Posts Tagged ‘Steely Dan

07
Oct
08

Steely Dan – Aja

Remember when Chevy Chase was funny?  It seems like an age has gone by since it was true…and before his train wreck of a talk show sort of sealed his fate. 

Not that I blame him, at the time they were giving out late night talk shows to just about anyone and only Conan survived the carnage. And it seems like he was only real funny when he was coked up, which is a shame. The man was Fletch for God’s sake!  And Clark Griswold, Dusty Bottoms and Ty Webb! He was like the Harrison Ford of smarmy comedy.  And man, did he do it well.  And aside from all that he used to be the drummer for Steely Dan.

True story.

Well, kind of…since they really weren’t called Steely Dan at the time. But I’m getting ahead of myself, and I don’t think you can blame Chevy for not staying with the band since the only two constants have always been Don Fagen and Walter Becker.  Everyone else has been pretty liquid.

Fagen and Becker met in 1967 at Bard College in New York and quickly formed a bond over their shared love of music…especially jazz. They began writing together and playing in local groups like The Bad Rock Group (AKA Leather Canary) where Chevy had a brief stint as their drummer.  I wonder what Chevy’s life would have been like had he just been Steely Dan’s drummer, but any attempt to imagine someone else playing Fletch makes me shiver with horror.

 

After a while playing cover songs and living like filthy beatniks, Fagen and Becker slowly drifted away from their friends…moving to Brooklyn to try and sell their songs.  Kenny Vance, who had an office in the same building and worked with his own group: Jay and the Americans, liked their material enough that he got them work doing the soundtrack to the overly long named Richard Pryor film “You’ve Got to Walk It Like You Talk It or You’ll Lose That Beat.”

Yeah, I’ver never heard of that one either.

Apparently Becker and Fagen weren’t to thrilled by it either, but it was a paid gig.  The created a series of demos between 1968 and 1971, all of which don’t exist except in bootleg form (yay bootlegs!)  They had no success, and were soon touring with Jay and the Americans, where they built a reputation for their anti-social behavior.  They might have vanished into obscurity until a friend, Gary Katz, dragged them to LA to become staff writers for ABC Records.

The only problem was that Fagen and Becker’s stuff was too complex for the ABC roster, being that so much of it was built on jazz scales. Katz suggested they form a band, which they did and named it Steely Dan after a strap-on dildo from William Burroughs novel “Naked Lunch.”  They released “Can’t Buy A Thrill” in 1972 and their stock began rising.  With a knack for working with nothing but top notch studio musicians and a reputation for perfectionism beyond what anyone could believe, Steely Dan released an album a year until 1977, when “Aja” dropped.

What sets ‘Aja’ apart from the other works was it’s return to the thing Fagen and Becker loved most…jazz.  They brought in top names like Lee Ritenour and Wayne Shorter, and even Michael McDonald as backing vocals on the chart topping ‘Peg.’  But the album also includes such transcendent hits like ‘Black Cow,’ ‘Josie’ and ‘Deacon Blues.’  But what makes Steely Dan and “Aja” so great aren’t just the hits, but the sound. They sound like a seventies band, but at the same time not so much.  In a time when everything fit nicely into a particular genre, Steely Dan didn’t.  They made their own noise, and that’s what keeps them relevant today. 

Unlike Chevy Chase.

30
Jun
08

FM – Original Soundtrack Recording

So, like two years back, I got hired to DJ a charity event.

I had never done a charity event, but I was relieved to discover that my services would be paid for at well over my going rate for a gig.  It was for a school and they were having a dinner and an auction to raise money…which was something I support so it was all good.

I talked with the lady who was in charge about what kind of music she wanted, and the only response I got was “Eclectic…you know…like KCRW.” (for the non Angeleno readers…KCRW is the big independent station in town that has NPR on for most of the day and plays some really awesome tunes at night.)  I listen to KCRW, so I figured I had it pegged.

Since I wasn’t there to get people to dance I was free to explore what I usually call “mingling music.” This is good music that people can enjoy and talk over at the same time.  Drew and I had done a nice mixtape of downtempo beats that I felt would be perfect, so a week before the gig I sent it to the lady in charge to see what she thought.

She was not pleased.

“What is this?!?!  This won’t work!  I told you I wanted KCRW type music!!!”

“Everything on there has been on KCRW” I told her.

“But I wanted rock…indie rock!”

“Well, all you told me was KCRW…they do play a lot of different music.”

“But I need indie rock!!!  I designed the whole evening around it!!! This is going to ruin the event!!!”

At this point I figured she was being a little more melodramatic than was necessary.  If people were there for dinner and cocktails I don’t think they were going to freak out if The Faint wasn’t playing.  I told her not to worry, and that I would come up with something that would please a crowd of hip middle aged parents.

I went with soft rock.

Why?  Because I believe soft rock is the new heavy metal.  And you know what? 

I killed it. 

People went ape shit for it…and most of my set was built around the soundtracks to “The Virgin Suicides” and “FM.”

Now, I’ll be the first to admit I’ve never seen “FM”…and as far as I know it’s not even on DVD.  From what I can gather, the story involves a group of groovy DJs who hijack the radio station in protest over the new management’s rules.

But none of that matters. 

What matters is that this collection is a hell of a line up…a virtual who’s who of seventies rock: Steely Dan, Boz Skaggs, Bob Seger, Steve Miller, Tom Petty, Foreigner, Boston, Billy Joel and James Taylor just to name a few.  But the song selection keeps it on the softer side like Tom Petty’s ‘Breakdown’ or Steely Dan’s title track ‘FM,’ which I don’t believe was released anywhere else.

Another real standout is a live Linda Ronstadt show where she covers the Stones ‘Tumbling Dice’ to perfection. (below) I don’t think this is available on any of her albums either.

Some of the tracks like Steve Miller’s ‘Fly Like An Eagle’ are radio edits…shorter than the originals.  But they did throw in the full length version of Joe Walsh’s ‘Life’s Been Good to Me.’

Until 2000, this wasn’t even available on CD, and to be honest you could probably put the soundtrack together yourself with access to any classic rock station or just off the individual albums. But that’s not the point.

The point is it stands on it’s own. And if you want to save the time and effort, just pick this up for your next road trip