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I thought our little wild time had just begun
I guess you kinda scared yourself, you turned and ran
But if you have a change of heart
Rikki, don't lose that number
You don't wanna call nobody else
Send it off in a letter to yourself
Rikki, don't lose that number
It's the only one you own
You might use it if you feel better
When you get home
I have a friend in town, he's heard your name
We can go out driving on Slow Hand Row
We could stay inside and play games, I don't know
And you could have a change of heart
Rikki, don't lose that number
You don't wanna call nobody else
Send it off in a letter to yourself
Rikki, don't lose that number
It's the only one you own
You might use it if you feel better
When you get home
You tell yourself you're not my kind
But you don't even know your mind
But if you have a change of heart
Rikki, don't lose that number
You don't wanna call nobody else
Send it off in a letter to yourself
Rikki, don't lose that number
It's the only one you own
You might use it if you feel better
When you get home
Rikki, don't lose that number
(Rikki, don't lose that number)
Rikki, don't lose that number
Donald Fagen pretty much admitted to "borrowing" the intro.
Thank You for the info!
I hear some notes from "Song for my father" by Horace Silver...
Donald Fagen pretty much admitted to "borrowing" the intro.
Just wait till you compare "Gaucho" with Keith Jarrett's "Long As You Know You're Living Yours."
Sadly, the RP Playlist doe not not have any KJ! PLEASE ADD KEITH jARRETT TO the RP playlist! Thank You!
Godlike
Just abut anything by Steely Dan is Godlike.
I hear some notes from "Song for my father" by Horace Silver...
Just wait till you compare "Gaucho" with Keith Jarrett's "Long As You Know You're Living Yours."
I might be one of the few in the general population born after this album was released (1974 vs 1977) who liked the Horace Silver tune "Song for my Father" before liking this Steely Dan track - in fact it was in Spring Quarter of 1996, my sophomore year in college, when Marc Seales added the Horace Silver track to our 'listening example' mix we had to listen to in the library. Of course nowadays, everything is online I'm sure, but in March of 1996 the UW hadn't gotten there yet. I found myself checking out the enormous headphones and requesting the tape to listen to while studying all my other classes. Everything from Jelly Roll Morton, Bix Beiderbecke, Louis Armstrong, Duke E, Fats Waller, etc., etc., etc. wow...now I'm really wanting to hear some (more) jazz on RP. I wonder if "Song for my Father" is on RP....I'm gonna check that out.
I'd rate the Horace Silver track a 10 and this SD track an 8.
Long Live RP!
Did you ever consider the possibility that Rikki was a dude?
Just going by spelling.
But what does that have to do with losing the number in the mail?
Really? I remember very little controversy on this song.
I'd rate the Horace Silver track a 10 and this SD track an 8.
Long Live RP!
Come on, HS has better tunes which would require an additional scope of qualification...
youtu.be/CWeXOm49kE0
And, oh those drums, and oh that Steely Dan!
Is that "Thing" from "The Munsters" working the mixing desk? Not a bad producer for a little dude with no ears.
Rikki lost the number
LOL
Oh, please. Enjoy the satire. And if you are afraid of this "scary dude" do not listen to the lyrics of Hey Nineteen. Get some therapy.
Rikki Ducornet, daughter of a prof at Bard - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rikki_Ducornet
"Ducornet says they met at a college party, and even though she was both pregnant and married at the time, he gave her his number."
Spoiler: She never called.
Cool old dude Skunk Baxter version here BTW
https://www.youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=6xN0hmNS_IU&list=RD5HTVMh7fur4&index=20
ImaOldman wrote:
Rikki was a female that Fagen had the hots for in college, don't think it ever worked out...
This song is top three in the Steely Dan playlist for me given time and circumstance back then.
The wit of the lyrics, musical sophistication, and off beat attitude of SD still gets me to this day. Desert Island band.
Rikki was a female that Fagen had the hots for in college, don't think it ever worked out...
Rikki lost the number
Oh, please. Enjoy the satire. And if you are afraid of this "scary dude" do not listen to the lyrics of Hey Nineteen. Get some therapy.
Probably more than likely about drugs.
Hmm, no one else seems to have interpreted the lyrics that way.
projection |prəˈjek sh ən|
noun
• the unconscious transfer of one's own desires or emotions to another person
Lame.
Weinsteins anthem.
The current touring group is really great, musically, and these songs are just fantastic, even after all these years. Recommended, and I'm not even biased.
I might be one of the few in the general population born after this album was released (1974 vs 1977) who liked the Horace Silver tune "Song for my Father" before liking this Steely Dan track - in fact it was in Spring Quarter of 1996, my sophomore year in college, when Marc Seales added the Horace Silver track to our 'listening example' mix we had to listen to in the library. Of course nowadays, everything is online I'm sure, but in March of 1996 the UW hadn't gotten there yet. I found myself checking out the enormous headphones and requesting the tape to listen to while studying all my other classes. Everything from Jelly Roll Morton, Bix Beiderbecke, Louis Armstrong, Duke E, Fats Waller, etc., etc., etc. wow...now I'm really wanting to hear some (more) jazz on RP. I wonder if "Song for my Father" is on RP....I'm gonna check that out.
I'd rate the Horace Silver track a 10 and this SD track an 8.
Long Live RP!
thought it was a song about Clapton and his addiction...
Lame.
Just because it was played a billion times on the radio doesn't make it a lame song or choice. It is an awesome song from one of the most talented bands of the 70s. I welcome it here and thank Bill for "reintroducing" it to my palette.
And I NEVER listen to the radio and bet that most RP listeners don't much either.
lemmoth wrote:
Agree with Horstman 100%
Horstman rules!
So there I am hangin' out in downtown Bogota in 1977 with a couple of cheap hotel mates from Florida. One of them Richard has piercing blue eyes, thin blond hair and jutting cheek bones.
So this drop-dead gorgeous bourgeois babe chats him up, gives him her card and, and, and,......, he loses it.
Good story. Makes me think of some good changes I blown myself. If only I could do it all over again....
Just because it was played a billion times on the radio doesn't make it a lame song or choice. It is an awesome song from one of the most talented bands of the 70s. I welcome it here and thank Bill for "reintroducing" it to my palette.
And I NEVER listen to the radio and bet that most RP listeners don't much either.
Agree with Horstman 100%
So there I am hangin' out in downtown Bogota in 1977 with a couple of cheap hotel mates from Florida. One of them Richard has piercing blue eyes, thin blond hair and jutting cheek bones.
So this drop-dead gorgeous bourgeois babe chats him up, gives him her card and, and, and,......, he loses it.
Lucky you didn't lose her number. ; )
Great song.
horstman wrote:
Just because it was played a billion times on the radio doesn't make it a lame song or choice. It is an awesome song from one of the most talented bands of the 70s. I welcome it here and thank Bill for "reintroducing" it to my palette.
And I NEVER listen to the radio and bet that most RP listeners don't much either.
There is a term used in the music industry when a song is played to death. It's called "burnt" and that's exactly why I don't listen to mainstream FM radio anymore.
horstman wrote:
Just because it was played a billion times on the radio doesn't make it a lame song or choice. It is an awesome song from one of the most talented bands of the 70s. I welcome it here and thank Bill for "reintroducing" it to my palette.
And I NEVER listen to the radio and bet that most RP listeners don't much either.
time flies when we're having fun...
And I NEVER listen to the radio and bet that most RP listeners don't much either.
I listen to music on the radio when I'm driving and I don't hear this song very often. Since its release I don't think I really heard this song so much that I'm burnt-out on it, but everyone's different. I like their nod to Horace Silver's "Song For My Father" in the opening.
Just because it was played a billion times on the radio doesn't make it a lame song or choice. It is an awesome song from one of the most talented bands of the 70s. I welcome it here and thank Bill for "reintroducing" it to my palette.
And I NEVER listen to the radio and bet that most RP listeners don't much either.
Yea, it doesn't get any better than those 2.
Monkey in Your Soul
Pretzel Logic
With a Gun let's hear 'em!!! But thanks for playing the Dan in the first place, Bill!
Just ONE comment in more than seven years? I wonder, does this reveal that it hasn't been aired since then? Or are RP listeners not touched at all by hearing it?