| | Steely Dan Pretzel Logic CD Steely Dan Discography of CDs
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Steely Dan: Denny Dias (guitar); Walter Becker (bass instrument); Donald Fagen, Jeff Baxter. Personnel: Walter Becker (vocals, guitar); Donald Fagen (vocals, keyboards); Timothy B. Schmit (vocals); Dean Parks, Denny Diaz, Jeff Baxter, Ben Benay (guitar); Ernie Watts, Jerome Richardson, Plas Johnson (saxophone); Ollie Mitchell (trumpet); Lew McCreary (horns); Victor Feldman (keyboards, percussion); David Paich, Michael Omartian (keyboards); Jeff Porcaro, Jim Gordon , Jim Hodder (drums). Additional personnel: Victor Feldman, Timothy B. Schmit (marimba); Chuck Rainey (bass instrument); Dean Parks, Jeff Porcaro, Jim Gordon , Michael Omartian. Liner Note Authors: Donald Fagen; Walter Becker. Recording information: The Village recorder, West Los Angeles, CA; Village Recorder, West Los Angeles, CA; West Recorder, West L.A., CA. Photographer: Ed Caraeff. Unknown Contributor Roles: Dean Parks; Victor Feldman; Michael Omartian; Chuck Rainey; Jim Gordon ; Jeff Porcaro; David Paich; Ernie Watts; Tubby Bruce; Tubby Burce; Jerome Richardson; Plas Johnson ; Wilton Felder; Ollie Mitchell; Ben Benay; Lew McCreary. Countdown to Ecstasy wasn't half the hit that Can't Buy a Thrill was, and Steely Dan responded by trimming the lengthy instrumental jams that were scattered across Countdown and concentrating on concise songs for Pretzel Logic. While the shorter songs usually indicate a tendency toward pop conventions, that's not the case with Pretzel Logic. Instead of relying on easy hooks, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen assembled their most complex and cynical set of songs to date. Dense with harmonics, countermelodies, and bop phrasing, Pretzel Logic is vibrant with unpredictable musical juxtapositions and snide, but very funny, wordplay. Listen to how the album's hit single, "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," opens with a syncopated piano line that evolves into a graceful pop melody, or how the title track winds from a blues to a jazzy chorus -- Becker and Fagen's craft has become seamless while remaining idiosyncratic and thrillingly accessible. Since the songs are now paramount, it makes sense that Pretzel Logic is less of a band-oriented album than Countdown to Ecstasy, yet it is the richest album in their catalog, one where the backhanded Dylan tribute "Barrytown" can sit comfortably next to the gorgeous "Any Major Dude Will Tell You." Steely Dan made more accomplished albums than Pretzel Logic, but they never made a better one. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Steely Dan holds the title as one of the most quietly subversive pop bands of the 20th century. They managed--on their first two albums and, especially, on PRETZEL LOGIC--to combine breezy, ear-pleasing accessibility with an immensely sophisticated sensibility that upended most pop conventions. On PRETZEL LOGIC that combination is perfected, even as band masterminds Donald Fagen and Walter Becker moved deeper into jazz-influenced territory. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," the album's lead off track, is a case in point. A sinuous slice of jazz-pop that merges piano balladry with a samba-esque groove, the song became a Top Ten hit. Though Fagen and Becker write the material and handle vocals/keyboards and bass, respectively, their recording process increasingly involved a rotating cast of session musicians, honing their studio-cobbled sound to a flawless perfection. The bar is raised in terms of musicianship here, as evidenced by the sassy cover of Duke Ellington's "East St. Louis Toodle-Oo and the bop atheleticism of "Parker's Band," a tribute to Charlie Parker. Yet Steely Dan blend their colors ever more effectively here, writing shorter, sharper compositions packed with harmonies, instrumental interplay, witty wordplay, and satisfying hooks. PRETZEL LOGIC ranks alongside AJA as one of the band's finest achievements.
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Uncut (3/00, p.88) - 5 stars out of 5 - "...PRETZEL LOGIC retains its reputation as the group's most melodic work..." Steely Dan Pretzel Logic Songs Pretzel Logic Music Review Average Rating: (4.6 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews One of Steely Dan's Two Great Records in Remastered Sound! Of all of Fagen & Becker's albums, only the "band" album "Can't Buy a Thrill" can compare with "Pretzel Logic". The songwriting and playing are fantastic.
Highlights: With a Gun, Rikki Don't Lose That Number, Barrytown. Submitted by robrich (Gainesville, FL)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
The best Steely Dan album? I'm willing to put money on that, if I can find a taker.
For fans of the Dan, this album is essential. You could pass up "Katy Lied" or even "The Royal Scam" (though you shouldn't) as long as you picked up "Pretzel Logic."
It has it all: pop numbers like "Rikki Don't Lose That Number" and "Barrytown"; the retro "East St. Louis Toodle-oo" and "Parker's Band"; experimental cuts like "Charlie Freak"; and finally, the usual Dan social commentary (circa early 70s) in "Through With Buzz" and "Monkey In Your Soul."
Steely Dan has always had a reputation for excellent arrangements. This album really shows the breadth of their accomplishments in arranging.
Any major dude will tell you, "Buy it."
Submitted by a reviewer (St. Louis, MO)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
The Best of the Low Lifes Over 30 yrs. later, it's really remarkable how some things get better with time. The songs, the lyrics, the stories, the musicianship, the diversity, the pop artistry- jazz, rock, soul, and country! After all of these years, I still come back to 'The Dan': tales of rouges, losers, cheap women, and crime, all with an air of poetic justice. "Ya just gotta luv da Dan!" Submitted by St.Dvy. (Windham, Me.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Jazz Influence Shines Through. Steely Dan's jazzier roots really came to the forefront with "Pretzel Logic." Following two excellent albums with extended soloing and a few lengthy pieces, the band (or should I say "concept"?) released a palatable set of compact songs (all the tracks clocked in under 5 minutes). The jazz influence is strongly evident in the flopanda introduction to "Rikki Don't Lose that Number", the cover of Duke Ellington's "East St Louis Toodle-oo", and, of course, the tip of the hat to Charlie Parker with "Parker's Band". The instrumentation is top-notch especially the guitar solo on "Rikki" and the piano lines on "Charlie Freak" and the acoustic tracks such as "With A Gun" and "Any Major Dude Will Tell You" and Donald Fagen finally cuts loose with his alto sax on "East St. Louis". The Dan's entire catalogue being great, I single "Pretzel" out as perhaps their all-time finest. Submitted by Will-T (Lawrenceburg IN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
A weaker one, but still cool I am a serious Dan fan, but I want to temper the positive reviews here a little.
This album I feel is one of the Dan's weaker albums. There are too many songs, and there is not as much coherency as other Steely dan albums. The juxtaposition of jazz homage ("East St. Toodle Do etc) and pure rock("Night by night" etc) does not feel quite right, and some songs are downright bad ("through with buzz"). Still there are some real gems, and songs like "Monkey in your soul" and "Any major dude will tell you" make up for the weaknesses elsewhere.
Overall still a very cool album, but not one of the Dan's better efforts. Submitted by boris_boy (Brisbane, Australia) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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