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The Steely Dan/Prince Thing... Again. During my sewing machine woes (fucking bobbin is testing me), I had music going to squelch my disdain for having to finish this quilt (literally 98% done when the machine started testing me) by hand. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I'm a huge fan of Steely Dan and Aja is a fantastic album I bet that Prince was a fan. | |
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I only really know the album from the Classic Album documentary from about 20 years ago - its worth a look if you haven't seen it. I guess I could see them in the mix of influence but I don't think its super obvious. https://m.youtube.com/wat...sdMV9TzMkc | |
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Musically speaking, Steely Dan are well-beyond some "Prince-level shit". They are the only truly successful (artistically speaking), fusion of jazz and rock that exists. Unlike Prince, these guys could actually play jazz, not just sprinkle some jazz debris on funk. I'm not taking anything from either, however, as music is not a competition and comparing them is like comparing apples and oranges. They both were and remain the best at what they do, they just don't do the same thing. | |
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I have long thought Prince must have listened and loved Aja. In the Prince book...I believe Dan P (co author that finished it) said there was a Steely Dan Greatest Hits CD in the Paisley garage. Someone seemed to day Prince did jazz rock lite where Steely did it all the way....I know what he or she means in that Prince did not set out to do it in a focused album like Aja but, you could collect Prince's jazz rock output and amass a hell of a collection that would rival and (I think) go beyond Aja. Sarah, Alexa De Paris extended cut, Mountains extended, MoQuake, Groovy Potential...just off the top. The only difference would be that Prince's output is just...funkier. When I got into Steely..I read up and found that these guys used a tonne of studio musician doing the same parts and settled on who they felt did it best. I think of the time and effort to produce Aja and the limited time Prince spent....Prince was a stone cold genius | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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- From a lyrical point of view, the albums ''Aja'' and ''Gaucho'' are far above Prince's overal lyrical efforts. Although it is somewhat unfair to compare them tbh. Other Steely albums like ''Katie Lied'' and ''Pretzel Logic'' are more than often on my playlist. i know every single note, turns and melodies. I also see various comparisons with Prince's music. They are hard to sing a long with, and that is sometimes also the case with Prince songs. They have songs that sound like dance songs, but are difficult to dance too, so do some Prince songs. They often sound like pure pop, but are beautifully mingled with complex styles, just like some Prince songs. Steely Dan's music is out of this world for me. (I discoverd them in 1983.) Prince sure was way too prolific to have a fair debate in comparison with Steely Dan. But from a Steely's point of view, sure there are quite some similarites to discover. - Most Steely Dan lyrics I had to look up. They sound easy, but are not all that easy to digest. Well written intelligent short stories. I even find some similar dry production, the wit, the chord changes, and some funky elements as well. Fagen was smart enough to have his own singing voice being supported byothers. His choice and good nose for splendid musicians resulted in high end pop.Something Prince did at some point too. - "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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Don't have a anything heavy or educated to share, but do have a question. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Blood, Sweat and Tears also comes to mind. Maybe it's all the horns. | |
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Steely Dan was big back in the 70s; you heard their music all over the place. Prince must've heard the group at some point. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Bootsy Collins has some great insight: . "Prince came along and legalized funk, as you can dance to it. You know, we made it legal to say...you know funk, okay cool... and then when Prince came along, I think he kind of made a universal thing of it, as far as people being able to dance and recognize... you know." | |
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It's funny. All those bands that are being named as somewhat close to Steely Dan: Doobie Brothers, Chicago, the egles, Blood, Sweat and Tears, they all sound like boring pop/rock to me. I never could get into them, and I tried. Steely Dan always hit me like a freight train though (as did the Donald Fagen albums). . Steely Dan always played with their tongue firmly in their cheek, like Prince also did on many occasions. (often Prince's misses, to me, are when he became very earnest and religious) . Sure, Steely Dan has jazz, rock, pop and some other parts, but to me, their swing and swagger stand out. They are the funkiest you can be without being straight up funk. (although, the intro to the song Gaslighting Abbie is kind of like a rock school lesson in how to construct a funk groove) . Anyway, I can't imagine Prince not liking Steely Dan and I (mis?)remember reading somewhere he did like them a lot, but can't find it again.. Then again, I can't imagine anyone not liking Steely Dan, as it's such a succesful marriage of most things good in music and never becoming abrasive to the ear (not saying that's bad, but it turns a lot of people of). And then I find that lots of people detest the Dan somehow.. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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I think you meant to say "commercially speaking," not artistically. [Edited 9/20/20 7:52am] | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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To me, TVOF4S has always been P's "Donald Fagen" album. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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databank said: To me, TVOF4S has always been P's "Donald Fagen" album. I can see that. | |
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. Oh certainly. I don't mean to say they are bad bands, simply that I never could get into them (the fault lies entirely with me), mostly to point out that I don't understand the perceived closeness/sameness to SD. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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. It is one of the albums that are most certainly in my top 10 Prince albums any day of the week. I loved it when Prince sounded more, ehm, natural, for lack of a better word. The Vault, Rainbow Children, to some extend Parade, Come... it really works for me. Good horns, good drums and you're more than halfway to a happy track in Princeworld. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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Not a fan of "the Dan" in the slightest, openly despise some of their stuff. Not a slight on then, it's just not for me. | |
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Kid Charlemagne is a TOP 5 (maybe 3) best song ever. Imagine Prince covering that shit and what he would do as a solo. (Cant top Carlton but it would have been cool to hear what he would do) | |
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. Good point. They definitely put in a lot of studio hours per song! Although I appreciate ABBA, I feel that the music of Steely Dan has a sophistication that goes beyond Prince even, especially their later work. Prince made it somewhat of a point to not learn music in the abstract way and it limited him somewhat. Meaning, I think he could've even been more interesting! . I guess the first take mentality came from his inability to not quickly finish a song before the next one came along, often to the detriment of his songs and sounds. Steely Dan are the other extreme almost, where a bit of going for happy accidents and spontaneity might have improved their work. Paisley Park is in your heart - Love Is Here! | |
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