AffinitiesAuteursBooks

How Steely Dan REALLY feel about Wes Anderson

By November 18, 2013No Comments

Steely Dan co-founder Donald Fagen has a book out, a col­lec­tion of essays and one diary entitled Eminent Hipsters. It’s real good. The top­ics of the essays range from the singing group The Boswell Sisters to the influ­ence of pulp sci-fi and semant­ic the­ory on the “work” of L. Ron Hubbard. The show­case piece, com­pris­ing over a third of the book, is the tour diary “With The Dukes of September.” By turns snide, poignant, antic­ally hil­ari­ous, and genu­inely heart­break­ing, it’s a remark­able piece of writ­ing: the “A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again” of musicians-on-the-road chron­icles, I’d reck­on. (I don’t want to get into any kind of piss­ing con­tests with oth­er crit­ics who’ve praised the book, but I will insist that the “Donald Fagen hates his audi­ence” read­ing that a num­ber of enthu­si­ast­ic crit­ics have giv­en this sec­tion is lam­ent­ably super­fi­cial, and a genu­ine mis­char­ac­ter­iz­a­tion.) On July 4, dys­peptic Donald finds him­self in Ashland, Oregon, with a night off.

In the even­ing, hav­ing zero interest in the town fire­works dis­play, Vince [the tour’s account­ant and Fagen’s de facto assist­ant] and I saw a film at the cute little movie theat­er, Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom, which was intel­li­gent and care­fully made, as his films always are. Walter [Becker, Fagen’s part­ner in Steely Dan] and I once had a bizarre inter­ac­tion with Anderson’s fans over the Internet, which star­ted when we pos­ted a couple of humor­ous let­ters (we thought) on the Steely Dan website.

I think one of the reas­ons we’re intrigued by Anderson is that he seems to be fix­ated on the sort of geek­ish, early-sixties adols­cent exper­i­ence that he’s too young to have had but that Walter and I actu­ally lived through. And yet he nails the mood pre­cisely, using com­ic exag­gra­tion and fantasy to do the job. Although it was no pic­nic, it’s too bad every­one’s coming-of-age can­’t take place in the early six­ties. Seeing the scouts in Moonrise Kingdom, I was reminded of my own exper­i­ence at Boy Scout camp. I remem­ber spend­ing a lot of time in my tent wor­ry­ing over a huge pot of boil­ing water in which I was try­ing to brew just the right blend of herb­al tea, mostly win­ter­green picked in the forest, fol­low­ing some recipe in the Scout handbook.”

So there you have it. I recall the “bizarre inter­ac­tion,” so dis­pir­it­ing that I am not even going to both­er find­ing rel­ev­ant links; basic­ally it was a lot of dumb snotty humor­less kids sniff­ing that these pro­gen­it­ors oa “dad rock” did­n’t “get” Wes. Fagen’s obser­va­tions here strike me as entirely apt. (As a Scout camp kid in the late six­ties, I found my own solace in mak­ing Sassafras tea.) Anyway, get the book. It’s fantastic. 

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  • Petey says:

    On July 4, dys­peptic Donald finds him­self in Ashland, Oregon, with a night off.”
    It pisses me off to no end that Disney simply won’t release their old Dyspeptic Donald car­toons in any form.
    Sure, they may not be in toon with the times, but still, just for the his­tor­ic­al record, you ought to be able to watch them in some form.
    (And now, I guess I have to buy the book.)

  • Grant L says:

    Completely agree, and as I’ve been bor­ing oth­er people with since hear­ing it, I think the audiobook ver­sion, read by him, is even bet­ter. It came in first from the lib­rary, and his read­ing style comes off much more ami­able and, believe it or not, sweet than any­thing else. By my lights he rips on him­self just as much as he does any­one else,too. Was glad to hear the Anderson men­tion. And would recom­mend to all that if his Boswells art­icle intrigues you at all, don’t hes­it­ate to dive into their work.

  • Petey says:

    Comments on Syd Field Biopic Script:
    Having Field die on page 77 seems a fatal blun­der. This means that Field is dead ahead of the plot point incit­ing the third act, thus ren­der­ing the plot point devoid of mean­ing. Further, with Field dead for the ENTIRE third act, the film would play with no dra­mat­ic ten­sion dur­ing what should be its sec­tion of highest dra­mat­ic tension.
    Conclusion:
    It seems a waste of resources to even put this into turn­around, as it seems unsal­vage­able. Recommend drop­ping the project.

  • mark s. says:

    I thought ‘Moonrise Kingdom’ was (rather gra­tu­it­ously) set in the 60’s so that Anderson could rup­ture the whimsy with a ref­er­ence to elec­troshock ther­apy, but then I don’t “get” Anderson’s work. Won’t deploy the over­worked ‘twee,’ but his films are awfully pre­cious. Great cast, though, esp. Willis.

  • evelyn garver says:

    It’s great to know a musi­cian you admire is also smart and funny. I will get this book for my hus­band, a lifelong Steely Dan devotee. In recent years, our favor­ite line has been “oh no, William and Mary won’t do..” as our beloved only daugh­ter is a juni­or at that won­der­ful school.
    I loved MOONRISE KINGDOM and spent my pre-teen years at Fort Dix with a foul mouthed, chain smoking scout lead­er. [more Alexander Payne than Wes Anderson.]

  • Toscana says:

    It sounds really good, so thanks for the recomandation.

  • Tom Block says:

    Speaking of find­ing rel­ev­ant links, I’ve wondered a few times why no SCR does­n’t have a search engine. Would that be a major fix?

  • Petey says:

    Speaking of find­ing rel­ev­ant links, I’ve wondered a few times why no SCR does­n’t have a search engine. Would that be a major fix?”
    Google is your friend. Preface your search terms with:
    site:somecamerunning.typepad.com

  • Tom Block says:

    Hm–okay. Thanks, Petey…

  • Petey says:

    17 Amazing Steely Dan GIF’s That Will Remind You Of Wes Anderson Movies