Quote:
Originally posted by Not Bob
"Subversive"? I think that that is the code for including a bit of humor and snark in lyrics. Or maybe the way they brought jazz influences into rock.
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Perhaps. I alays thought it meantmore than this, but maybe not:
"Listeners anticipating Steely Dan's patented amalgam of sonic perfection, sinuous musicality, and subversive storytelling . . ."
http://www.steelydan.com/emgpress1.html
"On this basis alone I have always maintained that Steely Dan's music was, has been and remains among the most genuinely subversive ouevres in late-20th-century pop."
http://www.voidspace.org.uk/cyberpun...teelydan.shtml
"Rock's most reclusive and subversive act of the '70's transformed into a warm and fan-friendly modern rock band when Steely Dan hit the stage for their second sold out night at the Amphitheatre in Universal City on Wednesday."
http://ubl.artistdirect.com/music/ar...ist=Steely+Dan
"As iconoclastic as they are, Steely Dan's Walter Becker and Donald Fagen apparently don't mind being icons themselves. After giving ‘70s radio listeners a stream of intelligent, jazz-imbedded, carefully crafted and entirely subversive pop hits that still haven't lost their sheen . . ."
http://www.virginmegamagazine.com/default.asp?aid=3C6
I suppose that the key to the "subversion" is combining adult-themed lyrics with well-crafted, but smooth and polished tunes:
"The resulting "Katy Lied", "The Royal Scam", "Aja" and "Gaucho" releases were wildly successful, combining a smooth, jazzy sound with some hilariously subversive lyrics."
http://www.musicinsight.com/2000/03/26.htm
I think Steely Dan fans need a different word.