Co-written by Peter Wood, "Year of the Cat" is a narrative song written in the
second person whose protagonist, a tourist, is visiting an exotic market when a mysterious silk-clad woman appears and takes him away for a gauzy romantic adventure. On waking the next day beside her, the tourist notes that his tour bus has left without him, and decides to stay where he is for the time being. Per the
Financial Times, Stewart's "girlfriend left a book of Vietnamese astrology open at the page for the Year of the Cat, then just beginning, the words fitted the same four notes — and also contained the word 'of'. Stewart was obsessed with
Bob Dylan’s 'of' songs — '
Masters of War', '
Chimes of Freedom', and presumably in 1975, '
Simple Twist of Fate' — believing that the preposition made them sound 'portentous'. When he watched
Casablanca on television, an opening couplet came to him: “In a morning from a
Bogart movie, in a country where they turn back time/ You go strolling through the crowd like
Peter Lorre contemplating a crime…” In the
Vietnamese zodiac, the
Cat is one of the twelve signs. At the time of the song's release, the most recent Year of the Cat had been 11 February 1975 to 30 January 1976; thus, the song was written and recorded in the Vietnamese Year of the Cat. The song began as "Foot of the Stage", a song written by Stewart in 1966 after seeing a performance by comedian
Tony Hancock whose patter about "being a complete loser" who might as well "end it all right here" drew laughs from the audience: Stewart's intuitive response that Hancock was in genuine despair led to the writing of "Foot of the Stage". It was the melody for this never-recorded song to which Stewart set the lyrics of "Year of the Cat" in 1975. Pianist Peter Wood was given a co-writing credit on the song. Stewart explained Wood's involvement in the creation of "Year of the Cat" during a concert in
Edmonds,
Washington in November 2017. He recalled that he was opening for
Linda Ronstadt during a 1975 tour of the United States and receiving a decidedly mixed reaction from audiences when he noticed the pianist (presumably Wood) using a catchy chord progression during soundchecks. Stewart asked if he could add words to the notes, but the pianist said no. Stewart incorporated the notes into the melodic line of "The Year of the Cat" anyway. ==Recording==