| | Steely Dan Can't Buy A Thrill CD Steely Dan Discography of CDs
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Steely Dan: David Palmer (vocals); Jeff Baxter (pedal steel guitar); Walter Becker (bass instrument); Jim Hodder (background vocals); Donald Fagen, Denny Dias. Personnel: Walter Becker (vocals, guitar, electric bass, bass guitar); Donald Fagen (vocals, piano, electric piano, organ, keyboards); David Palmer (vocals, keyboards); Jim Hodder (vocals, drums, percussion); Clydie King, Sherlie Matthews, Venetta Fields (vocals, background vocals); Jeff Baxter (guitar, steel guitar, Spanish guitar); Denny Dias (guitar, sitar, electric sitar); Elliot Randall, Elliott Randall, Denny Diaz (guitar); Jerome Richardson (saxophone, tenor saxophone); Snooky Young (flugelhorn, horns); Victor Feldman (keyboards, percussion); David Paich (keyboards); Shirley Matthews (background vocals). Additional personnel: Victor Feldman, Clydie King, Elliott Randall, Jerome Richardson, Snooky Young, Venetta Fields, Shirley Matthews. Audio Remasterer: Roger Nichols . Liner Note Authors: Donald Fagen; Walter Becker; Tristan Fabriani. Recording information: The Village Recorder, Los Angeles, CA; Village Recorder, Los Angeles, CA. Walter Becker and Donald Fagen were remarkable craftsmen from the start, as Steely Dan's debut, Can't Buy a Thrill, illustrates. Each song is tightly constructed, with interlocking chords and gracefully interwoven melodies, buoyed by clever, cryptic lyrics. All of these are hallmarks of Steely Dan's signature sound, but what is most remarkable about the record is the way it differs from their later albums. Of course, one of the most notable differences is the presence of vocalist David Palmer, a professional blue-eyed soul vocalist who oversings the handful of tracks where he takes the lead. Palmer's very presence signals the one major flaw with the album -- in an attempt to appeal to a wide audience, Becker and Fagen tempered their wildest impulses with mainstream pop techniques. Consequently, there are very few of the jazz flourishes that came to distinguish their albums -- the breakthrough single, "Do It Again," does work an impressively tight Latin jazz beat, and "Reelin' in the Years" has jazzy guitar solos and harmonies -- and the production is overly polished, conforming to all the conventions of early-'70s radio. Of course, that gives these decidedly twisted songs a subversive edge, but compositionally, these aren't as innovative as their later work. Even so, the best moments ("Dirty Work," "Kings," "Midnight Cruiser," "Turn That Heartbeat Over Again") are wonderful pop songs that subvert traditional conventions and more than foreshadow the paths Steely Dan would later take. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine This is the album that introduced Donald Fagen and Walter Becker's unique, idiosyncratic, and highly polished craftsmanship. Although CAN'T BUY A THRILL lacks the overtly jazzy tendencies that would define albums like AJA, it distinguishes itself from nearly all of the mainstream pop and rock of the era with its smooth, lounge-y feel, catchy hooks, and immaculate studio polish. They were played alongside the Doobie Brothers and the Eagles on '70s FM radio, but Steely Dan's sound was more self-conscious and sophisticated than its peers: this was postmodern R&B, dressed up in a tuxedo, and holding an advanced degree. The album's hit single "Do It Again" is textbook Dan, with its slinky, Latin-touched groove, expansive, minor key melody, and shimmering veneer. Fagen's quirky vocals grace the track, and the record's other hit, the chugging "Reeling In the Years," with its memorable looping guitar riff, but several cuts here feature the vocals of David Palmer, whose sincere, straightforward pop-soul approach seems at odds with the band's aesthetic. Even so, CAN'T BUY A THRILL sparkles, and is the first impressive notch for a band whose output would continue to improve.
Remastered
Can't Buy A Thrill Music | List Price | $9.95 (You save $3.46) | | Category | Rock Albums, Pop CDs, Rock/Pop | | Label | MCA | | Orig Year | 1972 | | All Time Sales Rank | 879  | | CD Universe Part number | 1104175 | | Catalog number | 11886 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Nov 17, 1998 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Gary Katz; Gary Katz; Donald Fagen (Reissue); Walter Becker (Reissue) | | Engineer | Roger Nichols; Roger Nichols | | Recording Time | 40 minutes | | Personnel | David Paich - keyboards Clydie King Venetta Fields - vocals, background vocals Donald Fagen - vocals, piano, electric piano, organ, keyboards David Palmer - vocals David Palmer - vocals Walter Becker - vocals, guitar Sherlie Matthews Jeff "Skunk" Baxter Snooky Young - flugelhorn, horns Elliot Randall Denny Dias - guitar, sitar, electric sitar Shirley Matthews - background vocals Jim Hodder - vocals, drums, percussion
Also: Victor Feldman, Jerome Richardson, Jeff Porcaro, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Larry Carlton, as Steely Dan's debut, illustrates | | Additional Info | Remastered |
Steely Dan Can't Buy A Thrill Songs Can't Buy A Thrill Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)   To Me, This Was Their Best!!! There are definitely two types of Steely Dan, and I loved this version when it first came out. I think they were never better than this one, and I own every cd they have put out. Don't get me wrong, their other cd's are also good, but this one is my favorite!!! Submitted by S. Jenkins (Knoxville, TN, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
A Great Beginning... This is Steely Dan's first album and for me it's nothing to be with what happened next in their succesful career.Donald Fagen and Mr.Becker were just starting their master band and mixing up their emotions in wonderful songs like Do It Again or Reelin' In The Years.Some people thinks this is their worst album because of the different sound of what came after with albums such as Aja or Gaucho...but for me i will listening once again to Dirty Work...the best fm song ever written and sang by David Palmer which left the band after this first album of one of the best band of the world. Submitted by losangeles32 (Gran Canary,Spain) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Superb debut from studio masters I first heard 'Do It Again' on the radio in the early seventies and felt it sounded fresh & different. Most of you will remember 'Reeling in the Years' also, but the remainder of the album is consistently good; another favourite of mine is Midnight Cruiser with some excellent guitar from Jeff Baxter. Steely Dan were a band (without any top session guys) at that time and they actually toured back then. Anyway, a great debut and a wonderful introduction to the masters Becker & Fagen. Catch them live if you can! Submitted by a reviewer (Croydon, Surrey, England) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
A Masterpiece The writing and music arangements a true masterpiece Submitted by JTaylor (Savannah,Ga) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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$17.15 A review written for the Folk & Acoustic Music Exchangeby Mark S. Tucker(progdawg@hotmail.com).First of all, if you haven't yet caught Danny's killer No Easy Way Out (here7)…well, ya gotta. It's a barnstormer, a soulfully riveting CD that comes on like a blistering blues hurricane sweeping all before its path. The disc easily made my Top 10 of the year for ALL genres, and I've been impatiently waiting like a kid in a candy store for this, a boogie-ing blues rave-up carrying forward everything contained in No Easy Way. Live, Brooks doesn't lose an ounce of the studio magic, as joyfully gritty and effervescent as one would most fervently hope.The Rockin' Revelators back him solidly, especially the horn section -- just trumpet and sax but, man, do they make themselves felt!—even in the melancholy ballads ("Down on my Knees", etc.), where the New Orleans element is most naked. In this disc, Brooks makes no effort to hide his Christian conversion or the saving graces it has endowed him with. I'm always asked if, as an atheist and anarchist, that doesn't make me uncomfortable, and my reply is simple: "Jesus was one of history's greatest anarchists, admired by Erasmus, Paine, Jefferson, and others equally Humanist, and his example has been a constant reference in my personal anarchy." This sends the interrogater away thoughtful…and that's precisely the effect of Live at the Palais Royale. You have to consider what it means, despite innumerable ills, when religion can save people's minds and souls, especially as it restores an incredible musician like Danny Brooks to a height he might never have achieved without it. Makes one pause, doesn't it?Live is a rollicking, boogie-ing, sweating, burning, hip-shaking display of pure unbridled energy with tons of grinning-like-a-cat sincerity. Brooks means each and every syllable he sings, earnest down to the soles of his feet, but that doesn't say that he can't have a damn good time, and, boy howdy!, doesn't the audience know it! They're floored between every cut. I've said it before and I'll say it again, though I know the utterance is sheerest ...
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