Shining the spotlight on those forgotten players.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Sweet Jesus, That's Smooth! The 1970s Guitarists of Steely Dan (Part 1)

This latest blog posting will be covering a group of players very dear to this reporter's heart. The music of Steely Dan in the 1970s, as well as being some of the most melodic and aurally-satisfying  pop music one can come upon, can be seen as a potted history of the electric guitar. Across a series of seven long players, Messrs Becker and Fagen provided the platform for a host of the era's axe-wielders to show off their enviable skills. What follows is an brief introduction to some of these talented muthafuckas. Let us begin with a familiar air.

Steely Dan began in New York as a songwriting vehicle for two slightly snobby, highly-talented, jazz-obsessed misfits, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen. Both had gained experiences working in the lower echelons of the  Brill Building, the legendary songwriting factory that produced most of the iconic pop tunes of the 1960s. Having grown tired of the Brill Building slog, the two writers hooked up with the precocious jazz guitarist, Denny Dias. Pretty soon though, Becker and Fagen got songwriting work on the West Coast, only calling on Dias when this work dried up. It is in Los Angeles that Steely Dan really came together, with Jeff 'Skunk' Baxter and Jim Hodder joining on guitar and drums respectfully. With temporary lead vocalist David Palmer, the group recorded their 1972 debut, Can't Buy A Thrill. Even at this early stage, Becker and Fagen's perfectionist tenancies would come to the fore, with the employment of session-head Elliot Randall to rip it up on tracks like Reelin' In The Years and this next one when Baxter or Dias was not cutting the mustard.

After the release of Can't Buy A Thrill, Steely Dan went on the road. However, it soon became apparent that the natural habitat for Becker and Fagen's sarky material for the foreseeable would be air-conditioned L.A. studios, full to the brim with the latest in recording technology. By 1974's Pretzel Logic, it was also clear that they would be handpicking instrumentalists to suit their songs, rather than depending on a consistent band lineup. While they would employ Denny Dias and his formidable jazzy chops on future albums like The Royal Scam and Aja, guitar wildman 'Skunk' Baxter and his winning handlebar mustache was shown the door. He would find himself part of another band of West Coast smooth merchants, The Doobie Brothers. Here is one of Skunk's last hurrahs with the Dan. Remember him like this, guitar nuts.

For good measure, he is a track that showcases Dias and Skunk's contrasting solos styles. Dias could out-bop any jazzhead you care to name, while Baxter was a rock 'n' roll animal, injecting the Dan's music with some welcomed fuzztone. Denny goes first while Skunk takes the outro.


Stay tuned kids for some more Dan-related postings in the future. G'Luck.


Recommended Listening: Countdown To Ecstacy (1973)
http://allmusic.com/album/countdown-to-ecstasy-r18941

Some Great Early Dan Guitar Highlights: The Boston Rag (Countdown To Ecstacy), My Old School (Countdown To Ecstacy), Parker's Band (Pretzel Logic)

1 comment:

kathy said...

Thanks for the write up on Steely Dan history. Too bad the videos have been removed...a reference to what might have been on the video would be great.