Rod Stewart - rock star.....and model railroader?

Danny Tse
Danny Tse Posts: 5,206
edited April 2011 in The Clubhouse
Post edited by Danny Tse on

Comments

  • dorokusai
    dorokusai Posts: 25,577
    edited November 2007
    If I was rich, I would collect cookie jars.
    CTC BBQ Amplifier, Sonic Frontiers Line3 Pre-Amplifier and Wadia 581 SACD player. Speakers? Always changing but for now, Mission Argonauts I picked up for $50 bucks, mint.
  • heiney9
    heiney9 Posts: 25,165
    edited November 2007
    dorokusai wrote: »
    If I was rich, I would collect cookie jars.

    I would just collect the lids....................and make a lot of people angry to have a cookie jar with out a lid.

    H9
    "Appreciation of audio is a completely subjective human experience. Measurements can provide a measure of insight, but are no substitute for human judgment. Why are we looking to reduce a subjective experience to objective criteria anyway? The subtleties of music and audio reproduction are for those who appreciate it. Differentiation by numbers is for those who do not".--Nelson Pass Pass Labs XA25 | EE Avant Pre | EE Mini Max Supreme DAC | MIT Shotgun S1 | Pangea AC14SE MKII | Legend L600 | BlueSound Node 3 - Tubes add soul!
  • reeltrouble1
    reeltrouble1 Posts: 9,312
    edited November 2007
    horns you say???? see link.

    http://www.trains.com/TRC/CS/forums/1255418/ShowPost.aspx


    They have 44,000 members in their forum, I am going to recommend Avantgarde if they need to couple horns to their train rigs............of course they need better power cords for their transformers, I know I can make the trains sound better. Also, like cables track matters.........

    Good on Rod......rich bastage, model trains, models with legs and a nice caboose.....I recall he has some hot new girlfriend as well.

    RT1
  • Danny Tse
    Danny Tse Posts: 5,206
    edited April 2011
    From Reuters....

    Even when getting a songwriting award from ASCAP, Rod still gushes about his model trains....
    (Reuters) – Rod Stewart would rather play with his toy trains than write a hit song, but his domestic distractions did not prevent him from getting a top songwriters' award in Hollywood on Wednesday.

    The 66-year-old rocker received the Founders Award for lifetime achievement at an annual dinner organized by ASCAP, a firm that collects royalties for songwriters whenever their compositions are played in public.

    Stewart attended the event, towered over by his wife, Penny Lancaster, and accompanied by five of his eight children. He has not written a hit song since "Forever Young" in 1988, and the seven albums he has released since 2001 have been covers of other peoples' songs.

    He is perhaps better known as an interpreter of material written by renowned musicians such as Tim Hardin ("Reason to Believe"), Cat Stevens ("The First Cut is the Deepest"), Tom Waits ("Downtown Train") and Van Morrison ("Have I Told You Lately").

    "I never saw myself as songwriter," Stewart confessed in an interview with Reuters. "Then I look back on the catalog and there's been some big songs. It was always a struggle for me, writing songs, almost like being at school."

    After his turn in the late 1960s with the Jeff Beck Group, which established him as one of England's premier R&B singers, Stewart enjoyed solo success with such songs as "Maggie May" and "You Wear It Well" (both written with Martin Quittenton) and "Every Picture Tells a Story" (written with Faces bandmate and future Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood).

    During the awards ceremony, Stewart recalled that his first songwriting attempt with Wood was a dismal failure, with Wood's mother noticing their blank writing pads and remarking, "I don't think the Beatles have got anything to worry about."

    Stewart went on to write or co-write such big '70s hits as "Tonight's the Night," "You're in My Heart," "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy" and "Young Turks." He said he was proudest of his **** rights-themed ballad "The Killing of Georgie," a bold declaration in 1976.

    But his albums during the 1980s and 1990s were largely desultory affairs, and he spent less time writing his own songs even while remaining a popular touring act.

    Stewart enjoyed a career renaissance in the new century with his "Songbook" series of albums paying homage to such songwriters as Irving Berlin and George and Ira Gershwin.

    Stewart is currently working on a blues album with Jeff Beck, covering such tunes as Muddy Waters' "Rollin' and Tumblin'" as well as a few curveballs.
    He said the ASCAP honor will "maybe give me a push up the bum to start writing again."

    On the other hand, it's not easy being a songwriter when he is savoring his gilded family life in Beverly Hills. His top priority when he awakened earlier in the day?

    "I couldn't wait to get up and work on my model railway," he said with a boisterous laugh.
  • mhardy6647
    mhardy6647 Posts: 33,766
    edited April 2011
    Joe Walsh is a fairly avid ham (the amateur radio variety)
    Bruce Dickinson has a commercial pilot's license
    Brian May finally earned his PhD in astrophysics

    Some of these rock 'n' roll guys have actual lives (or at least hobbies), too :-)
  • [Deleted User]
    [Deleted User] Posts: 1,225
    edited April 2011
    mhardy6647 wrote: »
    Bruce Dickinson has a commercial pilot's license

    Is that so he can fly from place to place in search of more cowbell ? :biggrin:
  • sda2mike
    sda2mike Posts: 3,131
    edited April 2011
    nap wrote: »
    Is that so he can fly from place to place in search of more cowbell ? :biggrin:

    i think he actually flew or flys for an airline in europe
  • mhardy6647
    mhardy6647 Posts: 33,766
    edited April 2011
    sda2mike wrote: »
    i think he actually flew or flys for an airline in europe

    That is correct. Take a look at his Wikipedia entry for much more info on his avocation :-)
  • [Deleted User]
    [Deleted User] Posts: 1,225
    edited April 2011
    sda2mike wrote: »
    i think he actually flew or flys for an airline in europe

    Just a joke. I hope it didn't "fly" over your head. :biggrin: