Friday March 28, 4:15 PM
Steely Dan member issues first album in 14 years
NEW YORK (Billboard) - Steely Dan principal Walter Becker
plans to release his first solo album in 14 years by early
June, and says he may hit the road to promote it later in the
year.
"Circus Money," the follow-up to 1994's "11 Tracks of
Whack," exhibits the jazzy studio perfectionism that Steely Dan
has been long known for. But, as evidenced by such tracks as
"Bob is Not Your Uncle Anymore" and "Do You Remember the Name,"
it also embraces another musical style.
After Steely Dan's most recent tour, Becker tells
Billboard.com he "went into a deep research period. One of the
guitar techs is a big Jamaican music fan. And I started to
listen to all this stuff that he had -- these really deep, dub
cuts from the '70s. I just became totally fascinated with it,
so I spent a lot of time listening to that and working on stuff
along those lines."
While the album does not feature an appearance by longtime
partner in crime, Donald Fagen, it does include quite a few
veterans of the Steely Dan touring band, including keyboardist
Ted Baker, guitarist Jon Herington, drummer Keith Carlock,
saxophonist Roger Rosenberg, and singer Carolyn
Leonhart-Escoffery, among others. "One of the ideas we had was
that we wanted to do all the tracks with basically the same
band," explains Becker. "And that's what we did -- plus or
minus a few personnel changes.
Also working closely with Becker on the sessions was
renowned producer Larry Klein. "Larry offered to produce the
album at exactly the moment when I was getting ready to think
about doing it. Having worked with him and known him for a
while, I thought it would be a great combination," Becker says.
Becker may play shows in support of "Circus Money" later in
the year, but next up for the singer/guitarist will be Steely
Dan dates during the spring and summer. And according to
Becker, fans are in for some pleasant surprises.
"We're going to reconfigure the show in a way that changes
the flow and energy of it considerably, I think," he says.
"(We'll) do some songs that we haven't done or haven't been
doing recently, and rearrange some of the other ones that are
perennial favorites."
But there's no progress on a new Steely Dan studio album,
which would be the band's first since 2003's Reprise Records
release "Everything Must Go."
"We were touring for four or five months last year --
that's a lot of work for us," Becker says. We've been laying
low between things. We don't have a plan at this point for any
particular album. I don't even know if we have a label anymore.
I hope we don't!"
Reuters/Billboard
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