considerable resemblence to the character of Harold.
Later Cat Stevens recordings
Subsequent  releases in the 1970s also did well on the charts and in ongoing sales,  although they did not touch the success he had from 1970 to 1973. In  1973, Stevens moved to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to avoid taxation from  the United Kingdom.
"Later" (1973)
Sample of "Later", performed by Cat Stevens. Appears on Foreigner.
During that time he created the album Foreigner,  an album which was a departure from the music that had brought him to  the height of his fame. It differed in several respects: entirely  written by Stevens, he dropped his band and produced the record without  the assistance of Samwell-Smith, who had played a large role in  catapulting him to fame, and instead of guitar, he played keyboards  throughout the album. It was intended to show the funk/soul element that  he had come to appreciate. One side of Foreigner was continuous,  much different than the radio friendly pop tunes fans had come to  expect. He performed the album on an uninterrupted ABC network  television broadcast titled the "Moon and Star" concert. The album  produced a couple of singles including "The Hurt", but did not reach the  heights he had once enjoyed.
The follow-up to Foreigner was Buddha and the Chocolate Box, largely a return to the instrumentation and styles employed in Teaser and the Firecat and Tea for the Tillerman. Featuring the return of Alun Davies and best known for "Oh Very Young", Buddha and the Chocolate Box reached platinum status in 2001. However, Stevens' next album was the concept album Numbers, a less successful departure for him.
The 1977 Izitso  included his last chart hit, "(Remember the Days of the) Old  Schoolyard", a duet with fellow UK singer Elkie Brooks. Linda Lewis  appears in the song's video, with Cat Stevens singing to her, as they  play former schoolmates, singing to each other on a schoolyard  "merry-go-round". This is one of few videos that Stevens made, other  than simple videos of concert performances.
His final original album under the name Cat Stevens was Back to Earth,  released in late 1978, which was also the first album produced by  Samwell-Smith since his peak in single album sales in the early 1970s.
Several  compilation albums were released before and after he stopped recording.  After Stevens left Decca Records they bundled his first two albums  together on their label as a set, hoping to ride the commercial tide of  his early success; later his newer labels did the same, and he himself  released compilations. The most successful of the compilation albums was  the 1975 Greatest Hits which has sold over 4 million copies in  the United States. In May 2003 he received his first Platinum Europe  Award from the IFPI for Remember Cat Stevens, The Ultimate Collection, indicating over one million European sales.
Religious conversion
Yusuf in 2008
While  vacationing in Marrakech, Morocco, Stevens was intrigued by the sound  of the A?h?n, the Islamic ritual call to prayer, which was explained to  him as "music for God". Stevens said, "I thought, music for God? I?d  never heard that before ? I?d heard of music for money, music for fame,  music for personal power, but music for God!" 
In 1976 Stevens  nearly drowned off the coast of Malibu, California and claims to have  shouted: ?Oh God! If you save me I will work for you.? He says that  right afterward a wave appeared and carried him back to shore. This  brush with mortality intensified his long-held quest for spiritual  truth. He had looked into "Buddhism, Zen, I Ching, Numerology, tarot  cards and Astrology". Stevens' brother David Gordon brought him a copy  of the Qur'an as a birthday gift from a trip to Jerusalem. Stevens took  to it right away, and began to find peace with himself and began his  transition to Islam.
During the time he was studying the  Qur'an, he began to identify more and more with the name of Joseph, a  man bought and sold in the market place, which is how he says he had  increasingly felt within the music business. Regarding his conversion,  in his 2006 interview with Alan Yentob, he stated, "to some people, it  may have seemed like an enormous jump, but for me, it was a gradual move  to this." And, in a Rolling Stone Magazine interview, he  reaffirmed this, saying, "I had found the spiritual home I'd been  seeking for most of my life. And if you listen to my music and lyrics,  like "Peace Train" and "On The Road To Find Out", it clearly shows my  yearning for direction and the spiritual path I was travelling." Stevens  had been seeking inner peace and spiritual answers throughout his  career, and now believed he had found what he had been seeking.
Stevens  formally converted to the Islamic religion on , taking the name Yusuf  Islam in 1978. Yusuf is the Arabic rendition of the name Joseph. He  stated that he "always loved the name Joseph" and was particularly drawn  to the story of Joseph in the Qur'an. Although he discontinued his pop  career, he was persuaded to perform one last time before what would  become his twenty-five year musical hiatus. Appearing with his hair  freshly shorn and an untrimmed beard, he headlined a charity concert on  22 November 1979 in Wembley Stadium to benefit UNICEF's International  Year of the Child. The concert closed with a performance by Stevens,  David Essex, Alun Davies, and Stevens's brother, David, who wrote the  song that was the finale, "Child for a Day".
Yusuf married  Fauzia Mubarak Ali on 7 September, 1979, at Regent's Park Mosque in  London. It was the 1,000th such ceremony to take place at the mosque.  They have five children.
Life as Yusuf Islam (1978?present)
Muslim faith and musical career
7:40 PM
Ilham
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