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Elly Roberts reviews

Donald Fagen: Morph The Cat

Distributed by
Reprise

    Cover

  • Cat.no: CDW49976
  • Released: March 2006
  • Rating: 10/10


When going solo, sophisticated cross-over jazzman Donald Fagen doesn't gravitate much from the latter Steely Dan template. Morph The Cat, the third in the solo trilogy following Nightfly (1982 - UK no 44) and Kamakiriad (1993 - UK no 3) can be regarded as the climax.

My Steely Dan love affair began in 1973 whilst at Art College. The entire 'smart' student brigade seemed to embrace them. Their debut Can't Buy A Thrill, was a sensation, spawning hit singles Do It Again and Reelin' In The Years. Each album progressed, until they had reached such a clinical, smooth and predictable state, they left themselves open to some criticism. By the time of Gaucho (1980), my interest waned.

Then came Nightfly, a more inspiring offering without cohort Walter Becker. Becker doesn't appear here either, though tried and tested musicians make the cut. Nowadays, Fagen can't nail the killer 3 minute pop song. Early on in SD, there was more adventure, which he seems to have forgotten or abandoned for the sake of safer ground. Most run 4, 5, 6, even seven minutes long.


He says, "I like it when songs develop in some way and four minutes usually isn't enough time for something to develop musically." Everytime, we know what we're getting - highly polished funky grooves that don't appear anywhere else in the biznizz. Tight is the keyword right now, though the songs aren't too much of a straight jacket, because it's not ALL Fagen making this happen. Allowing all involved, the album breathes the freedom afforded to the respective musicians to flourish within the parameters of Fagen's supremely crafted compositions.

The really interesting stuff happens within the songs i.e. the quality of musicianship - Fagen and Becker were always musicians' musicians. Attention to detail and those little touches have always been his forte too, and there are bucket loads of it spread over the nine tracks.

Effectively built around protracted 'textured' jazz, soul and rock grooves, Fagen is still plugged into the Duke Ellington model. Lyrically he deals with impending mortality and assorted apocalyptic scenarios, to homeland security and the ghost of Ray Charles.

WARNING - this isn't instant appeal; I can assure you its outstanding music - class from start to finish. Put on and enjoy.

Weblink: Donald Fagen.com


The full list of tracks included are :

1. Morph The Cat
2. H Gang
3. What I Do
4. Brite Nitegown
5. The Great Pagoda Of Funn
6. Security Joan
7. The Night Belongs To Mona
8. Mary Shut The Garden Door
9. Morph The Cat (Reprise)

Review & concert pics copyright © Elly Roberts, 2004-2010.

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DVDfever.co.uk - Est. February 25th 2000

As of April 2009, Blu-rays and DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TH-37PX80B 37" Plasma TV with a Sony BDP-1500 Blu-ray player and played through a Yamaha DSP-AX820 amplifier.

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