Rod Stewart is 80.
When Sir Rod Stewart left the Small Faces many moons ago, flares were just a fashion concept and glam rock was about to explode onto the pop music consciousness. Most of us though assumed that life would never be the same for the then Rod Stewart. Would Stewart be able to rock on his own? Nobody knew though, that today he would still be entertaining the global public, his devoted fans still packing the open air stadiums, the big concert venues and embracing TV celebrity.
Today, Celtic and Scotland's most famous supporter will be celebrating his 80th birthday and he still performs with all the uninhibited exuberance of a teenager swinging his microphone around a stage as if he'd just passed his driving test or added yet another girlfriend to his growing number of admirers. The long hair and leopard print shirt and trousers may have gone but the love of showbusiness and music may never fade. Rod or Sir Rod Stewart has still, undoubtedly got it and isn't afraid to flaunt it.
There must have been a time during the last decade or two when Stewart would have been forgiven for slowing down, for taking time out from his busy, punishing schedule and just chilling out. But not Sir Rodney, certainly not. It takes a lot to hold back this irresistible force of nature, since the man defies description. The energy is boundless, the desire to please has never been doubted and there is a frightening commitment to give his best every time he bounds onto the centre of a stage, body and soul in perfect harmony.
Just a couple of Christmases ago, Stewart suddenly arrived at St Pancras station with a whole entourage of musicians including a superb set of trumpeters and a small female trio as backing group. We were simply stunned and surprised since none of us had seen anything like it before. Then, Stewart grabbed his microphone and was accompanied by the ever stylish Jools Holland on piano. The rest is etched into music folklore. Both Stewart and Holland launched into a smooth old American songbook ballad and now the secret was out.
At the beginning of last year Stewart and Holland collaborated brilliantly on an album which included many of the songs that Rod Stewart's father had sung and then collected the album from which those great lyrics had been written. It was now that both of these consummate musicians declared a passion for model railways and now we were lost for words, an accusation that could never have been levelled at both men.
Throughout his colourful career and private life, Rod Stewart has always been at the heart of music's evolution from the hippiedom of the 1960s, through the commercial fame and fortune of the 1970s, well into the the prolific 1980's and 90s when music just became a toy and vehicle for even greater expression. There was always a vaudeville impudence and jack the lad outrageousness about Stewart that has never left him. Stewart has always delivered with a straightforward sincerity. There are no airs or graces about Stewart, just a powerhouse vitality that threatens the longevity of Sir Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones.
His back catalogue with his old mucker Ronnie Wood and the Faces now seems just a yellowing page from history. But when Sir Rod went solo during the 1970s, it was privately feared that few would take to the gravelly voice that sounded as though it had been rubbed down with sandpaper. Those croaky tonsils and growling delivery was unmistakable. And then in the early 1970s, there came the memorable Maggie May, a song so heartfelt, personal, poignant but full bloodedly rocky that you could tell that Stewart meant it from the heart.
Then in the mid 1970s there was the single that came to define and guarantee him Hall of Fame immortality. From the iconic album Atlantic Crossing which sold in phenomenal millions, there emerged the classical 'Sailing'. For what seemed the whole summer of 1975, 'Sailing' just dominated the number one spot in the BBC pop charts. Once again, Rod Stewart had nailed national popularity across the whole of Britain. 'Sailing' was emotional, lyrical, beautifully crafted and polished, another ballad that had a lovely, lilting feel that could never be forgotten. It was a record that would become a compulsive listen at any party, wedding or barmitzvah.
The First Cut is the Deepest, Do You Think I'm Sexy, This Old Heart of Mine and countless other gorgeous standards continued to sell in prodigious quantities. The 1990s marked a less consistent presence in the music charts. But Rod Stewart keeps coming back and showboating. He keeps announcing and promoting himself as a performer and remains peerless as one of Britain's finest all rounders.
At his palatial home in Chigwell, Essex, Stewart remains mine host at a giant five a side football pitch. Here some of Sir Rod's closest friends and celebrity acquaintances lark around joyously as if Celtic were locked in a permanent match with Rangers. Last year, Stewart led the campaign to get rid of the pot holes that were suddenly appearing in his local roads. It was somehow typical of a man who has never shirked controversy when necessary. He is now happily married to former policewoman Penny Lancaster and is surrounded by doting children and grandchildren. We love Sir Rod Stewart because he's never pretended to be anything other than Sir Rod Stewart. Happy Birthday Sir Rod.