There’s something smartassy about this band that almost makes you want to slap them. But I can’t stop listening to this song. Catchy and brilliant — like the most popular boy or girl in your class, you know that they know it, too. All that aside, though, Foxygen still is one of the best new bands I heard all year.
A friend of mine (Nate Cavalieri) once said that. He was talking about a Steely Dan video he was sharing. I always remembered it, and thought it made perfect sense in relation to that band’s sort of uber-polished, borderline-bland, radio-friendly pop sound.
Personally I’ve never fully settled on where I stand with Steely Dan. On one hand their sound is ubiquitous radio pop that’s overly crisp, with all the dirt washed off and creases ironed out. The sound can be cloying, and as we all know it’s been impossible to escape for decades.
On the other, man, when you really listen to some of those songs, they’re impressive. In terms of the writing, yes, but especially the production.
And from that perspective alone, an album like Aja deserves its accolades.
Toronto indie-rock band The Darcys today paid tribute to Steely Dan by releasing their own version of Aja–a song-by-song re-creation of the classic 1977 album, though done in their own moody, fuzzy style.