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Venerable rock vets Steely Dan brought home three gramophone
statues at the 43rd Annual GRAMMYs Awards -- not bad for a band who hasn't
put out a studio album in 20 years (Gaucho, 1980). Most notably, the duo's
latest, Chuck Crisafulli
Each time Donald Fagen and Walter Becker strode to the podium to pick up a Grammy on Wednesday night, it was hard not to notice stark differences between the two men and the artists they were up against. The 50-something pair, who are the songwriting, arranging and producing nexus of Steely Dan, are not terribly colorful. Looking at best like relatively hip accountants, they made cursory, brief remarks, thanking fans and associates and behaving nothing like their usual eccentric selves. Backstage, it was another story. Becker cracked wise about possibly apocryphal Grammy perks: "Well, we get a free trip to Orlando. To Disney World for us and our escorts. A weekend, an extended weekend." "I'm beginning to think that maybe the whole thing is fixed." -- Walter Becker "Four E tickets," Fagen reminded his partner. "Four E
tickets, and all our breakfasts are covered as long as they are
continental breakfasts," Becker said. Despite their level of popularity, there is
nearly no precedent whatsoever for Steely Dan's music. It involves lyrics
amounting to meta-narratives, abnormally sophisticated harmonies,
bewildering time changes and a knack for a pop hook that, despite the
preceding qualities that seem to be commercial impediments, regularly sent
the duo's albums up the charts in the 1970s. The pair's music has long been admired by
other artists, and especially by members of the audio community, which has
lauded the faultless, exacting standards of Steely Dan's recordings as the
pinnacle of studio craft. (The engineers who worked on Two Against
Nature took home this year's Grammy for Best Engineered Album,
Non-Classical.) This quite possibly came to bear on the duo's Grammy wins,
since audio professionals make up a large portion of the National Academy
of Recording Arts & Sciences, the group that hands out the awards.
Becker and Fagen grew up around New York and mutually developed a taste
for jazz music as well as the songcraft of Brill Building. They met as
undergrads at Bard College in 1967, forming a variety of bands together.
After touring with the '60s pop band Jay and the Americans, Becker and
Fagen resolved to become songwriters. But their tunes were too abstract
for most pop singers in the early '70s, so with the encouragement of
producer Gary Katz the two recruited session musicians and formed Steely
Dan. Can't Buy a Thrill (1972) was the first proper Steely Dan
record, finding Becker playing guitar and bass and Fagen singing and
playing keyboards. The album's "Do It Again" (#6, 1972) and
"Reelin' in the Years" (#11, 1973) became radio standards, and
the band embarked on its first tour. There would be only one other, in
1974, until 1993. From 1974 to 1980, Fagen and Becker became
consummate studio rats, spending an inordinate amount of time crafting
songs with the best studio players of the day. The ambitious Pretzel
Logic included "Rikki Don't Lose That Number" (#4, 1974),
and the knotty Aja featured "Peg" (#11, #1977) and
"Deacon Blues" (#19, 1978). Becker and Fagen hardly played on Gaucho,
which included the single "Hey Nineteen." And that was it for Steely Dan for another
13 years. After completing his first solo album, 1982's The Nightfly,
Fagen busied himself with soundtrack work and wrote about film music for Premiere
magazine. It has been said that he began work on a follow-up to The
Nightfly the day after it was completed, but the bluesy
sci-fi-oriented Kamakiriad, which Becker produced, was not released
until 1993. Becker produced such artists as Rickie Lee Jones in the
interim. The pair's collaboration on Kamakiriad
was occasioned by Becker and Fagen's all-star pickup band the New York
Rock and Soul Revue, which gigged around New York in the early '90s. Once
the album was released, the two assembled a band for a genuine Steely Dan
tour, which was followed by another in 1996. Then it was on to the recording of Two
Against Nature. The first Steely Dan studio record in 20 years was a
departure from its predecessor. In terms of song form, it is more
blues-based and not as compositionally elaborate. Furthermore, it's story
lines are more clearly articulated. Strange then, that Two Against Nature's "Cousin
Dupree," which won Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocal,
didn't spark near the controversy that rapper Eminem's lyrics did. The
song details a man's lustful longings for an underage cousin. Other songs
on the album have lyrics about three-way sex and drug use, but none of it
is as gleefully explicit as Eminem's The Marshall Mathers LP.
"We don't actually have any
lyrics about pedophilia, per se, in our songs and most of our
lyrics," Becker explained. "Most of our songs are about
relationships. As far as Eminem — I haven't really heard Eminem very
much, so I don't know what to say." Fagen and Becker were typically obtuse as to
why they thought they prevailed over Eminem when they spoke to VH1's
Rebecca Rankin backstage. Fagen said, "We were both surprised, 'cause
I think both of us figured probably Eminem would win because he's such an
attractive young man with so much to say, but we were surprised." Steely Dan's entrance into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, whether a fix or merely another result of consensus among music industry professionals, will take place March 19th 2001. — Rob Kemp |
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