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1985 Artists (by group or surname) Non-Soundtrack Music S Steely Dan

Steely Dan – A Decade Of Steely Dan

A Decade Of Steely DanAh, Steely Dan, love ’em or hate ’em. The brainchild of jazzy rockers Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, Steely Dan was an experiment to bring rock and jazz together, an experiment that not everybody welcomed – and yet somehow, the group scored two massive hits with their 1972 debut, the slinky rocker “Do It Again” (whose lyrics allude somewhat nebulously to shady deeds going down) and the more upbeat and yet still lyrically cryptic “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number”. And from there it was uphill in the charts, and downhill in the critics’ reviews, all the way.

Decade strings together Steely Dan’s most recognizable radio hits and a smattering of somewhat more obscure album tracks, all culled from the “band”‘s first ten years. And I put band in quotation marks because it really ceased to be that at some point – Becker and Fagen grew tired of the touring/promotional grind, disbanded the regular core members, and continued with Steely Dan as a studio-only entity. Granted, they had some of the best session players in the fields of rock and jazz by their side, and still scored on the charts, but the touring moratorium cost them more than a few fans.

As with most greatest hits albums, you can hardly critique the songs themselves – they aren’t new – but you can critique what’s included. That said, I’m glad that the theme song from the 1978 movie FM is the lead track on Decade – I’ve always loved the song (but not so much the movie) and didn’t want to bother with the double-disc FM soundtrack, so finally getting “FM” on a proper Steely Dan album is worth the admission charge in and of itself.

“Peg”, “Do It Again” and “Reeling In The Years” are some of my most enduring memories of ’70s radio – I mean, they did get played over and over, didn’t they? Unlike quite a few acts I could name from that era, though, Steely Dan’s output stands up to repeat listening. The bizarre melodic and harmonic twists that their songs throw at the listener are quite unlike anything we’ve heard before or since – even now that Becker and Fagen have forged some kind of truce and are playing (and, bizarrely enough, touring) together again. The new Steely Dan has nothing on the material from this era. It may be an unfair comparison to stack a new album up against a compilation of proven hits, but it’s almost like there are two different bands going by that name – the more recent incarnation having lost some of the nerve required to crash two very different flavors of music 4 out of 4together over 30 years ago.

This is Steely Dan at its finest. I like their stuff, and I’ve even heard their full albums, but I think it’s safe to say that unless you’re an ardent fan, this album will cover your Steely Dan needs quite nicely. You just won’t need anything else.

Order this CD

  1. F.M. (4:50)
  2. Black Friday (3:33)
  3. Babylon Sisters (5:51)
  4. Deacon Blues (7:26)
  5. Bodhisattva (5:16)
  6. Hey Nineteen (5:06)
  7. Do It Again (5:56)
  8. Peg (3:58)
  9. Rikki, Don’t Lose That Number (4:30)
  10. Reeling In The Years (4:35)
  11. East St. Louis Toodle-oo (2:45)
  12. Kid Charlemagne (4:38)
  13. My Old School (4:46)
  14. Bad Sneakers (3:16)

Released by: MCA
Release date: 1985
Total running time: 66:26

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2000 Non-Soundtrack Music S Steely Dan

Steely Dan – Two Against Nature

Steely Dan - Two Against NatureEvery once in a while, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen pick up the hint that it took Jeff Lynne 15 years to pick up, and resurrect the band that everyone remembers them belonging to. Namely, in Fagen & Becker’s case, that would be Steely Dan.

The only catch here, however, is that Fagen’s solo projects over the past 20 years have sounded more like Steely Dan than what now passes for Steely Dan. I have a bit of a problem with that. In many places, Two Against Nature sounds like Steely Dan; in a couple of places, it’s good Steely Dan, with “Almost Gothic” taking its place in the quasi-group’s pantheon of memorable, hummable tunes with literate, ironic lyrics. “Jack Of Speed” doesn’t quite live up lyrically, while “What A Shame About Me” stacks up lyrically but not musically. It’s almost as if they needed some more time – there are the beginnings of some really good songs on here, but it’s almost like the label told the musicians to wrap it up, because we’ve got to get Product on the store shelves.

I’m not going to dwell on this too long, but I’m not a big fan of the song “Cousin Dupree”. I know they’re trying to play it for laughs, but incest just isn’t funny. End of story. In this part of the country, in my line of work, I see 2 out of 4far too much disturbing stuff in our own news along these lines. I’ve also known a handful of families and friends whose lives have been forever changed by it. It’s not pop song material.

I wish I could give this a higher recommendation. I really do like Steely Dan, and really looked forward to this new effort…but it just has the feel of something which wasn’t ready for prime time.

Order this CD

  1. Gaslighting Abbie (5:56)
  2. What A Shame About Me (5:17)
  3. Two Against Nature (6:17)
  4. Janie Runaway (4:13)
  5. Almost Gothic (4:11)
  6. Jack Of Speed (6:21)
  7. Cousin Dupree (5:30)
  8. Negative Girl (5:35)
  9. West Of Hollywood (8:28)

Released by: Warner Bros.
Release date: 2000
Total running time: 51:51

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