Aja by Steely Dan

Aja

Steely Dan

1977

Aja is a Jazz album by Steely Dan, originally released in 1977. On Gatefold: 329 pressings tracked, owned by 131 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Jazz
  • Jazz Fusion
  • polished
  • serene
  • urban

About

<b>100 Best Albums</b> In a <i>Rolling Stone</i> interview from around the time <i>Aja</i> came out, the writer Cameron Crowe—who went on to write and direct <i>Jerry Maguire</i> and <i>Almost Famous</i>, amongst a handful of other movies—marveled at how aloof the members of Steely Dan could be when it came to their own success. They were no longer touring, and they weren’t doing a lot of press. And their approach to recording had evolved from a fixed group of people playing a set of songs from start to finish to a piecemeal process in which co-founders Donald Fagen and Walter Becker tried out multiple players for the same part, until they found a satisfactory combination—all before breaking it down and starting all over again on the next song. (Decades later, guitarist Dean Parks diplomatically reflected that “we would work then past the perfection point until it became natural.”) Asked if he felt like he was even in a band, Becker replied, “No. But we can get a real good one together in a hurry.” As sophisticated as the process was, Steely Dan never sounded more direct as it does on <i>Aja</i>. There’s the R&B of “Josie.” The bounce of “Black Cow” (and its destiny-fulfilling sample, 20 years later, on Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz’s “Déjà Vu (Uptown Baby)”). And the fact that “Peg” felt like <i>actual</i> dance music, rather than a dissertation on it. In the coastal fog of 1970s California pop, Fagen and Becker had always appeared like bookish New York hipsters raised on R&B and jazz. But <i>Aja</i> was the first time that identity had come through so clearly in the music. And while there are plenty of close seconds, no character better captured Steely Dan’s tragic romanticism like the suburban guy on “Deacon Blues,” who fantasizes about becoming a saxophone player—only to get drunk and die in a car wreck. Yeah, he’s a loser. But least he believed in something.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

Side A

  1. A1Black Cow5:07
  2. A2Aja7:56
  3. A3Deacon Blues7:26

Side B

  1. B1Peg3:58
  2. B2Home At Last5:31
  3. B3I Got The News5:03
  4. B4Josie4:30

Credits

Performers

131 collectors on Gatefold own this · 329 pressings tracked on Gatefold