For the coup-de-gras, they’re outrageous

It’s no secret among readers of this blog that I absolutely love Steely Dan. The seven albums Donald Fagen and Walter Becker put together during their initial run (1972-1980) are so consistently excellent as to defy comparison with any other artist of the same period, or maybe any period.

They started out as staff songwriters for ABC/Dunhill Records, but their songs were so idiosyncratic and quirky that no one else would touch them, so they formed their own group and recorded the songs themselves. They had hit singles right out of the gate — “Do It Again” and “Reelin’ in the Years” — but Steely Dan fairly quickly evolved into a two-man studio outfit, with Fagen and Becker bringing in dozens of seasoned session musicians to record individual tracks.

The songs offered some of the most literate, enigmatic lyrics in the business — puzzling, alluring, always entertaining wordplay often centering on strange characters engaged in nefarious activities.

In another installment of my Hack’s Back Pages Lyrics Quizzes, I have selected 20 Steely Dan song lyrics for you to mull over. See how many you can identify, and then scroll down to see how well you did, and read a little about the meaning or circumstances behind each one. There is, as always, a Spotify playlist at there end so you can listen to these tracks again, perhaps more closely than before.

Rock on!

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1 “When you need a bit of lovin’ ’cause your man is out of town, /That’s the time you get me runnin’, and you know I’ll be around…”

2 “Tonight when I chase the dragon, the water may change to cherry wine…”

3 “Got a case of dynamite, I could hold out here all night, /Yes, I crossed my old man back in Oregon…”

4 “She’s the raw flame, the live wire, /She prays like a Roman with her eyes on fire…”

5 “Are you crazy? Are you high? Or just an ordinary guy? /Have you done all you can do?…”

6 “On that train, all graphite and glitter, undersea by rail, /Ninety minutes from New York to Paris, well, by ’76 we’ll be A-OK…”

7 “I stepped up on the platform, the man gave me the news, /He said, ‘You must be joking, son — Where did you get those shoes?’…”

8 “Hush, brother, we cross the square, act natural like you don’t care, /Turn slowly and comb your hair, don’t trouble the midnight air…”

9 “The girls don’t seem to care what’s on, as long as they play till dawn, /Nothin’ but blues and Elvis…”

10 “California tumbles into the sea, /That’ll be the day I go back to Annandale…”

11 “Honey, how you’ve grown, like a rose, /Well, we used to play when we were three…”

12 “You been tellin’ me you’re a genius since you were seventeen, /In all the time I’ve known you, I still don’t know what you mean…”

13 “So useless to ask me why, throw a kiss and say goodbye, /I’ll make it this time, /I’m ready to cross that fine line…”

14 “An independent station, WJAZ, with jazz and conversation from the foot of Mt. Belzoni…”

15 “We hear you’re leaving, that’s OK, I thought our little wild time had just begun…”

16 “All those day-glo freaks who used to paint the face, they’ve joined the human race, /Some things will never change…”

17 “Attention all shoppers, it’s Cancellation Day, /Yes, the ‘big adios’ is just a few hours away…”

18 “She’s a charmer like you never seen, singing ‘Voulez voulez voulez vous?’…”

19 “Then you love a little wild one, and she brings you only sorrow, /All the time you know she’s smilin’, you’ll be on your knees tomorrow…”

20 “The Cuervo Gold, the fine Colombian make tonight a wonderful thing…”

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1 “Dirty Work,” from “Can’t Buy a Thrill” (1972)

Most Steely Dan songs are too enigmatic and non-commercial for other bands to consider covering, so the fact that a half-dozen other artists (Ian Matthews, Melissa Manchester, The Pointer Sisters) took a stab at “Dirty Work” tells you how conventional its structure is. Fagen, describing an affair between a single man and a married woman, didn’t want to sing it himself and so had vocalist David Palmer handle it on the band’s recording.

2 “Time Out of Mind,” from “Gaucho” (1980)

This immaculate track from “Gaucho,” which features the great Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits guesting on guitar, is a thinly veiled song about a young man’s first experience with heroin, introduced to him by a quasi-hipster who talks of “chasing the dragon.” Three years in the making, “Gaucho” has been maligned as “a yacht rock masterpiece” but is also considered “a classic lost in the shadow of ‘Aja’ and the changing tides of music in 1980.”

3 “Don’t Take Me Alive,” from “The Royal Scam” (1976)

Becker said this song was inspired by a series of news articles in Los Angeles about troubled people who barricaded themselves with a huge arsenal of weapons. The lyrics allude to the sense of fear and madness that the unhinged narrator feels (“A man of my mind can do anything,” “Here in this darkness, I know what I’ve done, I know all at once who I am“), creating one of the songwriters’ darkest vignettes on what is their most isolated, alienated album, “The Royal Scam.”

4 “Josie,” from “Aja” (1977)

Before they were signed to a recording contract, Becker and Fagen were hired as songwriters, and they cut demos of many of those tunes, some of which are available if you look for them. One is “Ida Lee,” with lyrics that resurfaced in a different way for “Josie,” which also focuses on a badass woman who returns to her old neighborhood with a few nefarious characters in tow. It ended up as an “Aja” single, reaching #26 in 1978.

5 “Doctor Wu,” from “Katy Lied” (1975)

Said Fagen about this irresistible song, “It’s about a love-and-drugs triangle. The girl meets somebody who leads another kind of life and she’s attracted to it. Then she comes under the spell of someone else, which ends or significantly alters the relationship. The someone else, in this case, is a drug habit, personified as Doctor Wu.” It’s probably the best track on “Katy Lied,” although there at least six others of similar worth competing with it.

6 “I.G.Y. (What a Beautiful World),” from Donald Fagen’s “The Nightfly” (1982)

The International Geophysical Year (I.G.Y.) was an international scientific project in 1957-58 that promoted collaboration among the world’s scientists, presenting an optimistic vision of futuristic concepts such as solar powered cities, a transatlantic tunnel and permanent space stations. Fagen said he remembered being excited by the prospects of a “gleaming future,” and he wanted the song to offer an uplifting look back at that rosy promise.

7 “Pretzel Logic,” from “Pretzel Logic” (1974)

Fagen and Becker were both science fiction fans and fascinated by the idea of time travel. The lyrics of this superb blues shuffle mention different time periods that were of interest to the songwriters — the American South during the time of minstrel shows in the late 1800s, and the years when Napoleon ruled France before he lost his mind. The reference to “the platform” was the teleportation device that would send them off to other centuries.

8 “Chain Lightning,” from “Katy Lied” (1975)

I went bonkers for the “Katy Lied” album when it came out, and always loved the groove of this track even if I didn’t really know what the lyrics were getting at. Fagen and Becker rarely talked about their lyrics back then, but more recently, Fagen has been more forthcoming. Turns out it’s about two scenes, 40 years apart: The first verse describes a well-attended fascist rally during Hitler’s reign, while the second verse depicts a revisiting of the same site decades later for guilty reminiscence.

9 “FM (No Static at All),” from the soundtrack for the film “FM” (1978)

The film “FM” bombed, but its soundtrack album was a multi-platinum success, led by Fagen and Becker’s marvelous title track. The phrase “no static at all” served as an FM station slogan but also underscored how FM radio by then had become more predictable than in the freewheeling days when deejays wielded more control over what was aired. Some AM stations refused to play a song that touted FM radio, but it still managed to reach #22 on US pop charts.

10 “My Old School,” from “Countdown to Ecstasy” (1973)

Fagen and Becker met in college in 1968 at Bard College, and their experiences there proved to be rich fodder for “My Old School,” with its comical sarcasm about never going back to Annandale, the city on the Hudson River where Bard is located. The lyrics use both factual and fictionalized anecdotes about a campus drug bust and the ensuing fallout for the songwriters and some of their friends. It was released as a single but inexplicably stalled at #63 in 1973.

11 “Cousin Dupree,” from “Two Against Nature” (2000)

Twenty years after Steely Dan’s last album, “Gaucho,” the duo at last reconvened to produce “Two Against Nature,” which, while not as strong as their Seventies work, still won the Album of the Year Grammy in 2001. By far the best track is the lyrically creepy “Cousin Dupree,” which tells the tale of a deadbeat relative who harbors lust for his younger cousin, hoping she’ll reciprocate the feelings, to no avail. “How about a kiss for your cousin Dupree,” indeed…

12 “Reelin’ in the Years,” from “Can’t Buy a Thrill” (1972)

The lyrics to this iconic classic rocker amount to a conversation between a man and woman who were once a couple but the woman fell for someone else. The man belittles his ex (“You wouldn’t even known a diamond if you held it in your hand“) while she points out it was his ego that she couldn’t abide (“You’ve been telling me you were a genius since you were seventeen“). A sizzling Elliott Randall guitar solo and full-bodied chorus helped lift this song to #11 on the charts.

13 “Deacon Blues,” from “Aja” (1977)

Fagen was watching football one fall afternoon and made an observation: “If a college football team like the University of Alabama could have a grandiose name like the Crimson Tide, then the nerds and losers should be entitled to a grandiose name as well.” Borrowing the name Deacon from Pro Bowl star Deacon Jones, he came up with the title character, who Becker said was “a broken man with a broken dream leading a broken life.”

14 “The Nightfly,” from Donald Fagen’s “The Nightfly” (1982)

As a kid, Fagen had always loved listening to jazz on late-night radio, and dreamed of becoming a deejay someday. He never did that gig, but this track from his solo album of the same name provides, as writer Arthur Phillips put it, “a portrait of a late-night D.J. in Baton Rouge, taking lunatic phone calls from listeners, smoking Chesterfield cigarettes and drinking coffee, all the while silently battling his own loneliness and regret.”

15 “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number,” from “Pretzel Logic” (1974)

Steely Dan’s highest-charting single (#4) is about a real person Fagen knew in college. Rikki Ducornet was a novelist and the pregnant wife of a member of the Bard faculty, and Fagen had a big enough crush on her that he gave her his phone number in the hopes that she would call. “He thought I was cute,” she recalled, “and I thought he was brilliant. I never did call him, though.” She moved to France, and upon her return to the US, she was stunned to hear Fagen’s voice singing her name on the radio.

16 “Kid Charlemagne,” from “The Royal Scam” (1976)

This arresting portrait of a Bay Area drug dealer is loosely based on infamous LSD manufacturer Augustus Owsley Stanley, with lyrics that make overt references to his reputation and how it can all come crashing down: “You were the best in town,” “Yours was kitchen clean,” “You are obsolete,” “You are still an outlaw in their eyes.” Jazz guitarist Larry Carlton takes this tune to another level with some of the finest soloing you’ll find anywhere in The Dan’s catalog.

17 “The Last Mall,” from “Everything Must Go” (2003)

Becker and Fagen had always been intrigued by stories involving the apocalypse having grown up in the age of bomb shelters and air raid drills. How typical of them to write a song making light of the fact that people might prepare for the end of the world by making one last outing to the shopping mall. It’s arguably the best track on their lackluster 2003 follow-up to “Two Against Nature,” which brought the Steely Dan studio album collection to a close.

18 “Pearl of the Quarter,” from “Countdown to Ecstasy” (1973)

This charming tune from the underrated “Countdown to Ecstasy” album may be the only one in Steely Dan’s catalog that qualifies as a love song. The narrator confesses that the prostitute from New Orleans — the “pearl of the (French) Quarter” — has captured his heart, and he reassures her she’ll always have “a place to go” if she chooses to retire from her profession. It was written in the duo’s early days, passed over for the debut LP, then resurrected in 1973. Sweet pedal steel guitar by Jeff “Skunk” Baxter.

19 “Do It Again,” from “Can’t Buy a Thrill” (1972)

Right from the get-go, for the song that introduced the world to Steely Dan, the lyrics of Fagen and Becker were populated with outlaws and malcontents. The central character is arrested for murder but is let off easy, only to “go back, Jack, do it again,” turning to gambling and sex addiction, showing himself to be unable to change his ways. The Latin-flavored song made it to #6 on US pop charts in the winter of 1972-73, setting the stage for a long line of outliers and mavericks in the group’s lyrics.

20 “Hey Nineteen,” from “Gaucho” (1980)

When Becker and Fagen wrote this catchy tune about an older man dating a much younger woman, they were in their early 30s, so a generation gap between themselves and a 19-year-old could still be felt: “She don’t remember the Queen of Soul,” “No, we got nothing in common,” “No, we can’t talk at all.” The age difference between the two characters makes you wonder whether the tequila and the cocaine that “make tonight a wonderful thing” were being used by the man alone after the woman ditched him…

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The Spotify playlist includes all 20 songs featured in the lyrics quiz, in order.

Have you got the information??

Here at Hack’s Back Pages,” I’m continually providing bits of what I hope you find interesting music trivia, and now and then, I like to share these facts in the form of a quiz to test my readers’ knowledge.

Go ahead, give Rock Music Trivia Quiz #4 a shot! You might know more than you think you do.

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1. Who was the first of these female artists to have a #1 single in the U.S.?

Petula Clark

Dusty Springfield

Lesley Gore

Dionne Warwick

2. Which David Bowie album features Stevie Ray Vaughan’s guitar work on most tracks?

“Scary Monsters” (1980)

“Let’s Dance” (1983)

“Heroes” (1977)

“Tonight” (1984)

3. Which of these four songwriters did NOT have one of their songs turned into a Three Dog Night hit single?

Randy Newman

Laura Nyro

Harry Nilsson

Carole King

4. Who was Neil Young singing about in his hit “Old Man”?

His grandfather

The caretaker of his ranch

His high school music teacher

B.B. King

5. Which major songwriter wrote this iconic line of lyric: “I was so much older then; I’m younger than that now”?

Paul Simon

Joni Mitchell

Bob Dylan

John Lennon

6. Which of these fine guitarists did NOT made a guest appearance on a Steely Dan record?

Rick Derringer

Eric Clapton

Mark Knopfler

Larry Carlton

7. Who had the most Top Ten singles on U.S. charts during the disco era (1974-1980)?

The Bee Gees

Donna Summer

K.C. & The Sunshine Band

Kool and The Gang

8. What album from 1973 is the only solo Beatles album to feature all four Beatles on it?

“Mind Games,” John Lennon

“Ringo,” Ringo Starr

“Band on the Run,” Paul McCartney

“Living in the Material World,” George Harrison

9. In the 1980s, Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” was far and away the most popular album, holding on to the #1 spot on Billboard’s Top Albums an incredible 37 weeks in 1983-84. What album ranked second behind “Thriller” for most weeks at #1 in the 1980s?

“Synchronicity,” The Police

“Hi Infidelity,” REO Speedwagon

“Purple Rain,” Prince

“Whitney Houston,” Whitney Houston

10. Which hit single by Creedence Clearwater Revival was NOT written by singer John Fogerty?

“Lookin’ Out My Back Door”

“Fortunate Son”

“Suzie-Q”

“Proud Mary”

Extra credit question!

There are several examples of different Top Ten songs that share the same title. Which song title below has been used on more Top Ten hits than the others?

“Magic”

“Venus”

“Lady”

“Fire”

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1 Lesley Gore

Gore was only 17 when “It’s My Party” rocketed to #1 in June 1963. Petula Clark’s #1 hit “Downtown” didn’t come until January 1965. Dionne Warwick’s early hits failed to reach #1, and she didn’t reach the top spot until 1974 with “Then Came You.” Dusty Springfield’s “You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me” was #1 in England in 1966 but peaked at #4 in the U.S.; she never had a #1 hit here.

Stevie Ray Vaughan and David Bowie, 1983

2 “Let’s Dance”

In 1982 at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland, Bowie first heard Austin, Texas-based blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, then mostly unknown, and when the time came to record “Let’s Dance,” Bowie tracked Vaughan down and enlisted him to overdub lead guitar solos on six of the album’s eight tracks, most notably on “Criminal World,” “Cat People (Putting Out Fire)” and the title track. It was the only time Vaughan appeared on a Bowie album.

Carole King and Gerry Goffin

3 Carole King

King, usually with her then-husband Gerry Goffin, wrote many hits for other artists (“I’m Into Something good” for Herman’s Hermits, “Don’t Bring Me Down” for The Animals and “Pleasant Valley Sunday” for The Monkees, among others). But Three Dog Night never recorded one of her tunes. The vocal trio did record Randy Newman’s “Mama Told Me Not To Come,” Laura Nyro’s “Eli’s Comin'” and Harry Nilsson’s “One.”

4 “Old Man” was written about the caretaker on Neil Young’s ranch

In 2006, Young explained the origin of “Old Man”: “Being a rich hippie for the first time, I had purchased a ranch, and there was a couple living on it who were the caretakers, an old gentleman named Louis Avila and his wife Clara. Louis took me for a ride in his blue Jeep, and he gets me up there on the top side of the place, and there’s this lake up there that fed all the pastures, and he says, ‘Well, tell me, how does a young man like yourself have enough money to buy a place like this?’ And I said, ‘Well, just lucky, Louis, just real lucky.’ And he said, ‘Well, that’s the darnedest thing I ever heard.’ And I wrote this song for him.”

5 Bob Dylan wrote “I was so much older then; I’m younger than that now” in “My Back Pages”

By the time of his fourth album, appropriately titled “Another Side of Bob Dylan,” he had begun to veer away from what he called “finger-pointing songs” that took issue with political leaders. Music critic Tim Riley said the new material “constituted a decisive act of non-commitment… in which he renounced his over-serious messianic perch and disowned false insights.” Dylan would occasionally return to so-called protest songs in his career, but at that point, he was eager to show a sense of humor and idealism, as shown in the song “My Back Pages.”

6 Eric Clapton

Rick Derringer played on three Steely Dan songs — “Show Biz Kids,” “Chain Lightning” and “My Rival.” Mark Knopfler guested on the single “Time Out of Mind.” Larry Carlton was almost a regular member, playing on “Daddy Don’t Live in New York City No More,” “Kid Charlemagne,” “Don’t Take Me Alive,” “Everything You Did,” “The Royal Scam,” “Third World Man” and five out of seven tunes on the “Aja” album. Eric Clapton was either never asked or declined to participate in any Steely Dan session.

7 Donna Summer

“The Queen of Disco” compiled 10 Top Ten disco hits between 1974-1980: “Love to Love You Baby,” “I Feel Love,” “Last Dance,” “MacArthur Park,” “Heaven Knows,” “Hot Stuff,” “Bad Girls,” “No More Tears,” “On the Radio,” “The Wanderer.” KC & The Sunshine Band accumulated seven hits in the Top Ten in those years; and The Bee Gees and Kool and The Gang both had five Top Ten disco hits (they had more hits before and after the era in question, of course).

8 “Ringo”

As the album’s back cover indicates, the “Ringo” album includes songs written by each of Starr’s former bandmates. Lennon wrote, played piano and sang on “I’m the Greatest”; McCartney wrote, played keyboards and sang on “Six O’Clock”; and Harrison wrote or co-wrote, played guitar and sang on “Photograph,” “Sunshine Life For Me” and “You and Me Babe,” although the four of them never played together on the same track. Ringo played drums on George’s “Living in the Material World” LP, but no other ex-Beatle played on John’s “Mind Games” nor Paul’s “Band on the Run.”

9 “Purple Rain,” Prince and the Revolution

A few months after “Thriller” completed its amazing reign at #1, Prince’s soundtrack album to his “Purple Rain” feature film began its own remarkable run as the #1 album, lasting 24 weeks. REO Speedwagon’s “Hi Infidelity” cornered the market as the #1 album for 21 weeks in 1981; The Police’s final album “Synchronicity” held the top spot for 17 weeks in 1983; and Whitney Houston’s debut album was #1 for 14 weeks in 1985.

10 “Suzie-Q”

Virtually every song Creedence Clearwater Revival ever recorded was written by their singer/guitarist, John Fogerty. There were exceptions — they did some fine cover versions of songs like “Good Golly Miss Molly,” “The Night Time is the Right Time,” “Before You Accuse Me” and even an 11-minute jam on “I Heard It Through the Grapevine,” but these were all deep album tracks. The only bonafide hit single Creedence had that Fogerty didn’t write was “Suzie-Q,” written by Dale Hawkins in 1957, which reached #11 in 1968 as the band’s first chart appearance.

Extra credit: “Lady”

There have been four different hit songs entitled “Lady” — Styx in 1975 (#6); Little River Band in 1979 (#10); Kenny Rogers in 1980 (#1); and The Commodores in 1981 (#8).

Three hit songs use the title “Magic” — Pilot in 1975 (#5); Olivia Newton-John in 1980 (#1); and The Cars in 1984 (#12).

Three hit tunes have the title “Fire” — Crazy World of Arthur Brown in 1968 (#2); Ohio Players in 1975 (#1); and The Pointer Sisters in 1979 (#2). (Jimi Hendrix had a ferocious rocker called “Fire,” but it wasn’t a single.)

As for the title “Venus,” it was a #1 hit for Frankie Avalon in 1959, and then a different “Venus” was a #1 hit for Shocking Blue in 1970, and a cover of Shocking Blue’s tune by Banamarama also reached #1 in 1986.