"Lady D'Arbanville" was the first single released from
Mona Bone Jakon, which took off in a completely different direction from the songs of his previous two albums. Although Stevens's debut album had
charted, and while both albums he had recorded had successful single releases in the
British pop music charts, he chafed against the "
Carnaby Street musical jangle" and "heavy-handed orchestration" that his producer,
Mike Hurst (of
Deram Records) favoured. Just at the completion of his second album with Hurst, Stevens contracted
tuberculosis and a
collapsed lung, requiring hospitalisation and rest for a year. During this time, he spent his empty hours writing more than 40 songs, and upon a clean bill of health successfully negotiated out of his Deram contract, and settled on
Island Records'
Paul Samwell-Smith as his new
producer, who encouraged Stevens's inclinations towards an emerging
folk rock genre. As Stevens was nearing the end of his period of recuperation, he attended a party that boasted a gathering of musicians in London including
Jimmy Page,
Steve Winwood,
Ginger Baker,
Eric Clapton and others. Among the party-goers was
Patti D'Arbanville, a US teenager who was pursuing a modelling career and later gained prominence as an actress. The two began dating. D'Arbanville stayed with him whenever she was in London, but often found her career taking her to
Paris, and
New York City. After over a year together, Stevens was ready to invest in a more serious relationship than was his young, ambitious girlfriend. It was on a foray to New York that she heard his song about her on the airwaves. Her reaction was one of sadness. She said, D'Arbanville continues, ==Musical genre and sound==