Here is the transcript from cnn.com
Interview With Yusuf Islam, Formerly Cat Stevens
Aired October 7, 2004 - 21:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
LARRY KING, HOST: Tonight, once he was Cat Stevens, pop music superstar, singing gentle hits about peace trains and moon shadows. Now he's Yusuf Islam, barred from the United States for suspected ties to terrorists, and he says he doesn't know why.
Yusuf Islam, the former Cat Stevens, is here for the hour with his side of the story that made headlines around the world. It's next on LARRY KING LIVE.
It's a great pleasure to welcome Yusuf Islam to LARRY KING LIVE tonight. He was the great Cat Stevens, knew him in the '60s and '70s for an enormous amount of hits. A wonderful entertainer and a great singer.
He was barred from entering the United States last month because of what the Department of Homeland Security says are concerns about activities potentially related to terrorism. We'll deal with all that in awhile, but first, let's go back a little.
How'd you get the name Cat?
YUSUF ISLAM, MUSICIAN: Cat? That's an old question. That's -- it goes back to the days when I was searching for an identity, maybe looking for something a little bit easier for people to remember.
My name at that time was Steve Dimitri Georgiou. And that was too longwinded, so Cat was something which, you know, I mean, a lot of people love cats, you know, so I was -- I was hoping they were going to end up loving me.
KING: Where did you grow up?
ISLAM: I grew up in London. Actually, not very far from where we are right now. This used to be my playground. We're in an area now which is close to Carnaby Street. Down the road is Soho. And I used to live a little bit further down the end of Yorkshire Street. My father had a restaurant. And I was actually born just across the road here, opposite -- Oxford Street.
KING: And you became an enormous hit in the United States. Did you like working in this country?
ISLAM: Oh, yes. It was a little bit daunting, of course, in the beginning, coming from the U.K. It was a more familiar place to me. But you know, America was that much bigger. And everything was just mega-sized, you know? And my career, actually, became mega-sized, also, along with it.
So it was a bit frightening at times, especially when things really took off and you know, we were playing big astrodomes...
KING: I know.
ISLAM: 60,000 seaters.
KING: Did you write your own material?
ISLAM: Yes. I think a lot of people who bought my records would have seen that most of my songs -- actually, all my songs except for "Morning Has Broken" were mine, yes.
KING: "Morning Has Broken" was -- who wrote that? That was a great hit, great song.
ISLAM: Yes, that was a hymn. That was actually something -- I was looking -- I was getting a bit dry, you know, from looking for inspiration. And I went into a bookshop and I went into the religious department. I have a kind of tendency to do that.
And -- and I came across this hymnbook. And I took it home, you know, bought it. And started running through these pages, and I found one song, "Morning Has Broken." I kind of played it with one finger style. It was such a beautiful song.
You know, I kind of revived it. I never sang that song as a child, you know, in one of the Catholic schools, which I went to. But a lot of people did sing that hymn. And it reminded them of, obviously, of their childhood. It's a beautiful song.
KING: Great story. I never knew it was a hymn.
OK, how did this happen, this conversion? Were you -- were you a practicing Catholic? I mean, did you go to mass?
ISLAM: No. There's more confusion to this, actually, because I went to a Roman Catholic school, because that was the closest school to my father's shop and where we lived. But my father was Greek Orthodox, and my mother was Swedish Baptist.
So you know, but it was a good Christian school. It was a good kind of moral school. And they decided to send me there. And I suppose that -- I mean, it was just off Drury Lane, you know? So again, back into show business.
KING: But how did the conversion happen to Islam? This doesn't happen overnight. Give me the story.
ISLAM: Well, you know, it is a big question, obviously. I mean when an icon from the music world, you know, sort of with his head in the sky decides to -- to cut out, you know, get away from that and put his head on the ground and start bowing to God.
Well, it's kind of -- it's important and a gigantic step. But it wasn't sudden, you know, because if you had listened to my songs and if you actually followed my path, I was always searching. Ever since I remember I was searching for the meaning to life.
And I didn't like things when they were hidden, when they were secret -- when they were kind of, you know, locked away and I was told, "Well, you can't go there."
And I said, "Why not," you know?
So I looked at all different religions: Buddhism, you know, Taoism. I had my Christian upbringing. And I was just interested in -- in different ways of looking at this universe. I mean, science was telling us something and in a way, a lot of people were now replacing religion with science, because hey, now we know how the universe began, sort of, I think. But no one was really sure.
And -- and so what happened, I've gone through many, like, I would say developments in my identity, in my -- in my art. I still wasn't satisfied. I still hadn't found what I was looking for. I didn't have that peace.
Then I was given a copy of the Quran. And that was given to me by my brother David. He wasn't Muslim, but he kind of discovered Islam in Jerusalem, when he went there and visited one year, I think, in 1976.
When, he came back. He saw some books from Islam. He saw the Quran. He said, "Oh, that's the Bible for the Muslims." You know, so he bought it and gave it to me as a gift. And that was really the beginning of my discovery of Islam.
In those days, you've got to remember, Larry, that there was no -- there was no news about Islam, you know? At that time it was a secret. There were only some Oriental books about, you know, this religion, or you'd see books (ph). But very little in the news, you know? This is way before the Iranian revolution, everything.
So, I was discovering this, really, privately and reading the Quran alone, with nobody telling me how to think about it, what -- how to interpret it. It was just astounding to me that I hadn't discovered this religion before. But maybe there was a reason for that.
KING: The words that -- are we saying that the words on the pages of the Quran jumped out at you? I mean, did -- what happened from the Quran that you didn't get from the others?
ISLAM: Well, the first thing I got, which I didn't expect, was you know, the clear declaration in the belief in one God. You know, up to that point, I thought, well maybe Muslims might believe in moons and stars and mountains and, you know, the image of the camel. You know, I had no idea what belief was, you know, to Muslims.
And the first thing that came so clear to me was this declaration in the belief in one God in this universe. You know, now that's powerful. That's powerful. Of course, in the Jewish faith, you know, that's fairly well known but -- but here, it was a universal approach. It wasn't now, you know, if you like a racial approach where it was only owned by Arabs. The Quran was talking to me in terms of humanity. I'd never heard that before.
When I saw the name of Jesus and Moses, Abraham, along with the prophet Mohammed, of all these prophets mentioned in the Quran, that was quite startling. I never expected that.
KING: Let me get a break and come right back with Yusuf Islam. A story, an incredible story, really. What a life.
As we go to break we -- you know, we realize a lot of our audience below a certain age wouldn't know Cat Stevens as a singer, so here's a sample. Watch.
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KING: We're back with Yusuf Islam. He was taken off a plane. We'll find out why, how he got into all this.
By the way, a DVD of Cat Stevens' 1976 Magic Hat Tour is now available from Eagle Rock Entertainment. It's -- it was recorded during his last North American tour, nearly 30 years ago.
Also available is the four-CD Cat Stevens box set from A&M United Music. It includes material starting with his first demo recording in 1965 through a 1997 collaboration done under the Muslim name.
And a video of Yusuf Islam performing his music in part of a double DVD of the November 2003 concert given to benefit Nelson Mandela's 46664 effort against AIDS in Africa.