I was 27 when this one first came out, Steely Dan were with me all throughout the 70's when the best musicians were putting together this great type of music, but Steely Dan were the creme de la creme of this type of music. There's been no one playing or writing on this level since. I've had all their stuff since their first album came out and I still have copies on both LP and CD and the LP versions blow away the CD versions. Gaucho, (the song and the whole album), is a timeless masterpiece.
My first SD purchase was Can't Buy a Thrill on 8 track tape. After that, it was all albums for me. I bought a Pioneer SX-880 receiver and a JVC direct drive turntable and spent many hours listening to SD late at nights and weekend mornings. It was a nice way to wake up :)
LP rules, especially with a system which resolves and is transparent. This cuts the bad albums out. I sure wish they didn’t compress the music as they do on this platform. There are details that get squashed by this process. It is disrespectful and just plain wrong and rude! 🙄
If a system is resolving and transparent it allows you to hear all the details, even the studio space or hall in which it is recorded. Of course, if you don’t have a system that reveals these details or your hearing is incapable of hearing. That is a tragedy in itself.
Listening to "Third World Man" reminds me that Joni Mitchell included this on an album of her personal favorites. I chiefly credit that inclusion for leading me to listen more to Steely Dan.
Gaucho in my opinion is the most perfectly engineered and produced album of all time. Also the Fender Rhodes became synonymous with the Dan sound and was sorely missing from their comeback recordings (and Fagen’s solo stuff after The Nightfly)
If you can listen to the Steely Dan Aja documentary, Michael MacDonald actually describes the difficulties he encountered in singing his vocal lines, such as singing very close intervals in his over dubbed tracks, and getting the pronunciation of syllables absolutely perfect to SD standards. I found MM confessions to be a valuable lesson as a fellow musician. Definitely a valuable lesson to any musician who is honest with their learning process.
@@musictheoryforeveryone7938 ever heard what Mark Knopfler had to say about working with SD? Hated it. Says they were coked-out perfectionists that drove him nuts. Never again.
6:57 In streaming services there is a slight drop in the drum sound 1:21 minutes into “Time Out Of Mind.” after Fagen sings “…far from the world we know.” Possibly a glitch, but sounds perfectly fine here, though.
I have this Same issue of gaucho. The original. I will play it later today and see how it compares to listening to this on these Sony headphones. Lots of hash in the 80s and early 90s before I could never smoke again due to tinnitus.
I got this the day it came out for my birthday the first song is an overlooked gem not sure what it means and does it matter? The vinyl sounds wonderful
This is great, modern technology , ugh!!; had about 1000 vinyl, 500 cds, now you can't even get a cd player in a car; when I want to REALLY Llisten I go to my Bose 901's. Oh by the way, amazing band, one of my top 5, and the song Gaucho as good as it gets; I got the Bose , because way back when Reelin in the years was new I heard it on Bose in a great bar and was blown away
I get why, but it is still a inferior distorted medium. Its like when people pays a buttload for a tube amplifier with a "warm sound". They are basically paying extra for an equalizer :) It's not the taste, it's the feeling :)
@@la7dfa The overwhelming choice of top producers for the sound closest to the mixing board feed in the 80's was ... Direct to Disc. CD was not well baked or spec'd and a bit to early for good technical implementation. I don't have an issue with 24bit 48khz digital tape. CD just doesn't work. Warm sound? that's the transformers - not the tubes. Tubes are elemental high voltage FET like devices. I guess some guys prefer their sound going through tiny chunks of doped, compressed dirt ... uh transistors.
I think I have lived to see three major technology scams in my lifetime - cd, digital cameras, electric cars. What they all have in common is marketing men persuading people to give up high-quality equipment for inferior technology at three times the price. I jump between Gaucho and The Royal Scam as my favourite albums. Could never get into Aja for some reason.
Few Crackles. Where are they from? But good. What cartridge are you using? True Hi Fi Buffs I like. No LPs from the Booty, they'll be rubbish and scorched. I still have my NAD AMP from the 80s. Works well with my latest Mission Speakers. :)
Hearing this brings back some very fond memories . Thank You Donald & Walter .
I grew up listening to Steely Dan but I enjoy more now that I'm almost 53
Music like this can make a grown man cry. Memories from our youth and some of the finest music that has been made.
A kid
I'm 23 at the moment and I'm sure I will still enjoy Steely Dan when I'm your age! I'm so glad my dad introduced me to this music.
At 78 and have been enjoying SD since Rikki don't loose that number...
This so cool. I could watch that turntable all night. Cuervo Gold, and the fine Columbian, as these guys say.
Make tonight a wonderful thing.
I learned this album on disc. Neat to see it on LP.
Steely Dan and good Redbud with a cold Michelob. Great times then
Presidents home health agency
The silver will turn to gold... time out of mind!
Steely Dan (and Fagen's further works) are a sound unlike any others. They knew how to engineer the instruments to get the feels across. This is art.
I was 27 when this one first came out, Steely Dan were with me all throughout the 70's when the best musicians were putting together this great type of music, but Steely
Dan were the creme de la creme of this type of music. There's been no one playing or writing on this level since. I've had all their stuff since their first album came out and I still have copies on both LP and CD and the LP versions blow away the CD versions. Gaucho, (the song and the whole album), is a timeless masterpiece.
Chills down the spine
My first SD purchase was Can't Buy a Thrill on 8 track tape. After that, it was all albums for me. I bought a Pioneer SX-880 receiver and a JVC direct drive turntable and spent many hours listening to SD late at nights and weekend mornings. It was a nice way to wake up :)
Pioneer and JVC equipment... couldn't afford it when I was a teenager. Those good old days when we didn't have any money...
Great memory !
Can't buy a thrill was my first CD
They layed the blueprint" may the next generation take us to the next level
What a gift to Steely Dan lovers...can't thank you enough...This is how I first learned the album, on LP...Still think the LP sound is best...
The album was originally mastered by Robert (Bob) Ludwig, one of the best mastering engineers of all time.
LP rules, especially with a system which resolves and is transparent. This cuts the bad albums out. I sure wish they didn’t compress the music as they do on this platform. There are details that get squashed by this process. It is disrespectful and just plain wrong and rude! 🙄
@@markphilpot8734 What do you mean by "resolves and is transparent" ? Genuinely curious.
If a system is resolving and transparent it allows you to hear all the details, even the studio space or hall in which it is recorded. Of course, if you don’t have a system that reveals these details or your hearing is incapable of hearing. That is a tragedy in itself.
Perfection and grace.
Rock and& Roll Hall of Fame these guys belong!!!
Geeez...Steely Dan was such an amazing band. They perfected sound in all it's forms!
My favorite Rocker's the greatest song writing duo" second to none..
Thank you! This is my first exposure to Gaucho! Love it!
Sounds good
Listening to "Third World Man" reminds me that Joni Mitchell included this on an album of her personal favorites. I chiefly credit that inclusion for leading me to listen more to Steely Dan.
Thanks for this treat. amazing album. Steely Dan is really an extraordinary band.
1st time i listened to this since walter moved on
LOVE THAT POPCORN SOUND in between songs
Walter "passed" on......and it's "bacon & eggs"...
It’s perfection and grace, it’s the smile on your face…..
been awhile since I spent time out of mind 😵
The mix...the mix...it's so beautifully blended like a seamless silk road to the land of all beauty.
You sound like you're high but you're absolutely right
@@joycemooney1690 The work involved must have been astounding.
'johny's playroom is a bunker filled with sand, he's become a third world man'
ahh, some vicarious vinyl!
very cool :-)
I’ve come to enjoy Side 2 over the years now more than the more popular A side. Third World Man is such a great album closer song.
Definitely
No band ever did a closing track like the Dan
What a haunting song. So soulful. Joni Mitchell said it was her favourite SD track, and that's what brought me here.
to think it could've been even better with The Second Arrangement on it
Gaucho in my opinion is the most perfectly engineered and produced album of all time. Also the Fender Rhodes became synonymous with the Dan sound and was sorely missing from their comeback recordings (and Fagen’s solo stuff after The Nightfly)
So true!
It's a gorgeous, fat sound, and of course it's never been better produced.
I think Gaucho is excellent,
But I’m very partial to Aja
I like you Louie
The one thing I missed on Gaucho (and Fagen/SD’s later work) was the acoustic piano; especially after Katy Lied and Aja utilized so much of it
High In The Custerdome🚬🚬🚬🚬🚬🚬🏁🏁🏁🏁🏁
Great !! S D out of mainstream until today . Thanks for the music !!! I 'm from São Paulo, Brasil. Tchau !!!
There’s something about Michael McDonald singing background vocals in a SD song that adds perfection and grace!
Yes, he has a soulful, warm voice that feels so good.
If you can listen to the Steely Dan Aja documentary, Michael MacDonald actually describes the difficulties he encountered in singing his vocal lines, such as singing very close intervals in his over dubbed tracks, and getting the pronunciation of syllables absolutely perfect to SD standards. I found MM confessions to be a valuable lesson as a fellow musician. Definitely a valuable lesson to any musician who is honest with their learning process.
puts a smile on my face
@@musictheoryforeveryone7938 ever heard what Mark Knopfler had to say about working with SD?
Hated it. Says they were coked-out perfectionists that drove him nuts. Never again.
Top shelf singer
nice video and great music...bravo
Excellent!!!
steely dan for ever¡¡¡
That little "Birdland" type break in the middle of "Time Out of Mind" never fails to get me.
I love this so much ❤
Such a tremendous CD. I think, the finest SD ever. But I've been wrong before...
The best album
The very first CD I ever bought.
And I never once listened to the vinyl again.
Merci ❤❤❤
Would you care to explain?...
wow.....
6:57
In streaming services there is a slight drop in the drum sound 1:21 minutes into “Time Out Of Mind.” after Fagen sings “…far from the world we know.”
Possibly a glitch, but sounds perfectly fine here, though.
Yess my Friend
DISCAZOOOOO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I have this Same issue of gaucho. The original. I will play it later today and see how it compares to listening to this on these Sony headphones. Lots of hash in the 80s and early 90s before I could never smoke again due to tinnitus.
third world man ...my favourite SD title ...same album
Esos coros femeninos son una caricia
Well done
Got My Marshall Major III's on. Sounds good.
I got this the day it came out for my birthday the first song is an overlooked gem not sure what it means and does it matter? The vinyl sounds wonderful
"What should we throw on the turntable, sir, for you to A/B these speakers?" The response millions of times to this question - Steely Dan, of course.
This is great, modern technology , ugh!!; had about 1000 vinyl, 500 cds, now you can't even get a cd player in a car; when I want to REALLY Llisten I go to my Bose 901's. Oh by the way, amazing band, one of my top 5, and the song Gaucho as good as it gets; I got the Bose , because way back when Reelin in the years was new I heard it on Bose in a great bar and was blown away
As always, I'm at a loss of words..
The Dan...
Its weird how people are drawn to the lp as opposed to other more sophisticated recording methods. Count me in!
I get why, but it is still a inferior distorted medium. Its like when people pays a buttload for a tube amplifier with a "warm sound".
They are basically paying extra for an equalizer :)
It's not the taste, it's the feeling :)
@@la7dfa The overwhelming choice of top producers for the sound closest to the mixing board feed in the 80's was ... Direct to Disc. CD was not well baked or spec'd and a bit to early for good technical implementation. I don't have an issue with 24bit 48khz digital tape. CD just doesn't work. Warm sound? that's the transformers - not the tubes. Tubes are elemental high voltage FET like devices. I guess some guys prefer their sound going through tiny chunks of doped, compressed dirt ... uh transistors.
This was recorded on 24 track tape applying DOLBY A nr and mixed analog also. Fagen's The Nightfly was digital. - Sandy the Aging Boston Audiophile
I think I have lived to see three major technology scams in my lifetime - cd, digital cameras, electric cars. What they all have in common is marketing men persuading people to give up high-quality equipment for inferior technology at three times the price. I jump between Gaucho and The Royal Scam as my favourite albums. Could never get into Aja for some reason.
You must have some serious gear bro. cause I'm getting very good hi fidelity from my phone and 3.95 earphones..Thanks mucho grande!
I hope to be listening to this as I contaplate jumping off the Chesapeake Bay Bridge .
Few Crackles. Where are they from? But good. What cartridge are you using? True Hi Fi Buffs I like. No LPs from the Booty, they'll be rubbish and scorched. I still have my NAD AMP from the 80s. Works well with my latest Mission Speakers. :)
i see you also play 4 channel records
Mabe I'm missing something, but, Third World Man was their last song as far as I'm concerned.
Didn't know Tonight when i chase the dragon was a heroin reference
Not certain of this but I think the expression came out of the San Francisco Chinatown opium dens. This might only be a romanticized urban myth.
Punchy
Trump will end social security
third world man is always the skipped song on this one. Boring in comparison to the rest of the album
Thank you