Skip to content

At the London Palladium

Two poets took the stage at the London Palladium this week. The first, Patti Smith, was celebrating the 50th anniversary of the release of the epochal album Horses by playing it all the way through with a band including two of her original confrères. The second, Al Stewart, had made it part of his farewell tour, and thus his final appearance in the city where he once shared a flat with the young Paul Simon and had a residency at Bunjie’s, a folk club a shortish walk across Soho from where he was saying his goodbyes.

Smith is 78. Stewart is 80. Horses came out in 1975, the year before Stewart enjoyed his biggest hit with the title track from Year of the Cat. Both drew full houses — Smith on two nights running — and performed with a vigour that reanimated the work of their youth.

We know Smith as a poet who rammed literary and musical forms together to great and lasting effect. Stewart’s success in turning big subjects — the Basque separatist movement, the French Revolution, Operation Barbarossa — into long narrative folk-rock songs reflected a creative use of the early impact of Bob Dylan on his songwriting. But where the enduring glamour of the New York era of CBGB and Max’s Kansas City ensures Smith’s continuing credibility, Stewart’s soft-rock associations have probably restricted his following to his original audience. There was no measurable difference in the enthusiasm that greeted both artists on a celebrated stage.

If the guitarist Lenny Kaye and the drummer Jay Dee Daugherty provided valued historical support for Horses, assisted by Jackson Smith and Tony Shanahan on keyboard and bass guitar, Stewart (and his four-piece band from Chicago, the Empty Pockets, plus the saxophonist/flautist Chase Huna) benefited from the guest presence of his old collaborator Peter White, who added beautiful guitar decoration to “Time Passages”, which he co-wrote, and “On the Border”, and remodelled the rhapsodic piano introduction — including “As Time Goes By” — to “Year of the Cat”.

To be honest, I hadn’t listened to Stewart for decades before last night. I bought the tickets as a treat for my wife, who knew him a little in Bristol folk scene of the late ’60s and remembers once giving him a lift to London. But as thrilled as I was to hear Smith declaiming “Redondo Beach” and “Birdland”, I was just as beguiled by Stewart’s “The Road to Moscow” and “The Dark and the Rolling Sea”.

Today Smith, of course, looks even more like a poet than she did in 1975. Stewart, who lives in Arizona, now resembles someone who might be the secretary of the local bridge club. Good on both of them.

7 Comments Post a comment
  1. Martin Archer's avatar
    Martin Archer #

    You’ve certainly made me wish to revisit my old Stewart records Richard!

    October 16, 2025
  2. twm909's avatar
    twm909 #

    On 3 November 1965, I went to the Marquee Club, even closer to the Palladium than Bunjie’s. It was a folk night. I think The Settlers may have been the main act but a few other performers dropped by and sang a song or two.

    One of those was Al Stewart and he sang “Desolation Row”, introducing it as a new song off Dylan’s latest album, which had only recently been released in Britain.

    October 16, 2025
  3. Peter Brown's avatar
    Peter Brown #

    Al was a lovely guy. At Bunjies he sang The Sounds of Silence, as it was then called, and taught me the words, which I wrote down during the break. Paul had just written it. Al must have been 20. I was 17. Great days.

    October 16, 2025
  4. michaengelbrecht's avatar
    michaengelbrecht #

    I belong to those who had bought „Year of the Cat“ when it was released, and the stayed with me, more like a wonderful memory than on high rotation. But in that summer in the mid 70‘s it was one of the records that made life a happier place – smart long songs, fine lyrics, a romanticism that never failed. And they still have an impact today, i am just listening… let‘s call it timeless music from an old, long gone campfire!

    October 20, 2025
  5. Paul Gannon's avatar
    Paul Gannon #

    It’s great to read that Al still has the power to beguile a discerning waverer after all these years. He’s a grandmaster of his craft and Al’s Army feel privileged to have had his remarkable catalogue as the musical backdrop to their lives over the decades.

    October 21, 2025
  6. Arne Schumacher's avatar
    Arne Schumacher #

    Dear Richard,

    Thanks again for another exceptional piece, entwining a Patti Smith and an Al Stewart concert experience in your very own personal way.

    I’m continuously amazed how close our feelings about a lot of music out there are, from your comments on recent Jazz albums and the world of Improvised Music to, well, Al Stewart, Paul Brady (!), tasteful jazzy Steely Dan cover versions or Laura Nyro. I actually learned to love Stewarts songcraft and voice with some of the albums that preceded this “Cat”-success. I stayed with him a bit beyond the still great sounding “Time Passages”. And recently returned for longer moment when i came across a TV concert production (Bremen, Germany) from his “big” years.

    Also: thank you so much for sharing your very personal experiences regarding your recent health issues. As frightening that definitely has been (and probably still follows you a bit as you’re getting used to the new “support”) there’s a lot of hope and so much humble respect in what you’re writing – and some humour, too, as difficult as it was. Something, I feel, we all should try to include in our view on life.

    I suppose you won’t be at Jazzfest Berlin this time? Anyway – looking forward to more writings about whatever!

    All the best,

    Arne, Bremen, Germany

    October 26, 2025
    • Richard Williams's avatar

      Dear Arne — Great to hear from you, and thanks for your kind thoughts. I have very happy memories of our many conversations over the years in Berlin; it was always clear that we shared many views about music, and I valued our collaboration. I’m afraid I won’t be at this year’s festival. Too much work! Maybe next time. Meanwhile I hope all is well with you. Best regards, as ever — Richard.

      October 27, 2025

Leave a reply to Martin Archer Cancel reply