Tag Archives | Recordings

Donald Fagen – Morph the Cat

Originally published in March, 2006. By Mike Chadwick Jazzfm “Eagerly anticipated,” bellows the press release about this the new album from Donald Fagen. OK, as a long suffering Steely Dan/Donald Fagen fan I must be grateful for this recent bout of creativity. I mean, two Steely Dan albums and a Donald Fagen solo album in […]

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Fagen’s smooth ‘Morph’

By Tom Sinclair Entertainment Weekly What makes great music great? The late Clash singer Joe Strummer once offered a theory about what doesn’t: ”It ain’t about playing the right f—ing chord, for a start,” quoth Saint Joe, making the point that passion trumps technical perfection. He was right, of course, but that doesn’t mean that […]

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Donald Fagen – ‘Morph the Cat’

By Paul Woloszyn MusicOMH.com At a time when sounding a bit rough around the edges is not a bad thing there are still some artists who are not swayed by changes in style, none more so than Donald Fagen. One half of Steely Dan, he has been making the same classy brand of jazzy pop […]

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‘Morph the Cat’

By John Kelman Allaboutjazz.com Sometimes tight-knit teams like Donald Fagen and Walter Becker — better known as Steely Dan — make it difficult to determine what each individual brings to the table. It’s no secret that Becker and Fagen have strong jazz sensibilities, not to mention an affection for Tin Pan Alley, having started out […]

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Fagen’s Solo Act Succeeds

By A.D. Amorosi For the Philadelphia Inquirer PHILADELPHIA — It is tempting to claim that the Donald Fagen — pop’s cheeriest misanthrope — who sold out the Tower on Saturday was little more than Steely Dan without other-half Walter Becker. Fagen’s lyrical concerns have the same apocalyptic sarcasm, yearning retro-futurism, messy romanticism, and midlife-crisis clamoring […]

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‘Morph the Cat’

By Edna Gundersen USA Today Morph the Cat (* * *) Donald Fagen Fagen’s third solo album, and first in 13 years, completes an informal trilogy that includes the frisky ambitions of 1981’s Nightfly and the midlife inventory of 1993’s Kamakiriad. This time the Steely Dan co-founder dwells on mortality and various impending doom scenarios, […]

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Review of ‘Morph the Cat’

By Richard Cromelin Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES — The taller half of Steely Dan returns from a 13-year break from solo albums as a sort of hipster Dr. Seuss. In the title song, a protoplasmic feline form permeates Manhattan, casting an inexplicable but welcome spell of well-being on Gotham. Less cartoon-like but similarly whimsical, […]

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One Cool Cat

By Jane Stevenson Toronto Sun TORONTO – Donald Fagen, one half of smart, sarcastic, ’70s jazz-rockers Steely Dan, had a serious case of writers block in the ’80s. But lately the 58-year-old New Jersey-born, Manhattan-based singer-keyboardist-songwriter has been experiencing his most creative period. After two Steely Dan albums — 2000’s Two Against Nature and 2003’s […]

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Donald Fagen: ‘Morph the Cat’

By David Randall Getreadytorock.com I know, it’s awfully uncool to admit you like a Donald Fagen album. Maybe I’m suffering from post-Steely Dan crisis. The erstwhile Dan co-founder, “voice” and keyboards player is back with only his third solo album. In 1982 it was the critically-acclaimed The Nightfly, in 1993 Kamakiriad. ‘Morph The Cat’ has […]

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Fagen Wraps His Strange Trilogy With ‘Morph’

By Jonathan Casey Jazzpolice.com Singer, keyboard player, and oddball songwriter Donald Fagen has laid bare his jazzy aspirations ever since Steely Dan’s Pretzel Logic album, on which he covered Ellington’s “East St. Louis Toodle-Oo” and aped Horace Silver’s “Song For My Father” (compare to the intro of “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number”). Never have I […]

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