Writer and producer Stewart produced or co-produced all of Eurythmics' albums and, once the band became established, he also became a producer of other artists. In 1985, as well as producing Eurythmics' hit album
Be Yourself Tonight, Stewart co-produced the album
Southern Accents for
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, as well as co-writing several songs for the album including the hit "
Don't Come Around Here No More". The same year, Stewart also produced the
debut solo album by
Feargal Sharkey, which included the UK number one hit "
A Good Heart". Due to these accomplishments, Stewart won "Best Producer" at the 1986
BRIT Awards in London. Stewart would go on to write and produce for a variety of other artists throughout the years. In 1986, he collaborated with
Bob Geldof on tracks for his debut solo album
Deep in the Heart of Nowhere. Working together, the duo named themselves "The Brothers of Doom". Also in 1986, he co-produced the album
Three Hearts in the Happy Ending Machine by
Daryl Hall. The same year, he co-wrote and produced the song "Is This Love?" by
Alison Moyet, a UK number 3. Stewart also co-wrote and co-produced several tracks for
Mick Jagger's 1987 album
Primitive Cool. In 1989, Stewart produced the debut album by Russian singer-songwriter
Boris Grebenshchikov,
Radio Silence. In 1992, along with
Marcella Detroit, he co-wrote the
Shakespears Sister hit single "
Stay" with his then-wife,
Siobhan Fahey (with Stewart credited under the pseudonym "Jean Guiot") as well as several other tracks for their second album
Hormonally Yours. In this year Fahey also provided vocals on "Walk into the Wind" for Stewart's group Vegas with Terry Hall,
Olle Romö and Emmanuel 'Manu' Guiot. In 1993, Stewart co-wrote two tracks for German punk rock-singer
Nina Hagen which were published on her sixth solo studio album
Revolution Ballroom. He can also be heard on keyboards and contributed background vocals. In 1996, Stewart produced the debut album by
Alisha's Attic,
Alisha Rules the World, and wrote a few tracks on the third Shakespears Sister album
#3 (actually a solo album by Siobhan Fahey, which Fahey ended up releasing in 2004). In 1997, Stewart co-produced the album
Destination Anywhere for
Jon Bon Jovi, and also co-wrote two tracks. The same year, he produced and co-wrote the album
Come Alive with the actress and singer
Rhona Mitra, who was in character as
Lara Croft for the recording, because she was the official model for the character at that time. In 1999, Stewart and Mitra collaborated on a second Lara Croft album, titled
Female Icon. Stewart collaborated with
Bryan Ferry on his 2002 album
Frantic, co-writing several tracks and co-producing one of them. He also co-wrote "
Friend or Foe" for the Russian pop duo
t.A.T.u., which is on their 2005 album
Dangerous and Moving. In 2008, Stewart was brought in by
Ringo Starr to produce his album
Liverpool 8, after Starr dismissed the album's original producer, Mark Hudson. Hudson's work on some tracks earned both Stewart and Hudson credits as co-producers (along with Starr himself). In 2010, Stewart announced on his Twitter account he was co-writing and producing the new studio album by
Stevie Nicks. The album, entitled
In Your Dreams, was co-produced by
Glen Ballard and released in May 2011. In 2010, Stewart co-wrote and co-produced two songs with writer and composer Mark Warford 'Lover Earth' and 'Time, Faith, Love' for the charity-focused dramatised audio production, 'A Voyage For Soldier Miles'. On 24 February 2011, Stewart tweeted that he had just produced a new album by
Joss Stone, stating that they also wrote 10 songs together. On 10 October 2011, Stewart released a new song called "Leap of faith" in collaboration with Greek singer
Anna Vissi. The official clip of the song was released in Anna's fan club YouTube channel. Two days later, the Stewart produced Fire EP for artist
Orianthi was released as an iTunes download. He has worked occasionally with American ska-punk band
No Doubt, co-writing "
Underneath It All" for their 2001 release
Rock Steady and "Sparkle" for their 2012 release
Push and Shove. In 2013, he worked with singer
Lauren Harris on the pop rock project Kingdom of I. The track
Crying at the Disco was released as a free download on SoundCloud later that year. Stewart co-wrote and produced New Zealand singer
Jon Stevens' album called
Starlight, which was released in March 2017 and features a blues and soul influenced rock / powerpop sound. Parallel to that, Stewart co-wrote and produced Australian singer
Vanessa Amorosi's studio album, which features "soul gospel" music.
Film, television and soundtrack work Stewart co-wrote, with
Mick Jagger and
Daryl Hall, the theme song for the 1986 comedy film
Ruthless People. He took a greater involvement in the film industry in 1989 by writing and producing the soundtrack
Lily Was Here for the Dutch film
De Kassière (English title
Lily Was Here). The single, also called "
Lily Was Here" and featuring saxophone player
Candy Dulfer, topped the Dutch charts for five weeks. The single also reached the UK Top 10 and peaked at No. 11 on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1990. Though he had previously directed music videos, he made his feature film directorial debut in 2000 with
Honest, a black comedy set in
Swinging London in the late 1960s featuring three members of the British
girl group All Saints. Stewart also performed the song "Everybody, All Over The World (Join The Celebration)" for the 2004 film
Around the World in 80 Days. Stewart, in conjunction with his brother John J. Stewart of Oil Factory Productions, and in collaboration with music critic and author
Robert Palmer and documentary filmmaker
Robert Mugge made a documentary dealing with
Delta Blues music.
Deep Blues: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads, released in 1991, was filmed in
Memphis, Tennessee and various north
Mississippi counties. Palmer narrated. Stewart was the main interviewer for the HBO series
Off the Record, which is a show that highlights songwriting and features prominent musicians. The pilot aired on
HBO on 24 November 2006 and featured Bono and The Edge from U2. He collaborated with
Mick Jagger to record songs which appear on the soundtrack to the movie
Alfie, released in 2004. The soundtrack includes the critically acclaimed song "
Old Habits Die Hard", which won a Golden Globe award for Best Original Song from a Motion Picture. In 2010 the song Love Lives, originally from the 2009 EP Let's Do It Again, is included in the soundtrack of the movie
Repo Men. In 2012, together with Rosemary Reed, Stewart was the executive co-producer of
Living The Life series on Sky Arts. He also recorded an exclusive soundtrack for the new episodes. Stewart is the co-creator and executive producer of the 2012
ABC sitcom
Malibu Country starring
Reba McEntire. Stewart created and executive produces the NBC unscripted series
Songland, which gives new songwriters a chance to have their original compositions recorded by an established artist, with a single released immediately following each episode. The panel of judges on
Songland include
Ryan Tedder,
Ester Dean and
Shane McAnally. The series premiered in the summer of 2019 and averaged 5.1 million viewers per episode, the most for a new unscripted series that summer. NBC announced that the series had been renewed for a second season in September 2019.
Musical theatre Stewart wrote the musical
Barbarella, based on
the 1968 film, which premiered in
Vienna on 11 March 2004. Stewart later wrote music and lyrics (with
Glen Ballard) for
Ghost the Musical, which premiered at the
Manchester Opera House in March 2011, ahead of a transfer to the
Piccadilly Theatre in London's
West End in June the same year; the show subsequently opened on
Broadway in 2012. In 2021 Stewart teamed up with
Joss Stone to write and produce a new stage production of
''The Time Traveller's Wife'', based on the
Audrey Niffenegger novel of the same name. The show received its premiere in September 2022 at the
Storyhouse in Chester, before transferring to London's west end, where it began previews at the
Apollo Theatre in October 2023.
Record label Though most of Stewart's own music (specifically with Eurythmics) was released via the
RCA/
BMG label, he also formed his own
record label in the 1980s called
Anxious Records. The label has included a roster of artists such as
Terry Hall,
Londonbeat,
Chris Braide and
Curve vocalist
Toni Halliday.
Platinum Weird In 2006, Stewart resurrected
Platinum Weird, a band he purportedly formed in the early 1970s in London with singer Erin Grace, but which was in reality created in 2004. According to the fictional account, Erin was moody and mysterious, and disappeared shortly before the band's eponymous album was due to be released in 1974. Platinum Weird features noted songwriter
Kara DioGuardi on vocals and the band has re-recorded some of the fictional original band's songs and some new ones as well for an upcoming album. The album was produced by
John Shanks. In July 2006,
VH1 premiered a
mockumentary entitled
Rock Legends – Platinum Weird, an examination of the band's unusual story, complete with cameo appearances from such rock legends as Mick Jagger, Annie Lennox, Ringo Starr and Elton John, all reminiscing about the former band's short-lived heyday and their impressions of the mysterious Erin Grace. The album was further promoted by a series of bogus
World Wide Web fan sites, some of which are registered by the New Media Department of
Interscope Records and hosted on the same server as interscope.com, and related false documents for the "lost" group.
Web3 Music In 2021 Stewart a co-founded SongBits, a
web3 music platform that focuses on fan-artist engagement. ==Bibliography==