Monday, November 25, 2013

Internet Handles

I am doing a paper on Internet Identities and I wondered what the percentages were for my Facebook friends in the Steely Dan world.

I happen to go by a handle in this world and I have for 12 years, but when I did this (obviously unscientific) study of my friends, these are the totals I got.

I was actually shocked that handles didn't win this survey, (they lost 16 to 18) because I have so very many friends who I have 2 names in my memory banks. Their handle and then their real name.

What did actually affect the data, were a few musicians who I am friends with, via the Steely Dan universe. They, of course do not go by handles.

Still, an interesting look at a subject that I find of interest.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Pearl Of The Quarter

This song is probably the most "Un-Steely Danish" song in their repetoire, though I am sure "My Old School" comes close.

The live version of "Pearl of the Quarter", (which you can listen to down below) begins with Donald Fagen mentioning that "it is a song about whores". They live in a lovely town called New Orleans, where Red Beans and Rice are a Quarter. :-)

The main difference in this song, is the masterful use of the pedal steel guitar, by Jeff "Skunk" Baxter. It gives the song a Country feel, which is not usually a sound you associate with Steely Dan songs.

This clip of "Pearl Of The Quarter" is from the Beacon performance on Rarities and Unreleased Night in 2011.

Pearl Of The Quarter

On the water down in New Orleans
My baby's the pearl of the quarter
She's a charmer like you never seen
Singing voulez voulez voulez vous
Where the sailor spends his hard earned pay
Red beans and rice for a quarter
You can see her almost any day
Singing voulez voulez voulez vous

[Chorus:] And if you hear from my Louise
Won't you tell her I love her so
Please make it clear
When her day is done
She got a place to go

I walked alone down the miracle mile
I met my baby by the shrine of the martyr
She stole my heart with her Cajun smile
Singing voulez voulez voulez vous
She loved the million dollar words I say
She loved the candy and the flowers
that I bought her
She said she loved me and was on her way
Singing voulez voulez voulez vous

[Chorus]

Saturday, November 23, 2013

The Second Arrangement

There are no songs more legendary then those that never were...

The Second Arrangement is a song that Steely Dan wrote and recorded for the Gaucho Album (which came out in 1980).

Brian Sweet's Reelin' In The Years makes mention of the problems with this song. Here's what he wrote.

"Misfortune struck early when an assistant engineer accidentally deleted "The Second Arrangement", a favorite track of Katz and Nichols". The song was gone, except for a small 19 second clip which has been around the web, for years and you can currently still listen to, HERE.

The duo tried to recreate the song, but it never sounded the same. They finally decided to call a stop to the recreation and consider it gone, since their hearts were not in it. So the bitter reality is, that it was never fully recovered.

They were now one song short. Since they needed a song for the album, they started putting something together. They used a guitar solo of Larry Carlton's from their sessions for an earlier album and reworked a song they wrote called, "Were You Blind That Day". The replacement song, became "Third World Man". In my humble opinion, a great song and I am glad it made it onto Gaucho.

In 2011, Steely Dan toured and they decided to do a rarities and unreleased night, which I wrote about HERE.

One of the songs that they played that night...was their best recreation of "The Second Arrangement". As with all my video, it is a crappy version, but hey, you can get the idea of what it was like that night at the Beacon.

Did I mention that I cried? :-)

Enjoy.

The Second Arrangement

Pour out the wine, little girl
I've got just two friends in this whole wide world
Here's to reckless lovers
We all need somebody
Stashed in the yellow Jag
I've got my life and laundry in a Gladstone bag
You should know the program
Just one red rose and a tender goodbye
[One last goodbye]

And I run to the second arrangement
It's only the natural thing
Who steps out with no regrets
A sparkling conscience
A new address
When I run to the second arrangement
The home of a mutual friend
Now's the time to redefine the first arrangement again

It's a sticky situation
A serious affair
I must explain it to you somehow
Right now I'll just move back one square

Here comes that noise again
Another scrambled message from my last best friend
Something I can dance to
A song with tears in it
Old friends abandon me
It's just the routine politics of jealousy
Someday we'll remember
That one red rose and one last goodbye
[One last goodbye]

Then I run to the second arrangement
It's only the natural thing
Who steps out with no regrets
A sparkling conscience
A new address
When I run to the second arrangement
The home of a mutual friend
Now's the time to redefine the first arrangement again

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Podcast About Why I Follow Steely Dan

This is a 3 minute story explaining how I started hanging out on Steely Dan message boards, back in 2001. In the podcast, I speak of watching an "In The Spotlight" show. If interested, you can see that, HERE.

It was a journey that took almost 1 year, from the start, to the first posting on a message board.

The concerts I have seen and the friends I have made along the way, have been priceless. I encourage people to scope out the scene, tread lightly, but don't be afraid to jump in.

Enjoy the podcast.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

My Review of Eminent Hipsters

As I promised (HERE), this is my review of the book, Eminent Hipsters.

This is Donald Fagen's first attempt at writing a book and as he says, a preview of a book about his life. Being that we Steely Dan fans have had nothing to go by, except the Brian Sweet book "Reeling in the Years", this is huge to us.

The first part of the book, he centers his time on some of the influences who shaped him. Radio DJ Mort Fega, Henry Mancini, Jean Shephard, The Boswell Sisters are a few of them. His quirky mixing of jazz changes in his rock songs, is a direct result of the synthesis of all these influences...so I found it of interest.

The vast majority of the 2nd half of the book (it is only 159 pages long) centers on his being "On Tour" in 2012, with the Dukes of September Rhythm Review. The Dukes are: Boz Scaggs, Michael McDonald, Donald Fagen and a Band. 3 old friends on buses, touring the US. He does not tell us anything about his partners on the tour, but he strictly stays with his own story and his own experiences of life on the bus. It is not pretty and at times, quite depressing. I couldn't put it down.

Take that comment as roaring approval of this book and go get it.

If you would like, you can purchase it on Amazon HERE.

Enjoy.

Monday, November 11, 2013

My Life On The Pluto Off Ramp (AKA: Following A Band Called Steely Dan)

Yes, I am a big fan of Steely Dan.

Many in my family and some of my friends think this means that I am a little weird.

Well, yes, I guess it does.

But following the ups and downs of the band Steely Dan has enriched my life so much and I will never regret that long ago day when I first jumped onto a message board and made that leap into cyberspace.

I was 46 years old and my son was past childhood and getting toward his teenage years.

I had a bit of time and following the band via message boards worked so well, for me at that point in time.

Now days things are so different. A different look, a different time and mostly a check in Facebook immediately brings me into that world once again. A good thing, because I don't have time to spend in message boards much anymore.

My Steely Dan friends are the ones who dragged me into Facebook, kicking and screaming in 2009. It was the right move, for that time and I have enjoyed becoming more then just "Friends" with them.

Less trolls, too. I have left them all behind. :-)

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Deacon Blues: A Behind The Lyrics Look

Another little quote from Donald Fagen's new book, Eminent Hipsters. In this section, he is on tour with The Dukes of September and writing of his experiences.

"Back to Alabama. The last stop in the South, the Tuscaloosa Amphitheater, couldn't have been more different from St. Augustine.
In the seventies, Walter [Becker] and I wrote a tune, "Deacon Blues," that toyed with the cliché of the jazz musician as antihero. It was kind of a takeoff on that old essay by Norman Mailer, "The White Negro," not to mention our lives up to that point. I'm sure we thought it was hilarious: the alienated white suburban kid thinks that if he learns how to play bebop, he'll throw off the chains of repression and live the authentic life, unleash the wild steeds of art and passion and so on. The chorus sums it up."

I'll learn to work the saxophone
I'll play just what I feel
Drink Scotch whisky all night long
And die behind the wheel
They got a name for the winners in the world
I want a name when I lose
They call Alabama the Crimson Tide
Call me Deacon Blues

Click Deacon Blues, for the complete set of lyrics.

Friday, November 8, 2013

An Audio Podcast Test

This is just an experiment to see if I can get a Podcast going on my website. It's a 2 minute story explaining how I started hanging out on Steely Dan message boards, back in 2001. The audio is very low. Sorry about that, this is just a test.

Monday, November 4, 2013

My Old School: A Behind The Lyrics Look

Hardcore fans know the story of the song, "My Old School" and as a matter of fact, Fever Dreams (click the link and scroll down) goes into quite a bit of detail on the subject under the My Old School section. Since this blog is brand new and I just got a copy of Eminent Hipsters, Donald Fagen's book, I thought I would recount some of it, since he devotes a chapter to some of his experiences, while in school.

If you check Wikipedia you find out that the start of the supergroup, Steely Dan, had its very humble beginnings at Bard College. The college is located along the east side of the Hudson River, near a town called Annendale. Many rich people had their summer homes along the river and one of them was used to start this school. Donald recounts the story of walking by this room one day and hearing someone playing blues licks on guitar. That someone, was a very young Walter Becker. Though 2 years apart in age, they found out that they had so much in common, both musically and in their wry sense of humor. They began working with each other and those collaborations brought the beginnings of some of the songs that they would eventually flesh out and record, years later. They were that good, right from the start.

One of their early songs, which ended up on their second album, was "My Old School" (recorded back in 1973) recounts the tale of why Donald Fagen is never, ever going back to his old school. I believe this is the first time I have seen such detail about the story, by the way.

Donald Fagen:
"In May of '69, I was up at Bard for the weekend, working on the last draft of my senior thesis in an off-campus house I had rented with a couple of other students. At four in the morning, the house and several men's dorms on campus were raided by deputies of the local sheriff's department, along with some state cops, under the aegis of the Dutchess County DA's office."

[They were looking for any trace of marijuana. He continues.]

"By sunrise, some fifty kids had been paddy-wagoned over to jail and locked in a cell block, including me, Walter and [Donald's girlfriend] Dorothy, who were both visiting. The guys were shorn of their long, treasured locks by a trustee barber. After a day or so, the college bailed out all the students, including former student Walter. They refused to do the same for Dorothy, a nonstudent.
I called my father, then living in Ohio, who arranged bail for Dorothy and then flew in so we could consult with the school's attorney, Peter Maroulis. A month later, our cases having already been dismissed, I sat on a bench with Dorothy, my father and Maroulis, watching the graduation of the Class of '69. Because the college refused to bail out Dorothy, and because they'd let the sheriff's office place an undercover spy with the building and grounds department-he had been disguised as a janitor-I'd decided to boycott the ceremony. Yeah, good times..."

This Entertainment Weekly Article came out when Donald released Morp The Cat in 2006. It also goes into the story, which you can read, if you like. Here is a small excerpt.

"Four years later, Fagen and Becker released ''My Old School.'' While Fagen says the song is ''not literal'' (and Becker insists he ''never thought of it as an angry-sounding song; I think of it as a funny song''), he acknowledges that there was real fury behind the ''never going back'' chorus. ''I don't know how serious we were [about never returning],'' he says, ''but at the time both of us were very pissed off at the school, that's for sure.'' Fagen kept his promise for 16 years. Then, in 1985, he returned to campus for the first time, to accept an honorary doctorate. What finally made him relent and go back to Annandale? He thinks for a moment, as if pondering the question for the very first time. ''Well, you know. I'm not one to hold a grudge''." (EW March 2006)

Here are the actual lyrics to "My Old School", though still cryptic (what Steely Dan song isn't), you can definitely see some of the autobiographical parts of the song.

I remember the thirty-five sweet goodbyes
When you put me on the Wolverine
Up to Annandale
It was still September
When your daddy was quite surprised
To find you with the working girls
In the county jail
I was smoking with the boys upstairs
When I heard about the whole affair
I said oh no
William and Mary won't do

CHORUS:
Well I did not think the girl
Could be so cruel
And I'm never going back
To my old school

Oleanders growing outside her door
Soon they're gonna be in bloom
Up in Annandale
I can't stand her
Doing what she did before
Living like a gypsy queen
In a fairy tale
Well I hear the whistle but I can't go
I'm gonna take her down to Mexico
She said oh no
Guadalajara won't do

CHORUS

California tumbles into the sea
That'll be the day I go
Back to Annandale
Tried to warn you
About Chino and Daddy Gee
But I can't seem to get to you
Through the U.S. Mail
Well I hear the whistle but I can't go
I'm gonna take her down to Mexico
She said oh no
Guadalajara won't do

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Sunken Condos Interview

On the last day of October, I bring you an interview that came out a year ago, when Donald Fagen's Sunken Condos came out. This quote from Michael Leonhart, kind of sums up how Donald works, all these years later. We always heard about how hard a set of task masters Donald and Walter were, back in the day. It's nice to hear that he still cares.

"The funny thing with Donald is whether it's live or overdub session, he's approaching everything as building a house from the bottom up in term of groove and tuning. I have seen him chuck a solo that was gorgeous, because the tuning was slightly off. Donald's brain is wired so that he's very sensitive to pitch,and he just can't turn that thing off - which can be a plus and a minus at times. But in the case of building a rhythm section, he's not going to green light a track, unless it rings true. It can be frustrating, but it's the only way to make this stuff."

You can read the entire Guitar Player interview archived HERE on Jon Herington's website.