Posts Tagged ‘Walter Becker’

Cratedigger: Steely Dan, “The Royal Scam”

Cratedigger is a regular (well, maybe semi-regular) column in which I’ll discuss some of my favorite vinyl.

Steely Dan - The Royal ScamThe Royal Scam was released almost exactly 33 years ago. It is, in my opinion, the best Steely Dan album. Maybe I feel that way because it’s the band’s most guitar-oriented effort, thanks in no small measure to the contributions from jazz-guitar great Larry Carlton. The music started to get pretty smooth for Steely Dan after The Royal Scam. Although I really enjoy their next album, Aja, it’s clear that some of the edge is gone, musically speaking. And when the edge went away, mainstream success arrived.

As is always the case with Steely Dan records, The Royal Scam is beautifully recorded, with longtime partner Gary Katz on board as producer. In addition to mainstays Donald Fagen on keyboards and vocals, Walter Becker on bass, and Carlton, there is a very impressive lineup of musicians, including drummers Bernard Purdie and Rick Marotta, bassist Chuck Rainey, guitarists Dean Parks, Elliot Randall, and Denny Dias, and background vocalists Michael McDonald and Tim Schmit. Add a handful of great songs to the stew that these musicians created, and you pretty much have the perfect storm.

The album gets off to a great start with my favorite Dan song, “Kid Charlemagne.” Despite the dark nature of the lyrics, loosely inspired by the life of acid chemist Owsley Stanley, the music is joyous, and Carlton’s guitar solos are simply astonishing. When I’m asked to name the best guitar solos ever, Carlton’s work on this song is at the top of my list.

The wonderfully melodic “Caves of Altimira” follows, before giving way to a sinister tale of murder and obsession, “Don’t Take Me Alive,” which is once again distinguished by Carlton’s fine guitar work. Side A closes with “Sign In Stranger,” which is something of a precursor to what we’d be hearing more of on future Steely Dan records in the sense that its jazz influence is more pronounced, followed by side-closer “The Fez” (”I’m never gonna do it without the fez on”), which is just downright funny. (more…)

Hooks ‘N’ You: “Still Crazy”

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If you’ve been dreading the return of this column ever since Popdose ended its holiday hiatus, then allow me to tell you who you have to blame for my decision to come out of hiding: the one and only Dw. Dunphy. There had been precious little in the way of concern about the absence of “Hooks ‘N’ You” from the Popdose landscape, and fair enough to that, given how much fantastic stuff is already filling the site on a daily basis, but Mr. Dunphy called me out on Facebook for the column’s absence, and I felt obliged to rise to the challenge and prove that, yes, I’m still around. And what better way to prove this than by spotlighting the soundtrack to a film with a title that handily describes my ongoing level of sanity?

There are plenty of great rock-themed flicks out there, and, indeed, many of them have some phenomenal soundtracks to accompany them. I have found, however, that not nearly enough fans of this genre are aware of “Still Crazy.” The film chronicles a ’70s stadium rock band called Strange Fruit, which ended its existence rather badly after first suffering through the unexpected death of their original lead singer and then replacing him, only to have their stage set-up struck by lightning during the 1977 Wisbech Rock Festival, an event which led to the break-up of the group. In 1998, the Fruits – as they are prone to call themselves – attempt to perform a resurrection of sorts and not only bring the band back together but rewrite history and be remembered for their music rather than their misfortunes.

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It’s a blending of bits and pieces from several real-life tales, but “Still Crazy” is also a film that achieves a remarkable degree of realism in the way it portrays the majority of the former band members not as a bunch of guys living posh off their royalties but, rather, real people who have spent the interim years since their original success having to struggle to make ends meet. Plus, it has a great cast, including Bill Nighy, Billy Connolly, Timothy Spall, Hans Matheson, Stephen Rea, and Juliet Aubrey, currently best known as the villainous Helen Cutter on BBC America’s “Primeval.” Most importantly, though, it’s full of more musical references than you can shake a stick at. My personal favorite has always been when Connolly’s character, Strange Fruit’s longtime roadie, drives up in the band’s new tour bus and boasts that it offers “tinted windows, air conditioning, and twin portaloos, not to mention an extensive library of pornography, courtesy of the Psychedelic Furs!”

Given this information, it will likely not surprise you that is a film very much beloved by quite a few musicians, including the members of the Fratellis, who not only named their first album after Stephen Rea’s character, Tony Costello, but, indeed, made time during the acceptance of their award for British Breakthrough Act at the 2007 BRIT Awards to thank the members of Strange Fruit. Furthermore, those who have seen and fallen in love with “Still Crazy” are almost certain to run out and purchase its soundtrack…and this is where we transition from talking about an unheralded film to discussing an unheralded album.

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