Post Tagged with: "Steely Dan Sunday"

Steely Dan Sunday, “Glamour Profession” (1980)

Steely Dan Sunday, “Glamour Profession” (1980)

Two things became apparent to me when first hearing “Glamour Profession” on Steely Dan’s ‘Gaucho.’

Steely Dan Sunday, “Hey Nineteen” (1980)

Steely Dan Sunday, “Hey Nineteen” (1980)

Steely Dan’s “Hey Nineteen” was the first time I can remember anywhere in popular media where Baby Boomers started waxing poetic about the good ol’ days.

Steely Dan Sunday, "Babylon Sisters" (1980)

Steely Dan Sunday, "Babylon Sisters" (1980)

Steely Dan albums always start strong, but “Babylon Sisters” might be their strongest intro track of all time. You May Also Like: Walter Becker, “Three Sisters Shakin’” (circa 1992): Steely Dan Sunday Steely Dan, “Hey Nineteen” from ‘Northeast Corridor’ (2021): Steely Dan Sunday Walter Becker, “Love in the 4th [akaRead More

Steely Dan Sunday: “The Second Arrangement” (1979, unreleased)

Steely Dan Sunday: “The Second Arrangement” (1979, unreleased)

If not for a young man’s goof, Steely Dan’s ‘Gaucho’ might have had a third hit: “The Second Arrangement.”

Vinyl

Steely Dan Sunday, “FM (No Static At All)” (1978)

Back in 1971 when they were struggling to make it as songwriters for hire and before they formed Steely Dan, Becker and Fagen landed some work scoring a soundtrack for a movie that starred Richard Pryor. You May Also Like: Walter Becker, “The Dopest Cut / Down In the Bottom”Read More

Steely Dan Sunday: “(You Got) The Bear” (ca. 1977, unreleased)

Steely Dan Sunday: “(You Got) The Bear” (ca. 1977, unreleased)

There’s really no telling how many great Steely Dan recordings fell to the cutting room floor, as Walter Becker and Donald Fagen were notoriously picky.

Steely Dan Sunday, “Josie”(1977)

Steely Dan Sunday, “Josie”(1977)

Like “Deacon Blues,” another of Steely Dan’s ‘Aja’ hits, “Josie” has a specially written intro revisited later in the song that’s absolutely killer.

Vinyl

Steely Dan Sunday, "I Got The News" (1977)

Shifty, start-stop rhythms, suddenly erupting musical asides and two guitar soloists (Becker and Larry Carlton), “I Got The News” has an irresistable, non-stop energy. You May Also Like: A World of Their Own: How ‘Aja’ Changed Everything For Steely Dan Steely Dan’s Aja at 40: Still the pinnacle of jazz-popRead More

Steely Dan Sunday, “Home At Last” (1977)

Steely Dan Sunday, “Home At Last” (1977)

Inspired by an episode from Homer’s ‘Odyssey,’ “Home At Last” works as a metaphor for the homesick Steely Dan.

Steely Dan Sunday, “Peg” (1977)

Steely Dan Sunday, “Peg” (1977)

There might not be a sunnier, snappier tune from Steely Dan than “Peg” and that’s undoubtably helped to propel the single to No. 11 on the Hot 100 charts.