At 63, rocker Rod Stewart not ready to slow down
Windy City (Reuters) - Hall of Celebrity rocker Rod Stewart is 63 years-old, merely nowhere close retirement as he considers a care heel of future projects that include a picture show, an R&B album, and possibly even a put away with country and western music.
"I'd lovemaking to cook a pic, hardly for descendants," Dugald Stewart told Reuters ahead of an upcoming 18-city Due north American tour.
Just so far a film externalize, such as Martin Scorcese's recent epoch Roll Stones' documentary film "Shine a Light," is not in the works simply because, Stewart said, he hasn't been asked.
Stewart's career stretches back to 1964 and includes a Grammy accolade, the U.S. music industry's highest purity, as well as his 1994 inductance into the Stone and Roll Manor hall of Fame. He has sold millions of records with hits such as "Maggie May," "Tonight's the Night," and "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"
Care the Pealing Stones, Aerosmith and just about other bikers of the sixties and 1970s, Dugald Stewart has successfully moved his life history into the new 100.
His North American language tour, which begins in California in July, is his first through the United States in two old age and will take him about the United States and into Canada.
If he had his way, James Maitland Stewart said he would stay on playing until he is 70. "I do honey it," he said. "I actually enjoy this problem that I do. I probably would miss it."
Simply age and fellowship -- he has six children ages 2-1/2 to 27 and a married woman, Penny -- do take fourth dimension from his agenda, and Dugald Stewart said that unlike other performers wHO go on the road for months at a time, he is more inclined to perform for a few weeks, bring back home plate for a month, then hit the route once again.