His best album since Every PictureTells A Story, this brought together sympathetic production by Tom Dowd and many of Stewart's finest songs of the '70s--including...
more >
After bouncing back to life with Atlantic Crossing, Rod Stewart crafted his most self-consciously ambitious record with A Night on the Town. The centerpiece of the album,...
more >
Stewart's first album on Warner Brothers was a significant step upward from the two Mercury albums which preceded it. Great interpretive covers abound, including Stewart's...
more >
Atlantic Crossing wasn't simply the moment when Rod Stewart left Britain for the greener pasture of America, it was the moment when he accepted his role as a full-fledged,...
more >
A very fun album, this sets the tone via its initial single "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy"--which, though it was occasionally taken the wrong way by some fans and critics, is one of...
more >
In its simplest terms, Blondes Have More Fun is Rod Stewart's disco album, filled with pulsating rhythms and slick, synthesized textures. It's also his trashiest, most...
more >
Like its sister, Best of Rod Stewart, Vol. 2 was also expanded in 1998 to include several bonus tracks -- it now weighs in at a hefty 19 tracks. The biggest hits were put on...
more >
Now that Stewart's used up his supply of Motown and old R&B hits, he's beginning to cover songs that sound much fresher. Among them: "Some Guys Have All The Luck" and "Can...
more >
Even though it has a couple of flaws -- particularly the appearance of "Maggie May," which doesn't quite fit in with the rest of the material -- Greatest Hits is an...
more >
Stewart emerged big-time on international levels with this set--not least because of the inclusion of ultrahit "Maggie May," but also because of its memorable title track. A...
more >
Without greatly altering his approach, Rod Stewart perfected his blend of hard rock, folk, and blues on his masterpiece, Every Picture Tells a Story. Marginally a...
more >
Most critics' favorite early Stewart album, this is a masterwork of taste and style. It's only failing may be an over-reliance on cover material--which in this case includes...
more >
Gasoline Alley follows the same formula of Rod Stewart's first album, intercutting contemporary covers with slightly older rock & roll and folk classics and originals...
more >
Out Of Order 1/1/1988, Yahoo! Music, Dave DiMartino
Includes "Forever Young," "Try A Little Tenderness," and "Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out." Now cynics could feasibly ask: OK, what's the dif between this guy and,...
more >
With the support of Power Station guitarist Andy Taylor and drummer Bernard Edwards, Rod Stewart rebounds from his previous career nadir of "Love Touch" with Out of Order....
more >
Originally released in the '70s, Mercury's The Best of Rod Stewart was expanded to a generous 18 tracks in 1998. Many of those added tracks were not proper hits -- they were...
more >
If there was a point when it started becoming difficult to enjoy Stewart in his full-on party mode, it's right here, via "Hot Legs"--which translates great when it's...
more >
Often the least-praised of Stewart's initial albums, in fact there's more substance here--in terms of quality songs and musical arrangements--than you'd likely believe. A...
more >
On his debut album (titled An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down in Britain, and The Rod Stewart Album in America, presumably because its original title was "too English"...
more >
A two-disc anthology of Rod Stewart's early Mercury recordings, which, in conjunction with the albums he recorded with the Faces, are inarguably his finest (nothing from the...
more >
A good, solid album for Stewart in the '90s, this includes a cover of Van Morrison's "Have I Told You Lately." Guest stars? How about Tina Turner and the...
more >
Rod Stewart continued to regain his strength with Vagabond Heart, the follow-up to his comeback album, Out of Order. Vagabond Heart is a stronger, more diverse album than...
more >
Sadly a poor choice of titles, this follow-up to Every PictureTells A Story seemed too much like a re-run to spark much enthusiasm upon its release. Much of what's here is...
more >
Essentially a harder-rocking reprise of Every Picture Tells a Story, Never a Dull Moment never quite reaches the heights of its predecessor, but it's a wonderful,...
more >
Stewart's tremendous live tours were draining much of the creativity out of his records. This covers-filled set is ultimately highlighted by the inclusion of single "Young...
more >
Though it lacks a truly great selection of songs, Tonight I'm Yours is a fine latter-day effort from Rod Stewart, and one of the last records that makes Rod sound like he's...
more >
Not bad, but not very good either. Stewart's skill as a songwriter keeps getting overshadowed here by a wealth of covers--in this case including "You Send Me," "Sweet Little...
more >
Stewart's best album of the '90s was everything his most recent work hasn't been: quiet, tasteful, and non-formulaic. A great look backward at Stewart's distinguished past,...
more >
The inherent problem with Rod Stewart's Unplugged album is that it seems like a supremely calculated attempt to revive his career exactly as Eric Clapton did. Stewart...
more >
Rod Stewart's always been way ahead of the pundits who said he threw away a promising R&B career for the supposed excesses of "Hot Legs" and "Do Ya Think...
more >
When We Were the New Boys finds Rod Stewart tackling the music of his Brit-pop offspring and coming to terms with his pub rock roots. It's a bit of a risky move, since he...
more >
The release of the three CD/CD-Rom box set Rod Stewart 1964-69) obviated the need for any further compilations of the erstwhile Mod's pre-fame and fortune recordings, but of...
more >
Downtown Train (Selections from the Storyteller Anthology) is a 12-track distillation of Rod Stewart's four-disc box set, but instead of containing early hits, it...
more >
In some ways, 1973 was a little early for Rod Stewart to release a greatest-hits album, since he had only released four albums to that point. Nevertheless, Sing It Again Rod...
more >
Taking its cue from Madonna's ballad collection Something to Remember, Rod Stewart's If We Fall In Love Tonight combines several of his biggest ballads with three new songs....
more >
Storyteller: The Complete Anthology is a flawed but effective four-disc box set covering Rod Stewart's entire career. Although most of Stewart's biggest hits and best-known...
more >
This double CD purports to assemble "every Rod Stewart recording from the '60s with the exception of his own work with the Jeff Beck Group." It doesn't seem 100 percent...
more >
Mercury/Polygram began recycling their Rod Stewart recordings almost immediately after he left the label for Warner. Rebound's The Ballad Album and its companion, The Rock...
more >
Mercury/Polygram began recycling their Rod Stewart recordings almost immediately after he left the label for Warner. Rebound's The Rock Album and its companion, The Ballad...
more >
Rod Stewart's volume of 20th Century Masters is heavy on hits, and the songs that aren't hits are staples of Stewart's classic early-'70s repertoire. It is true that not...
more >
Rhino's 2001 collection The Very Best of Rod Stewart aims to be comprehensive. Rhino has open access to the Warner vaults, and Stewart had many, many hits for the label --...
more >
There's a reason why music critics should never suggest that a certain singer would sound good singing the phone book. Eventually some smart-ass is going to try. Until then,...
more >
It's the kind of concept that seems brilliant on paper: revive the career of one of the great vocalists of the rock era by having him sing the great American pop songs of...
more >
In 2003, WSM followed up its imperfect but adequate 2001 collection The Very Best of Rod Stewart with Encore: The Very Best Of, Vol. 2, an 18-track compilation that gathers...
more >