Introduction
ROD STEWART’S STRANGEST COMEBACK — THE ROCK LEGEND, THE MODEL TRAINS, AND THE SWING ALBUM NO ONE SAW COMING

For more than six decades, Rod Stewart has been one of music’s most unmistakable figures. The hair, the rasp, the swagger, and the songs all became part of a legend that refused to fade. From “Maggie May” to stadium-sized anthems, he built a career on energy, character, and a voice that sounded as if it had lived every word before singing it. Yet in his later years, Stewart has revealed another side of himself—one that is quieter, more curious, and unexpectedly charming.
That side came into full view when Rod Stewart joined forces with Jools Holland, the celebrated bandleader and fellow model train enthusiast, for a project rooted not in rock spectacle, but in the timeless swing and jazz standards of the 1930s and 1940s. On paper, the pairing may have seemed surprising. One was a rock legend known for packed arenas and raspy vocal fire. The other was a master of big-band tradition, piano rhythm, and classic musical elegance. But beneath the surface, the two men shared more than musical curiosity. They shared a deep affection for craftsmanship, history, and the simple joy of building something with care.
Their friendship began not with a discussion about charts, singles, or record sales, but with trains. That detail says a great deal about Rod Stewart at this stage of his life. Behind the famous voice and rock star image stands a man who has spent years patiently building elaborate model railways, constructing miniature cities, stations, and landscapes with the same devotion another artist might give to a symphony. For longtime fans, it is a delightful contrast. The man who once seemed to belong only to the roar of the stage also finds happiness in quiet rooms, tiny buildings, and carefully arranged tracks.

That unexpected passion makes his collaboration with Jools Holland feel more personal than a standard late-career album. Their shared love of model railroads gave them common ground before the music even began. They could talk about layouts, stations, scale, and construction before turning to melodies, arrangements, and vocals. In a world where celebrity collaborations are often designed for publicity, this one feels refreshingly human. Two older masters found joy in a shared hobby, then discovered that their musical instincts also ran along the same track.
The album’s focus on swing-era jazz classics also reveals something important about Stewart’s artistry. Although he became famous as a rock singer, his roots have always reached deeper than one genre. His voice was shaped by rhythm and blues, soul, folk, and early rock and roll. He has often spoken with admiration for singers like Sam Cooke, whose emotional honesty and phrasing left a lasting mark on him. Stewart’s famous rasp was not manufactured for image. It became his signature because it sounded unlike anyone else. It gave him identity.
That identity was not immediately welcomed. Early in his career, record companies did not always know what to do with him. He did not fit the clean, polished image many labels preferred. His hair, his nose, his rough-edged sound, and his unusual presence made him stand apart. Yet what once seemed like a disadvantage became his greatest strength. Rod Stewart did not look or sound like everyone else, and that is precisely why audiences remembered him.
Now, decades later, the same voice that once powered rock hits is being used to explore songs from another era. That is not a retreat from rock. It is an expansion of a life in music. Stewart understands that swing, early rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and classic popular song are all connected by feeling, rhythm, and storytelling. When he and Jools Holland approach these older songs, they are not treating them as museum pieces. They are bringing them back to life with humor, warmth, and respect.
There is also something deeply reassuring about Stewart’s refusal to slow down. At an age when many artists might step quietly away from the stage, he continues to perform, record, and explore new ideas. He has sold more than 120 million records, earned a place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and received honors that confirm his status as one of Britain’s most enduring musical figures. Yet he still speaks about performing as something addictive in the best sense—a joy, a calling, and a privilege.
At the same time, the older Rod Stewart is not the same man the public met in the 1970s. Life has softened some edges without erasing his spirit. He is a husband, a father, a collector, a football lover, and a man who now lives with a clearer sense of what matters. His English country estate, his family life, his cherished cars, and his model trains all point to a man who has found pleasure not only in applause, but in continuity and home.
That is why this chapter of his career feels so compelling. It is not simply about an album. It is about a legend still curious enough to try something different. It is about two friends turning a shared passion into a musical adventure. It is about the surprising tenderness behind a public image built on flash and confidence.
For older listeners, this story carries a special charm. It reminds us that creativity does not have to fade with age. It can change shape. It can deepen. It can return to the songs of earlier generations and make them feel alive again. Rod Stewart may still carry the look and voice that made him famous, but his latest journey with Jools Holland shows a richer portrait: the rocker, the craftsman, the family man, the collector, and the singer still chasing the next joyful sound.
In the end, perhaps that is the real magic of Rod Stewart. He has never been only one thing. He is rock and soul, noise and tenderness, stadium energy and quiet patience, a man who can command thousands from a stage and then go home to build a miniature world by hand. And now, with Jools Holland beside him, he reminds us that even legends can find new tracks to follow.