Search - Steely Dan :: Everything Must Go (CD & Dvd)

Everything Must Go (CD & Dvd)
Steely Dan
Everything Must Go (CD & Dvd)
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

After trading their infamous two-decade hiatus for an armful of Grammies, Steely Dan breezed through the recording of Two Against Nature's follow-up in a year--near record time in the oft-tortuous Becker/Fagan sessionograp...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Steely Dan
Title: Everything Must Go (CD & Dvd)
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Reprise / Wea
Original Release Date: 1/1/2003
Re-Release Date: 6/10/2003
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
Styles: Soft Rock, Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 093624849025

Synopsis

Amazon.com
After trading their infamous two-decade hiatus for an armful of Grammies, Steely Dan breezed through the recording of Two Against Nature's follow-up in a year--near record time in the oft-tortuous Becker/Fagan sessionography. Loosening their notoriously anal retentive studio bent has yielded upbeat immediacy, an almost un-Dan-like brightness to jazzy funk and blues that snap and crackle--even if pop is obviously the farthest thing from their fevered brows. But anyone who confuses the sunny disposition of "Blues Beach" and others here with anything but an ever slyer incarnation of their trademark irony and icy veneer just isn't paying attention. Bookended by "The Last Mall" (a cool, chunky update of "Black Friday"'s apocalypse) and a bluesy, laconic title track that serves up metaphors for bankruptcies both commercial and moral, Walt and Don argue that our once fair society may well be past redemption. Better to simply close out the excess with a good blue-light special. "Godwhacker" serves jazz-head notice on no less than the almighty, whilst Becker makes his belated Steely Dan vocal bow on the slinky "Slang of Ages," daring to be termed "Newmanesque" for rhyming "netherworld" with "Duke of Earl"--if not his lugubrious, lounge-lizard delivery. Abetted by guitarists Hugh McCracken and Jon Herrington, the sax of Walt Weiskopf (and others), and synched to the playful grooves of drummer Keith Carlock, Becker and Fagan bring a deliciously detached elegance to "Green Book" and "Pixeleen"'s sharp musings on digital vidiocy, forging an album that's a cunning, symbolic reminder that the sun will shine brightest just before it explodes. --Jerry McCulley

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VALERIE P. (that-girl) from ATLANTA, GA
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the latest release from this classic 70s rock duo
0 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.

CD Reviews

NOT a DVD-AUDIO!!!
Scott Simeon | 04/16/2008
(2 out of 5 stars)

"I bought this, thinking it was a dvd-a (dvd-audio), playable in 5.1 surround.

While this album DOES come in that format, this particular Amazon product is NOT the one you want, if you're looking for DVD-AUDIO!! I already own the regular CD (great album)... what I wanted was the DVD-AUDIO.

I have to return it now."
Great CD-though a bit a pop added.....
D. Charles | PA | 09/12/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Why is it that people who listen to Steely Dan give such heady and presumptuously pompous reviews. (There are even websites dedicated to the assumtions of what Donald Fagan REALLY means in his lyrics!) As William Shatner mused in his Star Trek Convention SNL skit, "Get a life!"



Even the highly educated understand "GREAT CD!" Sheesh! :-)Take yourself a bit lighter there, Mr. Mc Cully. We understand you know some big words already! ;-)



Just kidding, but seriously, this is a pretty darn good CD. A bit absent is the lush orchestration and production from the older CD's but a great effort none the less. Good grooves and awesome players, this all fits the mold of a classic SD disk.



Strong recommendation.



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