The Rod Stewart Plan
Rod Stewart has been sliding across the country, well greased by PR men and Lancers, getting a lot of good press. I can understand it, he’s English-charming, gives a good interview, has a good album, is joining the Small Faces, the underground journalist’s favorite English band.
The Rod Stewart Plan
Rod Stewart has been sliding across the country, well greased by PR men and Lancers, getting a lot of good press. I can understand it, he’s English-charming, gives a good interview, has a good album, is joining the Small Faces, the underground journalist’s favorite English band.
The temptation to refer to him as the English Npil Young is almost overwhelming. His roots are deep in the English folk scene (without knowing, doesn’t Young strike you as an ex-folkie?), and now, here he is doing solo albums as well as pickin’ and singin’ with the Small Faces, a band which somehow reminds me of both the Springfield and CSN (I know, the element of circularity is missing, but then, you can’t have everything).