regarding Victor Feldman. many years ago i found a sealed 1958 Contemporary stereo of Victor Feldman Arrives. in the lower left corner was a cutout with the inscription as i remember: Leisle i will always remember your brother Scott....he was referring to Scott Lo Faro the double bassist who died in a car crash some years later. I am 76 and i found the record at a goodwill 30+ years ago. it took me about 3 years of searching to locate and return this album to Scotts sister. a great day in my record collecting.
@jonnuanez71832 ай бұрын
Aja is its own genre.
@MarkMonyhan12 ай бұрын
Can you believe they used to play this stuff on the radio? When FM radio first started it was so great!
@ceruleanbandit16922 ай бұрын
That Steve Gadd and Wayne Shorter solo in Aja gives me the chills every single time I listen to it. Its so goddamn beautiful
@loslobos94612 ай бұрын
Rumor is Shorter did it in one take and didn’t ask to be paid.
@esiegel22 ай бұрын
@@loslobos9461 I read that he listened, wrote out a sketch, and then played it down. That ascending low tone thing is just so....Wayne.
@SvenElvenАй бұрын
@@loslobos9461I think he said this in an interview with Down Beat ages ago. RIP Wayne Shorter, he really deserves to be better appreciated among mainstream listeners, even though he's an icon for us jazz and fusion fans.
@dtchinacat39732 ай бұрын
One of the All Time Best Albums Ever!
@UK_Lemons2 ай бұрын
Often overlooked but, I think, just as important are engineers Roger Nichols and Bill Shnee who are key to the sophisticated and beautifully recorded sound of Steely Dan. Both were masters of precision and like Donald Fagen and Walter Becker always pushed towards perfection.
@4rah462 ай бұрын
Cover needs to go up on Doug's wall of honor
@frankcoverjr.-jz3ne2 ай бұрын
@@UK_LemonsAbsolutely one of the best engineered and produced albums of any genre, ever.😊
@CroMagJohnson2 ай бұрын
i love steely dan! they are my 4th favorite band, and my favorite non-metal band. in my opinion aja is their best song, but the album as a whole, while amazing, is only their 4th or 5th best album. countdown to ecstasy and gaucho are my 2 favorite. then i would say can't buy a thrill is a clear cut #3. even the songs that weren't singles are awesome, especially only a fool would say that and kings. then the 4 and 5 spots are a toss-up between aja and the royal scam. then 6 - 9 is pretzel logic, katy lied, two against nature, and everything must go.
@DarrinSnider2 ай бұрын
I'd definitely put in a top ten perfect album list. Takes me back to summers with the T-tops off the Camaro. 😊
@kencribbs93442 ай бұрын
Fagen and Becker, the be-all and end-all of composition, performance, engineering and performance perfection. Their 50+ year-old work remains as fresh (no, fresher!) than anything else today.
@bennemer4892 ай бұрын
For those of us who were lucky enough to grow up with Steely Dan from the beginning, even after all these years, we never tire of listening to them and learning about them.
@pb68slab18Ай бұрын
From a bad day at school in the 70s to a bad day at work in 2024, I come home, grab a beer, put on some Steely Dan, take a few hits and everything else feels all unnecessary!
@hamiltonburger45742 ай бұрын
Doug, Of all the reactions I have watched regarding anything SD, you are the ONLY one that is really qualified to analyze their music. Not that the other reactions are not entertaining, but SD really deserves the deep dive that you go into. Bravo..
@chrisb.21782 ай бұрын
One of my favourite albums. It really deserves to be called a masterpiece and timeless classic. The sound is unbelievable good. For years this was the reference when you wanted to test how good your hifi system was.
@corygivan55072 ай бұрын
The Steely Dan rabbit hole could easily encapsulate your entire AUTUMN of this year. The rarest of bands have NO weak songs. Steely Dan has NO weak songs. Thank you!!
@peboblank4372 ай бұрын
I also thought thsi until I heard "Show Biz Kids" - a song with only one chord throughout - but it has great lyrics! 🙂
@TheCapedWanderer2 ай бұрын
@@peboblank437it’s a blues drone you fool; listen to the melody, the deadly slide guitar fills, the percussion, the syncopated handclaps, the marimba, the bouncy bass, Show Biz Kids is an unequivocally fantastic song with a lot going for it. Chord progressions are not the only or even the main reason Steely Dan song are good.
@f1refall2 ай бұрын
Queen of the Quarter
@TONE111112 ай бұрын
@@f1refall or pearl
@douglaspatrick868Ай бұрын
Steely Dan and Sly and the Family Stone, as close to unimpeachable as music acts get, so good!
@placidpaddler2 ай бұрын
Black Cow and the entire Aja album is the definitive music to sample the quality of ear- and headphones. The audiophile’s audio.
@TsunamiBeefPies2 ай бұрын
That was where Producer Gary Katz came in. He was key to the clean, clear sound of every SD album he was associated with.
@paulboudreau88412 ай бұрын
Always sounds amazing in my Sennheiser HD600’s
@SvenElvenАй бұрын
@@TsunamiBeefPies Gary Katz never pushed a fader or positioned a microphone in his life, he wouldn't know what to do with that sort of technical stuff. He was the old style of “producer” (more of a 'recording manager') who made the calls, knew the people and made the record happen. He was basically ABC Records' hired gun in charge of the recording sessions. The credit for the actual sound production on Aja goes to chief engineer Roger Nichols (who is pretty much an icon in music recording history), along with Fagen and Becker who were both extremely hands on at this point.
@scotconnolly118819 күн бұрын
@@SvenElven Indeed. The Rick Beato interview with Roger Nichols is superb (and every other SD session player / contributor he has managed to interview) and completely supports this
@The_Left-Hand_Path2 ай бұрын
This and Gaucho are two of the single most engrossing, complex, and addicting listens that appeal to a wide audience maybe ever. Masters of the craft, I cannot gush about them enough.
@MartinJessop-bi4yt2 ай бұрын
Yes I love Gaucho too. I would also add Donald Fagen's The Nightfly album. Superb, got to be the vinyl for that though.
@jc37452 ай бұрын
One of my favorite albums of my life. Steely Dan, erroneously called West Coast Jazz, created some of the most iconic music of my lifetime.
@campcrafter46132 ай бұрын
YUP!
@francesw.67742 ай бұрын
One of my favorites too, but Donald Fagen himself has gone on record saying that they were not a jazz band.
@JasonSmith-jr7jh2 ай бұрын
ROLLING STONE rag-azine called (calls) Steeley Dan YACHT ROCK...
@tomratcliff37552 ай бұрын
It's not always the artist that defines the genre. I wonder what Wayne Shorter would have called it? Or Lee Ritenower (sp?) ?
@JasonSmith-jr7jh2 ай бұрын
@tomratcliff3755 I just love that someone out there knows who the great Lee Ritenour is! Uh...I had to look at one of my Ritenour albums to make sure I was spelling it right (I was). One the unsung heroes of "Jazz" guitar!
@commonman3172 ай бұрын
Reminds me of Rick Beato's channel with the in-depth musical analysis of the songs. Both Doug and Rick are very knowledgeable about music theory and applications in their respective backgrounds.
@craigw19112 ай бұрын
Both Chicago (the years with Terry Kath, 67-78) and Steely Dan are my favorites for how they were able to blend jazz, rock, blues, etc into their own signature styles of rock with horns. So smooth!
@nancy9478Ай бұрын
Oh, that right there sums it up. My faves too.
@franklassek31322 ай бұрын
Heard Peg on the radio at work on the day it was released. We usually had on WXRT in Chicago, in the paint shop. They continued to play other songs from Aja throughout the day. I couldn't help stopping what I was doing to simply listen. I was blown away by what I had heard. Out the door at closing time, and went to Woodfield Mall and bought the album. Then, went up to Schaak Electronics, and bought a Technics Turntable that I still have today. I got home, hooked up the turntable, put on Aja, and took it all in. A Masterpiece. Thanks, Doug.
@CaptainRon132 ай бұрын
Similar story. Aja came out the year I graduated high school. With money, I received as a graduation gift, I walked into a stereo store in the San Fernando Valley. ( In LA). The salesman was playing Aja for a customer in the “high end” room. As I stood in the back of the room, I thought, “ WHAT IS THIS MUSIC?” After that , man, it was all over. Nothing could compare. Still can’t!!!
@doctorpatient5192 ай бұрын
"Throw out the hardware, let's do it right" that brilliant line in "Aja" always puts a smile on my face
@kevinwattswork65262 ай бұрын
I was 16 when this came out. Changed my musical tastes forever.
@dtchinacat39732 ай бұрын
You know Peg and Josie, but Home at Last is the hidden Nugget!
@mattpobursky8502 ай бұрын
I love everything about this album but I think Home at Last is my favorite song.
@francesw.67742 ай бұрын
Agree. I think it rivals the song "Aja" for musical sophistication.
@CroMagJohnson2 ай бұрын
home at last is so good!
@devilaverage67182 ай бұрын
so true
@missbelled67002 ай бұрын
In my top 10 for sure. Purdie shuffle + Rainey + Homeric Epic + the Dan... how could it ever miss?
@fayemanning1972 ай бұрын
Of all the Classic Rock, Soft Rock, Hard Rock, Pop Rock, Acid Rock, Southern Rock, Prog Rock, you-name-it rock, nothing I tell you Nothing has worn as well over the years as Steely Dan. I wore all my cassette tapes raw and knew every note, every nuance of all the music I owned and loved, and I would sometimes grow weary of music I "loved", but my ears Never tired of Steely Dan. To this very day, every song is Still a Joy, full stop. Always a musical feast, Every Time.
@girlinagale2 ай бұрын
I absolutely love you Doug. These songs are so deeply embedded in my world, the best way to listen to them is with someone else's ears.
@jml-rj5re2 ай бұрын
Indeed. A true masterpiece - combination of elite composition and musicianship!
@nazfrde2 ай бұрын
A vital part of the Steely Dan sound is the μ-major chord (as Donald Fagen refers to it) which is a major triad with an added 2nd (not 9th because that implies a b7), either replacing or added to the 3rd note of the triad. So the C μ-major would be C-D-E-G. Try it, and a lot of this stuff will fall into place.
@daze0232 ай бұрын
Could you come over and show me that?
@fel24thecat2 ай бұрын
These notes can make either C/D, Cadd2 or Cadd9 it depends on their way you put them
@Steelyman962 ай бұрын
That's a lovely bright chord, thanks
@trimetrodon2 ай бұрын
Isn’t it called a mu major chord? See the fine video by Nerd Writer.
@stevesheroan41312 ай бұрын
In learning a few of their tunes, I have found that you can’t just play the notes of those chords in any voicing and have it sound right. The voicing has to be the same as they did it for the most part, or it just doesn’t work as well.
@carnick12012 ай бұрын
AJA is da bomb Steely Dan album! I’ve had the LP since day one and still play it often - 47 years later! It still holds up and something new catches my ear every time! Hope my sons will be listening to AJA 47 years from today!!😊❤❤❤
@garyarnold31412 ай бұрын
This record is so well recorded and produced, in the 70s all the hifi shops used it to test out the hi-fi systems. It has to be some of the most complex music ever to appear in the charts.
@Promotion062 ай бұрын
When I went to buy a hi fi system back in the day they used Donald Fagen’s Nightfly album!!
@georgeerhard19492 ай бұрын
Aja, Roxy Music's "Avalon", and a bunch of Russ Freeman's Rippingtons albums were the go-to "try this out" albums in the stereo shops in the mid/late 80's in my area.
@nrich51272 ай бұрын
The unmistakable sophisticated mix of Pop and Jazz that makes Steely Dan so unique ....
@brianwacker91112 ай бұрын
“I know just enough about Jazz to be dangerous.” 🤣🤣 That makes two of us, Doug!
@08ruben692 ай бұрын
T-shirt!
@kenjordan57502 ай бұрын
One of the albums that I consider to be perfect.
@AU882 ай бұрын
True. Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumours” is another.
@williamhopper66022 ай бұрын
Sophisticated music. Excellent musicianship
@cheesesteak592 ай бұрын
This album's recording engineer deserves some serious props.
@WilliamClark-uj1uo2 ай бұрын
Roger Nichols was the engineer behind all the classic Steely Dan.
@texashookem222 ай бұрын
This is right alongside Dark Side of the Moon for greatest album of all time for me. The title track alone is an absolute masterpiece.
@pamstuckey83492 ай бұрын
I can still vividly remember putting the needle to the album on my new Technics turntable - from my first legit post college paycheck - back in 1978 and very consciously choosing to listen to Aja. Genuinely felt like I was in heaven
@louise_rose2 ай бұрын
Yes, it was the very first album my brother played on his new CD player setup too, around twenty years ago. He and I have been fans of Steely Dan since roughly around the time this album was released. :)
@rickknight18102 ай бұрын
I love that Doug does not stop the tracks to comment, but just throw in his comments in real time. Nice!
@astroteech2 ай бұрын
I'm 67 and this album highlights my life at that time when it came out. It triggers so many memories. I was then, previously, and will forever be a fan of Steely Dan. I grew up the son of a semi-professional jazz pianist mother (heard Brubeck's "Take 5"" when it first came out at age 5 or 6, so I didn't get it till later, but it definitely sunk into my mind at the time) who made sure all her 3 sons learned to play instruments (for me it was trumpet, baritone horn, bass guitar, drums, mandolin, and piano, but not proficiently). I have always been awed by Donald Fagen and Walter Becker and all the incredible top notch musicians that made up Steely Dan. Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, and others would have been impressed or at least amused.
@peterodwyer9384Ай бұрын
I am also 67 and eagerly bought this album when it came out. A culmination of their progress through their previous albums ... each one progressing in sophistication, while remaining unbelievably memorable. A true case of the more I practice the luckier I get.
@willowvee58442 ай бұрын
A never ending source of joy. Over and over, I played this since 1979. Still love every note.
@CodeBleu7242 ай бұрын
I love your breakdowns of chord structure. You and Rick Beato nail this part of reactions. And Steely Dan are the masters of music structure. I was a drummer in a band back in the 90s and I never needed to know this part of songwriting. I just kept time and filled in at the changes when needed. I never needed to know the words of our songs. I wish I dove deeper into my own band's melodies and been an all around musician.
@ronaldbharvey2 ай бұрын
Steve Gadd did not play the solo in Aja anything like that during rehearsals. He pulled that out for the recording and made everybody's jaw drop and almost forget what they were supposed to be doing.
@steveelshoff33532 ай бұрын
And he did it coked out of his mind.
@JasonSmith-jr7jh2 ай бұрын
@@steveelshoff3353You are mistaken. Steve: "We were all doing too much coke during the late 70s. But I never did it while recording" -Modern Drummer magazine. What is YOUR source for this Bullshit statement? Methinks YOU do cocaine...
@muzikkification2 ай бұрын
@@JasonSmith-jr7jh who cares if he did or not, like jesus dude, chill
@ceruleanbandit16922 ай бұрын
@@JasonSmith-jr7jh Gadd did a long interview w Rick Beato and he talks extensively about what recording that song and w the Dan was like.
@missbelled67002 ай бұрын
@@muzikkification They were a bit harsh but imo it's fair, on such a seminal take like that, it's important to honor the truth whatever it may be. If the man was sober, that's a different story than if he was gakked. Plus it's not like we need more coked out drummers who think they're the next Gadd LOL
@johnowens52842 ай бұрын
I've never clicked on a link so fast. Happy Friday y'all!
@tomhenninger41532 ай бұрын
LOVE Aja! Amazing songwriting and performance. I was totally into prog when this album came out. Truly a masterpiece. Thanks for the video!
@kuau7142 ай бұрын
one of the best albums of all time
@BradBolin2 ай бұрын
This is a worthy successor to Gershwin. The composition demonstrates formal, academic, historical mastery and it is also alive. Real art.
@realbser19562 ай бұрын
Sonically, hard to come up with a better sounding album in my 67 years. Aja is a true masterpiece in every sense of the word.
@stevesheroan41312 ай бұрын
One of the only contenders is Gaucho, which I think actually sounds better, but I prefer the songs and vibe of Aja a bit more.
@mournblade10662 ай бұрын
@@stevesheroan4131 Donald Fagen's solo album, _The Nightfly_ , is up there. In fact, it's arguably even better soundwise, since it was recorded 100% digitally.
@stevesheroan41312 ай бұрын
@@mournblade1066 I agree, though it it has a little too much drum machine for me. It’s done as well as could be done, it just isn’t Purdy (a little pun for fun).
@rickknight18102 ай бұрын
The horns in Deacon Blues are so gorgeous, you hope they have horns like that in heaven.
@nancy9478Ай бұрын
God has horns. And they are better. That must be amazing given how perfect Steely Dans are
@courtneywallace8712 ай бұрын
One of the greatest albums of all time. Sheer perfection! I love listening to Doug talk even though I have very little idea what he’s actually talking about. I don’t know if anyone else will agree with me, but I’d love to see Doug react to Oh Good Grief by Vince Guaraldi, the music from all the Peanuts holiday specials. Lovely album.
@genecase94642 ай бұрын
After you've finished the album, there's a really fantastic documentary dvd by Classic Albums on the making of Aja with interviews by most everyone involved including Donald, Walter, the engineer, producer and many of the musicians. Facinating stuff! Watch it with the misses!
@gregskipworth45332 ай бұрын
The sax guy on Deacon Blues was a member of the tonight show orchestra during Johnny Carson's time on the show. Got to listen to side 2 of Aja!
@PaulSmith-gc2my2 ай бұрын
Oh my God! You are in for such a treat when you do side 2! "Home At Last", and "I Got The News" never really got much notice, but both are fantastic songs and deserve way more praise than they received. ("Home At Last" is one of those songs I keep inside my head and "listen to" from memory, it's THAT good!) "Peg" and "Josie", on the other hand, got a lot of attention and radio play (all of it well deserved!). Both quite different from each other and both stand out as the kind of song that knocks your socks off.
@mournblade10662 ай бұрын
"Home at Last" is the hidden gem of this album.
@rk41gator2 ай бұрын
Amazing that using so many different session players Steely Dan could still maintain their unique 'sound'. A tribute to these guy's writing style and choices for instrumentation. Smoothly Funky.
@mr.steinhaus60142 ай бұрын
This has been this metalheads secret favorite album since my dad showed it to me as about an 8 year old. I’m 42 now and it is still the jazz pop, audiophile, sardonic wit in a smoky club classic. Not many better!
@mojorider84552 ай бұрын
hahaha, i used to have guilty pleasures and all, but no longer care anymore what others think of my record collection! At my age, I don't gotta prove anything to anyone or justify why I like Steely Dan or anyone else.😎
@thehof90582 ай бұрын
Ahh Yes. An album with riffs so tasty I couldn't resist wiping my mouth as well @11:24. Thanks Doug!
@caramanico12 ай бұрын
Loved the Dan when I was a kid / pre-teen (Do It Again, Reeling In The Years, etc...). Then I started to play guitar and bass and get more deeply into music. When I got Aja I was more mega blown away as I ever have been over anything. A true masterpiece.
@RonNaeve2 ай бұрын
Yes, this is an epic album. thanks for taking the time to analyze and react. Doug, please provide a reaction to side one of the debut album by Ambrosia. Talking about an engineering masterpiece it too won a grammy for engineering. Nice, Nice, Very Nice, Time Waits for No One and Holdin' On to Yesterday are the key songs here, but the entire album is fantastic. Thanks Doug.
@Sonichistorian2 ай бұрын
That album was produced by another true master in Alan Parsons.
@walterstevens38742 ай бұрын
My favorite album byֶ my favorite band. My son started listening to them in his teens. After a few weeks, he said, “They’re their own genre.”
@sethkaicer3192 ай бұрын
They call Alabama the crimson Tide, call Doug Deacon blues 💙
@4rah462 ай бұрын
What a thrill to hear the music rattling around in Donald and Walter's minds. Our fortune is to experience this genius, so timeless
@thefinecolumbian2 ай бұрын
Steely Dan = Modern Day Mozarts. My lifetime, all time favorites. Royal Scam, Aja and Gaucho are the most incredible albums. If you haven't listened to a lot of their stuff, I highly recommend all 3.
@WilliamClark-uj1uo2 ай бұрын
I love Katy Lied as much as the 3 you mentioned...
@emmbee19062 ай бұрын
Steely Dan was the music of my high school days and will always have a special place in my heart. I was a singer as opposed to a musician, but I have always had a deep admiration of songs that were instrumentally complex and sophisticated - and nobody was better at creating those songs than Steely Dan. Nearly 50 years later, "Aja" is still miles ahead of its time.
@carlbrown88302 ай бұрын
I never realized Denny Dias played on the Aja album even though I've listened to it uncountable times. He was the lead guitarist with the band when Becker was still playing bass. He played lead on "Do It Again" while "Skunk" Baxter played bongos.
@WilliamClark-uj1uo2 ай бұрын
There's a documentary on the making of the album. Denny is on it playing the Aja solo
@tuckerrogerd2 ай бұрын
I'm a jazz fan. I also grew up in the 70s and 80s so I got the appreciation for that period and classic rock. I f'ing love Steely Dan
@barriereid92442 ай бұрын
This arrived as I was due to leave 🏴 high school on its release...it has travelled everywhere with me including a decade in the 🇲🇷🐪🌴 Sahara. Never ever tired of it. Donald Fagen's Nightfly is a gem too.
@NotBenCoultryАй бұрын
38:00 I think they're writing chord to chord on Aja and Deacon Blues, meaning mentally eliminating all but the transition between the one just written and what would sound cool next, within the parameters of the mood
@reneweisz91572 ай бұрын
Everything about Steely Dan is perfection. Their sound till today is unmatched, it is not just hitting a couple of keys or play chords.
@hulldanfan2 ай бұрын
Doug - Watch the video of 'The Making of Aja' . Its Don and Walter sat at a mixing desk and almost re-mixing this real time. It is fascinating and there's so many little musical inserts
@artromano24192 ай бұрын
Great review and I thank you!! You're the best!! Oh and looking forward to side 2!!
@Fibonacci642 ай бұрын
I bought this when it came, very young, just 13. I really liked it, but obviously couldn’t appreciate it in full. It grew. Over the years, I have also got clues to what the lyrics are all about. I now know what ”Black Cow” is about and the rest of it - except the title track. Well, I’m swedish so english is my second language.
@kelvinheron34252 ай бұрын
A "black cow" is a non-alcoholic drink made by mixing root beer and ice cream.
@davidvalderrama18162 ай бұрын
Steely Dan has always had my attention. I started learning drums in 76 and was blown away by these tracks. Steve Gad, one of the GREATS!
@leojmorts4022 ай бұрын
Doug, you made our evening with this! Bought the vinyl three times now since first release. Thanks for the analysis
@donallmon13382 ай бұрын
One of my favorite albums! Thank you for doing this one!
@simflier829823 күн бұрын
I enjoyed your reaction! Those two are Music Scientists! They can blend chords in a non-conventional way that makes you listen to it over and over again, yet never get tired
@chrisw98542 ай бұрын
Doug, ive listened to this album a lot over the years but today you've taken me to another level of listening, especially Black Cow which often i would breeze through en route to Aja. Looking forward to the second side!
@TsunamiBeefPies2 ай бұрын
Thanks, Doug! This brilliant album just gets better with age, in my opinion. I could say that about almost all of the Steely Dan catalog, though. Extraordinary music that, in its way, is every bit as progressive as Gentle Giant or King Crimson. This is highly sophisticated music, and that is mostly the work of Donald Fagen, a wizard at crafting highly advanced chord structures and then fitting catchy melodies to go over them. The song "Aja" is simply a masterpiece. I'm blown away all over again every time I hear it. By the way, I was 23 when this album came out, young-en! You're the best, Doug!
@paullacroix5272 ай бұрын
Chord master Donald. He's a legend. Love these guys. Donald's voice is also unique. No one sings like him. You might do all SD albums. From Countdown to Gaucho. Also must listen to his first solo 'Nightfly', sensational record. I cried when I wrote this song, sue me if I play too long, WHAT A LINE. Well done Doug..
@CoryDrummer2 ай бұрын
I love Steely Dan. One of my favorite records of all time. Yes, I have the original record. And yes, you have to get to side 2 asap.
@stony24942 ай бұрын
An absolute timeless masterpiece 😎🙏❤️🎶
@davidboivin79962 ай бұрын
So outrageous ❤
@BillHeIsRisen2 ай бұрын
Yeah, those guys really composed some extraordinary songs, didn't they?
@grahamhowes69042 ай бұрын
Extraordinary musicianship and on AJA one of the greatest drum outros ever!
@jamieosborn2 ай бұрын
It's impossible to tire of this album.
@claudiofernandes98342 ай бұрын
FINALLY a full album reaction from one of the best bands ever!!!!!
@marccollins9317 күн бұрын
Much enjoyed you reviewing Aja, my fav album since I was 15. You may never be able to figure this out, but just close your eyes, turn it up, and listen to the masters like all of us out here. Forget school - we can all tell that you know and get it! thanks for the ride!
@themoscowrules2 ай бұрын
The same day Gadd tracked the drums to “Aja” he also recorded the drums for Leo Sayer’s huge hit “you make me feel like dancin”- supposedly all while hung over and sleepless.
@chasefreak2 ай бұрын
couldn't have as You Make Me Feel Like Dancing came out a year before the Aja album was recorded
@joecharles53682 ай бұрын
A lot Of Vitamin C!🤫
@ukiahsguitarsolos343624 күн бұрын
I very much enjoy watching someone like you (who is extremely musical) react to this stuff!
@gregbartley2475Ай бұрын
Arguably one of if not best album sides of the 70’s, any genre. Definitely my favorite.
@timothyslaughter476Ай бұрын
"Out the corner ....of my eye...i saw you ar rudies you were very high....you were high"......gets me every time.
@markseay37362 ай бұрын
Thank you Doug for coming back to Steely Dan. This album in particular. When you get to Side 2, please share with your listeners a little more about how much sonic meat is in this sandwich. Not just the musicianship, but the recording engineering and mixing. Anyone that wants to learn the art\science of audio recording needs to study and absorb this piece of work. It's just phenomenal in both conceptualization and execution. There are SO many layers to this onion to relish. It's right up there with Bohemian Rhapsody, Dark Side of the Moon, and Wish You Were Here in terms of scope and technique. As many others have mentioned, this album is part of my childhood and early music education. I was blessed to have one of the great album-oriented rock FM radio stations in my town. So, I was spoiled to hear deeper tracks from artists all the time. And on Sunday night, they would play 6 albums in their entirety. Even though it was an AOR station, they recognized the brilliance of softer music like Steely Dan and played them a lot. Because it was THAT good. And my life is richer for it.
@Parula062 ай бұрын
Truly a masterpiece. I listen to this album regularly (and The Royal Scam and Gaucho and The Nightfly and... you get the idea). Not a dud in the bunch. Simply superb.
@sanandaallsgood6732 ай бұрын
Fagan and Becker were masters at bringing jazz elements into these 'easy listening' rock songs they made. Aja is one album that holds a lot of examples such as Aja, Black Cow, Peg and Josie to name just a few. Their other albums did similar manifestations, again using studio musicians because there was no definitive band called Steely Dan. It was like Fagan and Becker were the wizards who brought Oz to the people by having the munchkins create the support.
@patrickmurphy66022 ай бұрын
Great composers can demand fealty to the music. Fagen and Becker are great contemporary composers deserving our respect.
@WilliamRogers-zn8op19 күн бұрын
You get The Dan at a level above me and im very happy you get and say what I can't.
@chrisdyre70492 ай бұрын
Doug I like the fact that it made you veer into music theory and philosophy. They were so far ahead of the time that no one has caught up yet! I used to have a complete scores book, it does exist and it is amazing to follow along with that. Great installment.
@billbrandine58572 ай бұрын
I heard this LP when it originally was released, and hearing it here today, I am STILL amazed and awed. Nothing has EVER sounded like Aja. It's on top of the pop/jazz/rock/fusion/prog list for greatness. Thanks Doug.
@donfletchersr.664425 күн бұрын
I love watching people being blow away by the Dan voicings etc. Especially by someone of this caliber. So fun watching..
@tomsvideos60142 ай бұрын
I find it amazing that Doug isn't more familiar with Steely Dan. Aja is a masterpiece and it's so much fun to watch Doug discover the genius going on in their music. Looking forward to Side two of Aja review. I wish I knew more about music so I could better understand what Doug is saying. I have listened to Aja probably hundreds of times over the years. Crazy good.
@Bryman1970Ай бұрын
i remember listening to this album in elementary school and loving it. I'm older now and have been playing music for almost 40 years. I still love it in a much more mature way musically. Still an amazing album. Aja is my favorite track.
@MrMjp5824 күн бұрын
Sheer quality. As sophisticated as pop/rock ever got. For me, Deacon Blues remains their individual stand-out track. It achieves a unique perfection for their style at that time. Excellent review Doug.
@socalltd2 ай бұрын
In the making of Aja doc, Larry Carlton was the conductor for Walt and Don in the studio. He would get demo's and sheet music to guide whoever was in the session playing that day.
@ronskopitz23602 ай бұрын
2+ years of music theory in high school and college and no one ever explained why there isn’t a 4th inversion - thank you, Doug!!
@jonnuanez71832 ай бұрын
Deacon Blues is probably the most complicated song structurewise that I know how to play on guitar. I used it as a litmus test with others when they didn't believe that I play guitar (because I guess you're supposed to "look" a certain way as a guitar player). This and Eruption (of course). There was a band called Deacon Blue that of course named themselves after this song.
@simono.sniper32142 ай бұрын
I grew up in my teens listening to all Steely Dan's albums in the 70's, and 80's. Their music changed my life.... Love them....
@waldorfstatler31292 ай бұрын
I would say that the Joni Mitchell albums Court and Spark, Hissing Of Summer Lawns, Mingus, Hejira come close to what you were saying about jazz and pop.
@tric51222 ай бұрын
There is a YT vid of a college professor that said he uses them in his music theory class. You can see why in this album. Up until the early 2000's I believe they were one of the most sampled bands in hip hop, and it's that jazz/pop fusion and unique sound that you can see why you'd want it in your songs.