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Thread started 03/17/06 2:59pm

theAudience

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2 "Morphed" Views

Inter and then Re on Donald Fagen's Morph The Cat

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mp3.com Inter-view...

For any lexophobics, Stream the interview: http://www.mp3.com/stories/3491.html

Exclusive Interview with Donald Fagen
By Chris Rolls
March 2, 2006 at 10:24:00 AM



Chris: So you have a wonderful new album out.

Donald: Oh, thanks.

Chris: It's has been 13 years since your last true solo endeavor.

Donald: Yeah, pretty much.

Chris: Why such a long wait?

Donald: Well, you know I had this...well, there is this oppressive Steely Dan gig that keeps getting in the way, and I have to make these Steely Dan albums and go on tour and stuff like that. And it's my day gig really, and so I don't get that much chance to do these solo things that often.

Chris: I see. I read a small piece that said this particular album was the final installment in a trilogy, and I'm wondering is that in fact truth, and if so, would this be considered your last solo album?

Donald: Well no, you know, it's true it's the last one of a trilogy; otherwise you'd have to call it something different than a trilogy. But yeah, it didn't start out as a trilogy, but you know, the first album was The Nightfly in 1982, and when I was finished with the second one, Kamakiriad, in '93, it had a kind of unfinished quality. It ended with a kind of a cliff-hanger, so I realized that there should be a third installment.

Chris: Could you describe that cliff-hanger?

Donald: Well the...the first album, The Nightfly, was sort of from the point of view of a younger person, maybe an early teenager, and Kamakiriad was...although it had a science fiction framing [device], it was actually about midlife. And, you know, now I'm 58, so this sort of looks toward the last years of life. But that Kamakiriad, actually the midlife album, ended with--this guy was driving this sort of futuristic car--and ended up about to drive out into the unknown, not knowing where he was going, so it has this kind of suspenseful quality at the end.

Chris: All of your work with both Steely Dan and obviously your solo work embody a lot of ironic humor and cryptic lyricism--it just seems to be a constant in your work. Do you approach each album with a set lyrical theme, or is the process a little less rigid than it appears?

Donald: Well, with Steely Dan I don't think we ever premeditated the theme really, although I think some of the albums do have a kind of...they reflect whatever we were thinking at the time or something about the time we were living in. But I think it's true that...I know when I made The Nightfly there was some kind of semiautobiographical intent. So that when I did Kamakiriad, I definitely had a kind of vague, vague storyline. You know, I don't like to be too rigid about it, but for these three albums, there was definitely...you know it's basically the theme was, the kind of...well it turned out to be sort of the three ages of man or something like that.

Chris: Your inspirations, are they always--I mean lyrical inspirations--are they generally taken from a personal perspective?

Donald: From my albums or Steely Dan albums?

Chris: For your work in particular.

Donald: Well yeah...the main difference between the Steely Dan record and the one I do myself is that mine are a bit more personal and subjective and have more to do with autobiographical matters.

Chris: But with Steely Dan, you would consider it to be more of an external experience?

Donald: Well you know…Walter and I developed over the years this kind of collective persona, which kind of narrates the songs and this time around, it's kind of like Steely Dan is guys without girls. It's...you know he has a lot of male defensive devices, and then once in a while, he breaks down once in a while and you see through his defenses and so on and so it's really...you know that character has a lot of problems, he's kind of unrepentant about it.

Chris: The Steely Dan character?

Donald: Yeah.

Chris: That character, well the name I mean, it's widely known that it was taken from a William S. Burroughs novel.

Donald: Right.

Chris: Do you often draw upon literature for inspiration?

Donald: Well, when Walter and I met, we--aside from having some musical favorites in common--we were both jazz fans as, really as kids, which is kind of very unusual, especially for that time, you know, like since we were 10 or 11 years old, type of thing. But we also had some literary tastes in common, particularly what they used to call black humorist, which is not African American books so much but a dark humorist like Kurt Vonnegut and Thomas Berger, Philip Roth, and Vladimir Nabokov. And although these represent a wide variety of authors, they were kind of...in those days kind of categorized as a type of literature, which before that time really...no one had really categorized them that way, but it was very big in the early '50s and the early '60s.

Chris: Were you a fan of Philip K. Dick?

Donald: Yeah also...well, science fiction writers were part of that in a way, although in those days they didn't make science fiction with what they would call literary fiction. But indeed, Philip K. Dick as well as the books of Fredrick Pohl, C.M. Kornbluth, and...Alfred Bester is another one I remember, and some of the Theodore Sturgeon stories. And just, a lot of science fiction writers really are satirists--they just use the forum to satirize the present, really.

Chris: And those literary themes have carried over very well into your lyricism, both in your solo work and with Steely Dan, and that really seems to be something that's absent from contemporary popular music. And I'm just curious what your take is on...?

Donald: Oh, you know, reading is absent from a lot of popular culture altogether.

Chris: It is, and I feel it's reflected in popular music, and I'm just curious how you feel about the popular music industry?

Donald: You know, I don't have that much contact with it really. You know, I recently have been talking to some people from Warner Brothers…I've been in Warner Brothers since The Nightfly in 1982, and I think between...I guess in between albums I never get one phone call from Warner Brothers. Like, I have no contact with the company whatsoever unless it's to do something specific. So when an album comes out, there's a whole new bunch of people there because everyone else has been fired, and they're all young, you know much younger, increasingly younger than I am and don't even know who I am, so I have to reintroduce myself. It's, you know, that shows how alien I am to the whole process really.

Chris: The sort of "man on the hill."

Donald: Exactly.

Chris: Do you listen to any contemporary music?

Donald: Not that often. I mean, there's a few things I like if someone brings it to my attention, but I only listen to the same 40 jazz records I had in high school pretty much.

Chris: It's funny that you say you sort of have to reintroduce yourself. Your music has remained a constant over the years; it's instantly recognizable.

Donald: Oh, well thanks.

Chris: And I'm curious do you--well it sounds like maybe you've answered this--but do you consciously sort of shut out anything that's going on with contemporary music trends or...?

Donald: It's not really necessary, because I don't think anything has happened for 30 years or so.

Chris: Really.

Donald: Not really. You know there's a new kind of...you know they have different names for like crunk and stuff like that, or there's this kind of music, but you know aside from some fairly subtle things, and like, maybe they use a drum machine instead of drums or something. But that's really kind of the opposite of evolution as far as I can say so. It's really...I don't think there's anything really...I don't see any sort of major thing that's happened since maybe reggae music in the '70s that's really different.

Chris: So you wouldn't consider, say, rap music to be new?

Donald: Well, I mean it's more of a theatrical forum really...or poetry with music type of thing, which certainly isn't new. And the beats are basically funk, or something else, only played by machines, it's really not...it doesn't sound new to me. I mean, what's new about it?

Chris: Well...

Donald: I mean, they use sampling technology to put out a blip of sound, but it's really like an orchestral hit will be sampled and then so...you know and maybe they do...like if they appear very rapidly, that's something maybe an orchestra couldn't do, because it happens faster than an orchestra could play it but...it's not what I would call a really significant change or anything.

Chris: So no real validity to the art of sampling, in your opinion?

Donald: Well it all sounds so canned that it's basically...since they use drum machines and sequences for even the ballads now…people are used to it now, but to me, it also sounds like the kick drum comes in the wrong place, or it sounds wrong. You know like it's...there's really something wrong with the groove. Although, they're getting better at mimicking real grooves. To me there's always something, and the fact that it's unchanging makes it sound, it may be hypnotic, but it has no dynamics, and it has no shape.

And what's more, if you want to continue with the technical thing, as far as the other instruments are concerned, if you use synthesizers for all the keyboards and stuff like that, they're always out of tune, technically, and I can hear it. It's like the top end is always a little flat, and the bottom end is always a little sharp, because the keyboards aren't what they call "stretched." Like, when a piano tuner tunes a piano, aside from being tempered, they'll stretch the tops of the harmonics so they aren't flat on the top and sharp on the bottom. So they're...there's no groove and they're out of tune.

Chris: Have you adopted...well, I assume you haven't adopted modern synthesizers then into your work?

Donald: Well, I sometimes use synthesizers, but only in special situations…I'll play a Rhodes piano, which is tunable, or some other kind of, like a Wurlitzer piano, which is also tunable by a piano tuner, because I just can't take the out-of-tune quality of synthesizers.

Chris: What about in your recording process? Have you adopted any of the modern recording techniques?

Donald: Yeah I think Pro Tools for instance, the digital technology is really helpful at times, just because you can maneuver around easily and quickly.

Chris: Where was the bulk of Morph The Cat recorded?

Donald: Mostly in Manhattan. My wife and I went on a vacation to Hawaii in the middle of it, but I got bored and, you know, rented this studio and did some of the vocals there as well.

Chris: Did Walter Becker help out with this particular record?

Donald: Not on this one.

Chris: OK, I know the two of you tend to work outside of Steely Dan together.

Donald: Yeah, sometimes, but we were just on a kind of a break.

Chris: Are you going to be touring in support of this?

Donald: Yeah I'll be out in March and--with my own band--and then in the summer, I'm going to go out again, and then maybe toward the end of the summer, Walter and I will hook up and do some Steely Dan gigs as well.

Chris: Oh really! Oh that's very exciting. What could someone expect from your live performance of solo material? Will there be theatrics involved?

Donald: Yes, smoke bombs, the usual kind of--no, I'm kidding. Usually Steely Dan, when we play, it's pretty basic, in fact we'll be probably...my show will probably be even more stripped down, like usually, Steely Dan has a kind of fairly deluxe-looking stage set, and lights and stuff--I'll probably have something a little more economical.

Chris: Interesting. Well I wanted to say that I grew up listening to Steely Dan in the '70s and listened to many of the albums. Well, my mother would play them for me. But it seemed like when I was a child, you were releasing albums quite often...

Donald: Yeah, that's right.

Chris: And I would sit and stare at the records, and I found myself pulling them out again as I became an adult. And there's this quality about your music that really sort of manages to transcend whatever is happening at present.

Donald: Oh, thanks a lot.

Chris: What do you personally feel it is about the music that gives it a timeless quality?

Donald: Don't know, it's hard to say. You know, I think as far as the lyrics, I think we've always tried to be honest and address problems like aging and you know...I think we didn't even start out pretending we were adolescents or anything like that, so we didn't have to keep that up. You know, maybe coming out of adult traditions like jazz and literary tradition kept us honest, I think, and so...but on the other hand, the Rolling Stones still pretend they're adolescents, and they're in their 60s, and they survived very well, so I'm not sure.

Chris: Well you seem to be surviving well. Two Against Nature brought home a Grammy.

Donald: I saw the Rolling Stones the other day. They were great. You know, I mean, Mick Jagger was in incredible shape, he was actually very inspiring...not only was he pounding around for two hours, but he seems to sing just as well doing that, as if he was standing still, which is quite miraculous.

Chris: You saw them live?

Donald: Mm hmm, in Madison Square Garden.

Chris: Are you friends with them?

Donald: No, I met Keith Richards a couple of times, but I'm not really friends with anybody, no.

Chris: With anybody?

Donald: Well, with any, you know, any like celebrity-type people for the most part.

Chris: Did the continued success of Steely Dan into this millennium, has it surprised you at all?

Donald: Yeah….when we got nominated for the Grammy and all that stuff--it was quite unexpected.

Chris: So, back to Morph The Cat. What are the themes that dominate this particular record?

Donald: Death.

Chris: Death.

Donald: Mm hmm.

Chris: Is that something that, well, is on your mind?

Donald: Well yeah. I'm 58 as I say, and so you start thinking about, you know, I have so many years left, and so what am I going to do, what's important. My mother died a couple of years ago, so that was interesting, and then I'm a New Yorker, so 9/11 I think was particularly...had a fairly intense effect, and I think it still does on all New Yorkers. You know, this kind of underlying paranoia in the city that was never there before, and I think it also tends to eroticize the society a little bit more, in that it's kind of a reaction to the imminent extinction.

Chris: Of the self or society?

Donald: Well just, you know, both. If they think...when people think they don't have that much time left, and when there's a threat of war, or during wartime, I think it's kind of sexy.

Chris: And do you feel the same way about the sort of omnipresent paranoia and fear that's been injected into the American mind?

Donald: Mm hmm, yeah sure.

Chris: It certainly plays upon a lot of the literary themes that you mentioned earlier.

Donald: Yeah. I think especially like, for instance, in Milan Kundera's work, when he talks about Czechoslovakia during the communist regime he makes a point of saying, "I kind of eroticized the society," and that's different in many ways from what I'm talking about, but I think there's a parallel somehow.

http://www.mp3.com/stories/3491.html

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Village Voice Re-view...


Catdown to Ecstasy

Steely Dan's unfashionable co-founder catches a New York where things changed forever

by James Hunter
March 16th, 2006 7:01 PM



Donald Fagen's new album, the Steely Dan co-founder's first since 1993's Kamakiriad, is a funky suite devoted to post–9-11 conundrums. His song cycle is framed by "Morph the Cat," a lazy-gaited pop-jazz groove that serves as the collection's title, opening tune, and ending reprise, and which Fagen—who in liner notes writes a brief synopsis of each track—describes as follows: "A vast, ghostly cat-thing descends on New York City, bestowing on its citizens a kind of ecstasy."

This act of the imagination is a fanciful yet brutal inversion of intentionally caused smoke that was the result of enormously less innocent sources. In "Morph the Cat" Fagen's New Yorkers experience not fear but profound entertainment. The environmental joy is there whether these New Yorkers look at the sky or encounter the phenom in their "wiggy pads" as the cat-thing "oozes down the heating duct" or "swims like seaweed down the hall." And "Chinese cashiers," "grand old gals at evening mass," "young racketeers," "teenage models/Laughing on the grass"—they all react this way.

Within the frame of this song and its conceit—as whimsical in the song as it is harrowing in its actual political basis—Fagen offers more grand and low-down tunes; the music is as free as birds and as constrained by reality as the Times. A guy late to LaGuardia falls for a security inspector, her sweeping wand and crooked smile in "Security Joan"; "Search me now," he begs. The woman in "The Night Belongs to Mona" has become a Manhattan nocturnalist, although since "the fire downtown" she doesn't go out clubbing but rather optionlessly stays home, dresses in black, plays her CDs, and dances alone; sometimes she telephones Fagen's narrator to discuss all this "grim and funny stuff." The couple in "The Great Pagoda of Funn" want their relationship to protect them from the cable-TV-fueled daily realm of "poison skies and severed heads." In "Mary Shut the Garden Door"—"Paranoia blooms when a thuggish cult gains control of the government," Fagen's synopsis runs—the perception of public tragedy boils down to exhausted, droll reporting: "They won/Storms raged/Things changed/Forever."

All of this would be of impressive but still limited achievement if Fagen's music weren't alluring. And the music—melodic angles dissolving into dulcet straight lines and circles, Mensa harmonies skillfully made super-vivid by '90s Steely Dan sessioneers, lapidary lead vocals gliding in deep-skull cashmere, often decorated with tiny yet plush backup chorales—refines further Fagen's singular pop-r&b-jazz. It remains the painstaking music of a man who once pointed out to an interviewer that since computer keyboards overtook the instrumentation of most pop productions, records have gone out of tune, and that generations of listeners now take the fatally unforgiving temperament of those tunings as pitch-perfect. So is Fagen's music good? Unfashionable, yet wicked good. And as David Geffen once famously said, there's never a bad time to be good.

Morph the Cat has smashing tunes about death as expressed by W.C. Fields ("Brite Nitegown"), Ray Charles's sexual genius ("What I Do"), and an eccentric old band ("H Gang"); each occupies Fagen's sequence well but less programmatically. The music wields the musical-literary focus of The Nightfly, Fagen's 1982 solo debut, where he held court like J.D. Salinger as a jazz hipster. And it also offers the sonic kicks, if appropriately cooled off, of Kamakiriad.

But Fagen's triumph of rendering post–9-11 New York most recalls how perfectly Steely Dan caught LA on 1980's 'Gaucho.' Nothing in pop music outdoes Patti Austin's and Valerie Simpson's background voices there, floating through and dramatizing the maybe horrible ease and questionable unblemishedness of the money and sex and drugs and surgery of West Coast high life. Similarly, Fagen's narrator urging that security chick to "Search me now" cinches, effortlessly, the current world of ongoing monumental worry and this afternoon's missed flight.

http://www.villagevoice.c...54,22.html
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
[Edited 3/17/06 19:00pm]
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #1 posted 03/17/06 3:53pm

blackguitarist
z

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Serious read! But nice. Man, u love u some Donald! That's cool, Steely was/is no joke, that's for sure. Very SMART musicians.
SynthiaRose said "I'm in love with blackguitaristz. Especially when he talks about Hendrix."
nammie "What BGZ says I believe. I have the biggest crush on him."
http://ccoshea19.googlepa...ssanctuary
http://ccoshea19.googlepages.com
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Reply #2 posted 03/17/06 4:22pm

theAudience

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blackguitaristz said:

Serious read! But nice. Man, u love u some Donald! That's cool, Steely was/is no joke, that's for sure. Very SMART musicians.

lol Thanks. What can I say?
Probably because we're starting to look alike. cool

It's just the high standard set for the kind of Pop music I enjoy.
The New York sensibilities
The feeling he describes of being in it (the industry) but not of it for so long.

Just the cleverness of it all.

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #3 posted 03/17/06 4:34pm

blackguitarist
z

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theAudience said:

blackguitaristz said:

Serious read! But nice. Man, u love u some Donald! That's cool, Steely was/is no joke, that's for sure. Very SMART musicians.

lol Thanks. What can I say?
Probably because we're starting to look alike. cool

It's just the high standard set for the kind of Pop music I enjoy.
The New York sensibilities
The feeling he describes of being in it (the industry) but not of it for so long.

Just the cleverness of it all.

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431

I know.
SynthiaRose said "I'm in love with blackguitaristz. Especially when he talks about Hendrix."
nammie "What BGZ says I believe. I have the biggest crush on him."
http://ccoshea19.googlepa...ssanctuary
http://ccoshea19.googlepages.com
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Reply #4 posted 03/18/06 5:46am

cubic61052

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blackguitaristz said:

Serious read! But nice. Man, u love u some Donald! That's cool, Steely was/is no joke, that's for sure. Very SMART musicians.


Serious, yet informative for me. I bought the CD a couple of days ago, but really have not had the time to actually sit down, close my eyes and give the CD the time it deserves and 'appreciate' it.
Donald Fagen is not only clever, his music and lyrics are also intelligent - something I respect in our overly commercial entertainment culture in the US.
Thanks, tA. I have not had the time lately to look up reviews - you made it easy for me!
music
"Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries. Without them humanity cannot survive."
Dalai Lama
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Reply #5 posted 03/18/06 9:00am

theAudience

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cubic61052 said:

Serious, yet informative for me. I bought the CD a couple of days ago, but really have not had the time to actually sit down, close my eyes and give the CD the time it deserves and 'appreciate' it.
Donald Fagen is not only clever, his music and lyrics are also intelligent - something I respect in our overly commercial entertainment culture in the US.
Thanks, tA. I have not had the time lately to look up reviews - you made it easy for me!
music

You're quite welcome.

Make sure you've got the lyrics in hand when you do that kickback listen. wink


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #6 posted 03/18/06 10:54am

Slave2daGroove

It's weird, this friend of mine just saw him live on Wednesday night and said it was amazing. I was like "Really, you mean Steely Dan guy?" and he said he had "the best guitarist I've ever seen." So if anyone gets a chance, check out this show if it comes to your town.

I'm on this disc, thx for the heads-up and the great interview t/A
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Reply #7 posted 03/18/06 1:33pm

funkaholic1972

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I have been playing the album constantly since Saturday and I absolutely adore it! I think it is excellent and a much more satisfying effort than Steely Dan's latest offering Everything Must Go. Everyone should buy this album! cool
RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
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Reply #8 posted 03/18/06 3:09pm

Stax

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I snatched it up this morning. Start to finish, it swings. thumbs up!
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #9 posted 03/18/06 4:34pm

theAudience

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Slave2daGroove said:

It's weird, this friend of mine just saw him live on Wednesday night and said it was amazing. I was like "Really, you mean Steely Dan guy?" and he said he had "the best guitarist I've ever seen."

He must be talking about...



...Wayne Krantz who's on the tour (along with John Herrington).


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #10 posted 03/19/06 10:12am

theAudience

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funkaholic1972 said:

I have been playing the album constantly since Saturday and I absolutely adore it! I think it is excellent and a much more satisfying effort than Steely Dan's latest offering Everything Must Go. Everyone should buy this album! cool

I'm guessing you've been groovin' heavily on Brite Nitegown? cool

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 03/19/06 10:43am

Stax

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theAudience said:

funkaholic1972 said:

I have been playing the album constantly since Saturday and I absolutely adore it! I think it is excellent and a much more satisfying effort than Steely Dan's latest offering Everything Must Go. Everyone should buy this album! cool

I'm guessing you've been groovin' heavily on Brite Nitegown? cool

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431



I like that one a lot, but I wish Fagen would lay off the brite nitegown lyrical vamp at the end and let the smokin' guitar work come out a bit more.

H Gang is my cut, so far.

music
[Edited 3/19/06 10:44am]
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #12 posted 03/19/06 11:04am

theAudience

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Stax said:

theAudience said:


I'm guessing you've been groovin' heavily on Brite Nitegown? cool

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431



I like that one a lot, but I wish Fagen would lay off the brite nitegown lyrical vamp at the end and let the smokin' guitar work come out a bit more.

H Gang is my cut, so far.

music


The more I listening, i'm getting progressively more disappointed that i'm gonna miss the show here in L.A. pout

I have a strong feeling that's one of the spots Wayne Krantz gets unleashed live. That solo is blazin' guitar


I've temporarily burnt out on H Gang since i've had it for a bit...lurking
But i'm sure it'll be back in the rotation after i've played the rest of the CD an equivalent few hundred times. wink

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #13 posted 03/19/06 11:08am

Stax

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theAudience said:

Stax said:




I like that one a lot, but I wish Fagen would lay off the brite nitegown lyrical vamp at the end and let the smokin' guitar work come out a bit more.

H Gang is my cut, so far.

music





I've temporarily burnt out on H Gang since i've had it for a bit...lurking


I can see that happening, definitely.

Security Joan is a great tune, as well, and I really dig What I Do too.
[Edited 3/19/06 11:08am]
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #14 posted 03/19/06 11:28am

theAudience

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Stax said:


I can see that happening, definitely.

Security Joan is a great tune, as well, and I really dig What I Do too.


When you get down to it, what's NOT to like on the album. lol

This is one of those cases where the phrase, "It's all good." is a perfect fit.

I've been observing that strange ability to juxtapose musical beauty against rather twisted lyrical imagery in the pre-choruses of The Great Pagoda of Funn.

From poison skies
And severed heads
And pain and lies
So follow me


=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Of psycho-moms
And dying stars
And dirty bombs
Please follow me


Mary Shut The Garden Door is another one...

So if you ever see an automaton
In a midprice luxury car
Better roll the sidewalks up
Switch on your lucky star
Cause this zombie does impressions
But not really to amuse
This ballad is for lovers
With something left to lose



tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #15 posted 03/19/06 11:35am

Stax

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theAudience said:

Stax said:


I can see that happening, definitely.

Security Joan is a great tune, as well, and I really dig What I Do too.


When you get down to it, what's NOT to like on the album. lol

This is one of those cases where the phrase, "It's all good." is a perfect fit.


Yep, you're right. I am really pleased with the work.

btw Mary Shut the Garden Door is my new favorite.
lol
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #16 posted 03/19/06 11:40am

theAudience

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Stax said:

btw Mary Shut the Garden Door is my new favorite.
lol

smile I'll check back in 10 minutes for an update. wink


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #17 posted 03/19/06 1:00pm

funkaholic1972

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theAudience said:

funkaholic1972 said:

I have been playing the album constantly since Saturday and I absolutely adore it! I think it is excellent and a much more satisfying effort than Steely Dan's latest offering Everything Must Go. Everyone should buy this album! cool

I'm guessing you've been groovin' heavily on Brite Nitegown? cool

tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431


Amongst others, yes! My fav still is Morp The Cat itself, but the other ones all are nearly as good.

Great album, I just love his use of all these chords and harmonies over tight grooves, the splendid musicianship and of course the tight production. I listen to it on the Genelecs I recently bought and the sound is just amazing!
RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
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Reply #18 posted 03/19/06 8:30pm

paligap

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...

biggrin Kool interview and review!!




I'm diggin' the whole album, too! If pressed for favorites....probably The Great Pagoda of Funn...Krantz's solos on this album are killin' me!!...and I bet more guitar fans are gonna check out his solo work after this tour....







...and for the more adventurous listeners:




...
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #19 posted 03/20/06 10:03am

theAudience

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funkaholic1972 said:

Great album, I just love his use of all these chords and harmonies over tight grooves, the splendid musicianship and of course the tight production. I listen to it on the Genelecs I recently bought and the sound is just amazing!

I totally agree. wink


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #20 posted 03/20/06 2:04pm

Dancelot

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it's amazing to see this album getting so much love around here touched

really I have to go back several years to find an album that immediately grabbed me like this one. not one weak track in sight, a fabulous flow from the first to the last second


and tA, thanxalot for posting the interview, great reading!
Vanglorious... this is protected by the red, the black, and the green. With a key... sissy!
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Reply #21 posted 03/20/06 5:49pm

Slave2daGroove

Wow. Donald's voice doesn't always get it for me but what an amazing piece of work. I think this is something that will take a while for complete processing, it's just deep stuff.
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Reply #22 posted 03/20/06 6:34pm

theAudience

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paligap said:

...and for the more adventurous listeners:




...

hmmm Not hip to those two. And I am adventurous.


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #23 posted 03/20/06 6:39pm

theAudience

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Dancelot said:

and tA, thanxalot for posting the interview, great reading!

Glad you enjoyed it. wink


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #24 posted 03/20/06 6:40pm

theAudience

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Slave2daGroove said:

Wow. Donald's voice doesn't always get it for me but what an amazing piece of work. I think this is something that will take a while for complete processing, it's just deep stuff.

That's another tasty thing about a DF/SD diet.
They don't go down in one big gulp. They're prepared for long-term feeding. cool


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #25 posted 03/20/06 7:08pm

Stax

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Record of the Year?

2:1 odds?
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #26 posted 03/20/06 7:13pm

theAudience

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Stax said:

Record of the Year?

2:1 odds?

In this day and age? confused

Love to see it happen but I wouldn't bet the farm. smile


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #27 posted 03/20/06 7:37pm

Stax

avatar

theAudience said:

Stax said:

Record of the Year?

2:1 odds?

In this day and age? confused

Love to see it happen but I wouldn't bet the farm. smile


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431


lol

Hey, Santana did it just a few years ago. It could happen.
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #28 posted 03/21/06 3:28am

funkaholic1972

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Well, at least for me it's gonna be the Record of the Year, hehe! lol
RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
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Reply #29 posted 03/21/06 6:28am

paligap

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theAudience said:

paligap said:

...and for the more adventurous listeners:




...

hmmm Not hip to those two. And I am adventurous.






biggrin on the way.....



...
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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