FM - Steely Dan | Andy & Alex REACTION
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This song is for us old timers when we went from AM radio to FM. It was so much better, hence no static at all. The speaker industry appreciated it too, lol.
Amplitude Modulation vs. Frequency Modulation!
Agreed. It always makes me feel old...that young people don't get the impact of that line (no static at all). For decades AM radio was the go-to for music.
Absolutely. Rock was only on AM stations and FM was mostly Classical or "Easy Listening" type music. Then FM rock stations appeared and EVERYTHING changed. No Static at All.
@@anerdtoolate2795I used to listen for hours. Of course, it helped that music was actually good back then…
Pepperidge Farm remembers! So do I!
You cannot express enough how FM radio impressed us in the 70's. This was HUGE, like going from black and white to color
Playing songs like this from Steely Dan will increase your party’s cool quotient by at least 39%. I did a study.
I have to absolutely Agree. They just are a vibe. I grew up listening to the Dan.
Facts!
You know, 17% of all statistics are made up :)
I was part of the study 😅
😂😂😂
Damn, this song still kicks ass after 46 years, the saxophone sounds awesome.
Definitely sounds better on FM than AM.
@@michaeloreilly2533 Better than WiFi too
The sax was courtesy of Pete Christlieb, who also performed the sax solo on "Deacon Blues." At that time, he was part of the Tonight Show Band and went over to the studio. He noticed that Becker and Fagen were using jazz chord changes rather than rock chord changes...so he felt right at home and improvised his solo. Only took two takes...which is an incredibly small number due to the studio perfection that the Dan demanded.
The guitar solo version is much better.
@@frankmarsh1159 There is an extended version that someone made up, that has both versions mashed together.
@@jjr007 on a channel called AbleApe
Pete is a family friend. He also owns a drag racing team.
Hometown hero growing up in LA. His record “Apogee” with Warne Marsh is special.
" I had a friend who was an AM radio disc jockey. When ever we walked under a bridge I couldn't hear him." Steven Wright
I thought I'd heard every Steven Wright joke! haha
good one. never heard that one before. But kids these day would have no clue! LOL
I love Steven Wright!
Hahahahaha
Yes! The same reason I can pick up AM Radio stations from 1,000 miles away late at night.
Back to Steely Dan? Well, it's about time!
Any major dude will tell you
Green Earings
AM radio was all three-minute songs and tons of commercials. FM radio came along and was clear, and some late-night DJs would play entire sides of albums without interception.
It was like night and day.
One of the FM stations in my area actually used that as an advertising hook, calling it "The Seventh Day." Every Sunday evening, they would play 7 full albums back to back, with no commercials. Everybody knew, with a wink and a nod, that the cassette decks were out and rolling on the whole thing.
Can you imagine that happening today. You would be sued by the band, by the studio, by the RIAA and ASCAP, before the music ended.
Those were the days, we thought would never end.
The shift to FM radio was the biggest thing that hit us. We went from crappy AM static to crystal clear sound. This song is the perfect fit for that with its smooth clarity.
Much clearer and in stereo!
You can never go wrong with Steely Dan.
Lots of folks don’t understand what FM was. And how life changing it was. 😊
Song gets better and better the more you listen to it.
Won a Grammy for Best Engineered Recording. The only single to ever do so. Steely Dan Aja won the same reward the year before...
It's been said that Steely Dan is what professional musicians listen to when they're not gigging.
This song was recorded and released in 1978, the album Gold was a compilation released in 1982...
It was the title theme for the 1978 film FM, a comedy drama film about internal conflicts at an FM radio station erupting into an on-air revolt against the management. Cleavon Little plays a dj with the handle Prince of Darkness.
Thanks. I thought I was losing it because I definitely remembered listening to this before the 80s.
Thanks I feel sane now 😊
@@joemachine4714 Me Too!!!! That pool party didn't happen in 1982. (that soundtrack was so good)
@@mikecaetano
I LOVE that movie! I've heard it said that it was the worst movie with the best soundtrack ever! You can't get it anywhere that I know of, but I have it on VHS! Might have to watch it this weekend!
Growing up in the 70's with all the diverse music... it was funny to be a Steely Dan fan and get grief because they were jazzy. Now looking back on their discography - they get a lot of praise for being jazzy.
My friends and I loved them BECAUSE they (and we) were jazzy!
Steely Dan were the alchemists of cool.
Alex is thinking of Hey Nineteen
Yes!!!
This song...and most Steely Dan songs...make me feel as if I own a yacht, an island, $100K and a private beach . Oh and a convertible VW Beetle . Love it!!
That sax solo is just ear candy for me. It's listenable jazz for my brain, it logics back and forth going in and out of the melody but always returns. So chaotic yet fulfilling.
One of my favorites in my top five sax solos along with the ones in Pink Floyd's "Money", "Shine on You Crazy Diamond", Danny Gatton's song "Pretty Blue", and the short one in Supertramp's "Bloody Well Right".
Jeff Porcaro on drums...the grooveMASTER!
Funk, groove, vibe, and no static at all.
Steely Dan is so sophisticated. It really takes a seasoned ear to appreciate it fully. Love you guys.
This is my favorite SD song. It reminds me of when we were able to begin listening to FM radio. What a difference in the quality of songs we were exposed to. It was a huge thing in our young lives.
From the movie that inspired "WKRP in Cincinnati." It was a silly movie but the soundtrack was incredible.
The brilliance of Donald Fagan & Walter Becker cannot be overstated, their absolute dedication to squeezing out the perfect sound was always for our benefit.
Quite possibly my favorite Steely Dan song. Never tire of it.
One of my favorite bands! Back in the day you had to go with FM to hear the best rock!
22 year old me remembers when this was brand new..... driving at night, warm weather, windows down....
One of the greatest Steely Dan outros ever. And there is another version of "FM" that features a guitar-based outro that is equally good, or for some, even better. Keep going with more Steely Dan, guys. There are SO MANY more!
Came here to say that. In my FM market growing up, the version played was with the guitar outro. Still prefer that version.
That generation was defined by the difference between AM and FM. No static at all was liberating!
The album you pulled this from is ‘82, but the song is 1978 - title track from the movie FM.
What ever happened to that movie? Killer soundtrack, I believe WKRP in Cincinnati was bastard child of FM the Movie
@@user-ys8gs5tw5ei saw the reissue soundtrack bandn last fall was big price forget how much
@@user-ys8gs5tw5ewatched it a few months ago. Like many of that era, the movie lost its luster but the soundtrack is timeless!
Recorded 1977, released May 19, 1978, title track of movie "FM".
I could listen to Steely Dan all day long!!!! The instrumentals are so good. My #1 band of all time!!!!
Released May 19, 1978, the title theme for the 1978 film FM. There are 4 versions of the song, the 1982 release of the compilation album Gold uses the 4:50 full-length version.
great movie
🥰
Oh yeah, I thought there was a film. I remember Tom Petty being in it.
@@jlmain5777 Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffet was in it too
I was born at the end of 1959. I was the perfect age to experience the evolution from AM radio to FM. With FM, as a teenager, all of a sudden you could listen to a whole album late at night in your room with the lights off with no commercials and cool, smart DJs, drive around LA listening on your car radio.. KLOS and KMET in Los Angeles! Such a great time to grow up.
That was one of the best things about early FM radio was that there were a lot of DJs who knew their music and loved to turn the listeners on to new bands. Prog rock benefitted greatly from FM which could play those 14 minute songs. And a lot of those DJs would do feature albums late at night which no doubt translated into album sales.
It was a great time to grow up, never again.
That time period was a musical “gold rush” of sorts. I doubt that music boom will ever be repeated, 60’s-70’s into the early 80’s it was a constant stream of great music.
Same experience. Add to the late night listening a great set of headphones. I listened to KSAN out of San Francisco and I will always be grateful to live this music scene in the Bay Area.
Album oriented radio. What a gift back in the day.
The "F. M. No static at all, " was meant to mimick the id theme of every FM radio station on the early 70s. Most popular top-40 music was on AM radio (with static and in Mono! And lots of frantic DJ chatter and LOTS of commercials). FM radios were less common. You'd have to have "grown up car" or a fancy portable or one on a home hifi tuner. So FM stations played more "grown-up" music, like jazz. The DJs were more chill, they'd play longer stretches of music between commercials, which were also softer pitched than the frenetic AM commercials. There were also public radio stations on FM with NO commercials. Gradually, as FM radios became more popular, stations playing long form rock songs popped up.
Stereo AM was a thing for just a short while.. I suppose to combat the FM stations cropping up all over the place, but it didn't last long. As a kid living in Michigan, a cool thing to do, late at night, was to listen to AM stations down in Texas or Louisiana. The radio waves would 'skip' off the atmosphere. You couldn't receive them during the day because of other interference from TV, the Sun, etc.. I guess we were more easily amused back then..
@vailmcc yes, and IIRC, it came later - in the 80s? I never knew anyone who had a stereo AM reciever
Some FM stations near me would play whole albums, mostly in the evening. Maybe they still do, I don't listen to the radio that much these days.
Yaay! Friday AND Steely Dan. You can't go wrong with that!
Several of the Eagles sang back-up on this track. Mutual respect from the bands.
Glenn Frey, Don Henley and Timothy B. Schmit. And Jeff Porcaro (Toto) on drums!
Word has it that Don Henley is threatening copyright infringement for use of his backup vocals in this song.
Nah, not really. But if it DID happen, remember you heard it here 1st. 😅😂😅
@@TresLanes😂
Interesting!!
@@TresLanes 😆😆😆😆😆🤣
The triumphant return of Steely Dan to the freedom shack, on a Friday no less. Thank you Gentlemen.
Oh man - you guys shoulda listened to "Steely Dan - FM - extended version!". Steely Dan released 2 versions of this song back in the day: one with the saxophone solo you just heard; one with a guitar solo by Walter Becker. In the "extended version", a guy on TH-cam seamlessly merged both versions so you get to hear both solos.
It's a must listen
The name of the TH-cam channel is " AbleApe "
Not seemlessly at all. The cut is very obvious and jarring. It happens when the voice says "a-ha". It was a terrible edit.
Love this song... there is a live feel about it which just grooves, it is a perfect soundtrack song. Also the FM soundtrack is one of the best rock compilation albums made.
Longest. Fade. Ever.
Love this song. Lush instrumentation and production. Such a great groove. This was the soundtrack for my college years, guys!
This is such a smooth bluesy-jazzy song. It was a pretty big hit for Steeely Dan back when it dropped. I love the Sax!
I've been watching you guys so long. This 65 yo grandma feels like she is watching you feel like I did the first time I heard all these great old songs you get turned onto for the first time. I subscribe to a few, but I still enjoy and appreciate the reaction and comments from you both more than any other. Keep it up dudes.
I remember going to this famous Mexican Restaurant with all the people in my high school graduating class. The day our classes ended. 1978. We all knew and loved Steely Dan. (Too bad they never toured.) I remember how smooth and sophisticated this song was. Then, in the fall of 1978, I went to college. That's when "Aja" came out. What a great bookend to the end of the greatest decade of music ever.
Definitely a favorite. It was for a movie soundtrack. The movie was dead in a week, but this song lives on.
I had this album back in the day and wore the grooves out.
A great soundtrack from a really terrible movie.
Static here is also a double entendre: the girls were happy so they gave the guys "no static (backtalk) at all."
This song didn't come out in 1982, it was part of a soundtrack for a movie called "FM" which came out in '78. It was added to a Steely Dan compilation album in '82.
The movie had a lot of songs from then current rock people (Tom Petty, Linda Ronstadt, etc...) but Steely Dan got the title song and killed it.
One cool bit of trivia (I'm old and remember all this stuff from that time)... traditional terrestrial radio was AM and FM... this song was very popular but AM stations didn't want to play it because it advertised the FM format. They put out a cut for AM called "No Static At All", leaving off the FM line, but it never took off. Most of us were 100% on board with FM.
I'm old right there with you buddy.
Totally correct. I remember when the movie came out and wanting to see it as I was a teen and in love with FM rock stations!
I concur I bought this when it came out.
I thought they had a cut where some DJs would take the A from Aja and put it over the F since they are held for a similar amount of time, so it would sound like it said "AM, no static at all"
this song is kind of the quintessential capsule of the fm sound of that particular period.
This was the opening track to the film "FM" - sunrise coming up over LA, and the song was so fitting for the image. The film is no great shakes but quite a few good appearances by Linda Ronstadt, Tom Petty, and others. But FM the song just sets it's own tone - perfect.
Steely Dan- Royal Scam- Album of Month- Patreon
yes
Arguably as good as Aja!
My mom had that album
@@xophersmithI prefer it
In some ways better..
Here at the Western World is another great song by them that never appeared on an album other than greatest hits as I recall.
"Haitian Divorce" next, please.
Steely does reggae in such a solid way with this song. It's a keeper.
My favorite from them!
So good!
Talk box guitar is incredible throughout.
My favorite. The back story is pretty interesting too.
Don't Take Me Alive! One of the best guitar solos by Larry Carlton ever recorded. Off of The Royal Scam, an amazing album.
I love the intentional dissonant note in the piano that is repeated twice after the sax solo.
I like changes like on "The girls don't seem.. " CMaj7 Bm7 Am7 G F#7 B7 E6/9 A13 BM7 Am7 Em7 C#m7b5 C13 B7sus4
The sax is mainly played over DM7 C#aug7#9 CM7 B7b9 B7 Em7 A7 C7 Baug7#9 repeating,
@@tommack9395 The sax also ventures outside the key during the solo vamp. It just pushes the right buttons and can be described as "delicious".
So much fun growing up as a teenager and listening to music like this 🎼🎶🎷
“And Somebody else’s favorite song”
One of my favorite lyrics.
I absolutely LOVE SD........the musicianship, the complexity of the musical arrangements, the instrumental layering.....superbly pleasing to my audio palette!
I adore this song. Probably my favorite SD tune.
It brings back specific memories for me, some very bittersweet, yes, from 1978.
Andy: you previously listened to a different version of the song which had an extended guitar solo rather than a sax solo in the coda. The lead guitar in this song is played by Walter Becker, the other half of SD (RIP), which was unusual as they typically utilized top notch session guitarists. You commented that that extended guitar solo reminded you of David Gilmore. And indeed it does.
It definitely does, I much prefer that version
The one with the guitar solo outro is the original version.
@@cactaceous Yes this is a badly edited mish-mash of the original and instrumental versions.
Best heard sitting in a dim lit room sipping on an expensive red wine.
Finally!!! Such a great song!
even some FM stations wouldn't play the second sax solo back when this was released. glad you got to hear the full version. RIP 94.7 KMET in Los Angeles!
Unless I missed it, you still haven't hit one of their classic and most rocking tunes: "Don't Take Me Alive" off of the Royal Scam album. Not only a total heater but opens with one of the most famous and nastiest chords ever laid down on tape (by legendary jazz guitarist Larry Carlton). You can't call yourselves true Steely Dan aficionados until you've given it a spin. Looking forward to your reaction!
This was the song in the opening scene of the movie "FM" when the program manager was driving form his home to the station, evading police along the way. He was driving maybe an MG? Some small two-seater. The movie was less than memorable, but the soundtrack album was an instant classic!
FM (No Static at All) - Steely Dan
Night Moves - Bob Seger
Fly Like an Eagle - Steve Miller Band
Cold as Ice - Foreigner
Breakdown - Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
Bad Man - Randy Meisner
Life in the Fast Lane - Eagles
Do It Again - Steely Dan
Lido Shuffle - Boz Scaggs
More Than a Feeling - Boston
Tumbling Dice - Linda Ronstadt
Poor, Poor Pitiful Me - Linda Ronstadt
Livingston Saturday Night - Jimmy Buffet
There's a Place in the World for a Gambler
Just the Way You Are - Billy Joel
It Keeps You Runnin' - The Doobie Brothers
Your Smiling Face
Life's Been Good - Joe Walsh
We Will Rock You - Quee
So glad to be born and raised during the pre satellite era and understand what it was and where it has gone. Great Steely Dan song that just nails the meaning of the days gone by. And of course a killer song with that jazz fusion.
I remember going to this famous Mexican Restaurant with all the people in my high school graduating class. The day are classes ended. 1978. Yeah, we knew Steely Dan. I just remember how smooth and sophisticated this song was. Then, summer came and we went our separate ways. Then, in the fall of 1978, I went to college. That's when "Aja" came out. What a great bookend to the music I listened to in the 70's.
One of my top 5 SD songs
College days when I found FM. But 🎉Hs 60s, early 70s I was able to get stations KOMA & Wls at night. Thank my mama for always having music in the house. Love & miss her
Steely songs just always take you into a setting and mood as the narrative spins your own imagination..love your thoughts via Reeling, in that for me it's always imaged a summer day whereas FM is incredible on summer night patio with margaritas lol.. I love your introspective Steelyness! 🎶🍻
Been listening to this on repeat while driving lately. One of my favorites and epitomizes the late 70s/early 80s era or AOR. If you were there, you know...
This song killed my headache and stress ❤ again and always since the 70's.
A lot of old timers here probably remember trying to hold their recorders up to the speakers to record their favorite songs on an "AM Only" radio during rain or a thunderstorm. Every ten seconds or so the song would be disrupted by the static crackles on the radio from the lightning outside. When FM stations came into existence, it was like a magical musical wonderland. 13Q and WIXZ were the major AM players here in Pittsburgh, and then came WDVE, 96KX, and B94 on the FM dial.
Definitely one of the top 5 songs from Steely Dan -- love it!
The more you listen to this song the more you like it. Has become one of my favorites through the years. Great reaction guys! ☮️ ❤️ 🎶 🎸 🎶
This is perfect. Musicians at their finest.
Steely Dan had a very unique harmonic approach for pop music that no one else ever had (including the "mu major" (added 2)). And as songwriters they seemed to center their universe on blues. It is that combination of blues and jazz/pop voicings that made Andy and Alex feel like they had heard that before in a different Steely Dan tune. Arguably Steely Dan had the biggest influence on establishing smooth jazz. I think their records keep getting better with age. They wrote and played music at as high a musical level as any pop band - they are in the pantheon of incredible music collectives.
There was stuff like this all the time on FM radio. We were the luckiest music generation when FM kicked in.
Even after all these years, this is still one of my go-to songs for auditioning speakers.
I saw Steely Dan back in 1993 with Dave Matthews opening for them. As a second gen Steely Dan fan, that concert was like a street drug for the hears!
This was the theme song for the 1978 movie "FM" that was about a radio station (think WKRP) and featured Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffet. The song is the best thing about the movie.
The Dan of Steel, high schools coolest soundtrack. Love this song, it came out a year after graduation. Boomers know what FM drift on the car radio is, and remember AM stations from far away coming in late at night. Ya had to be there.
FM = Frequency Modulation, a radio broadcast method in the VHF spectrum that eliminates much interference, popping and static, is more true to the original input and is Dolby stereo friendly, but gives up range (broadcast distance usually up to 100 miles max) in the process. The '70s saw an expansion in FM stations across America, much to the delight of musicians and listeners alike. It sounds like AJA as it was recorded directly after that album, hence in that period of The Dan's evolution. It was the theme song for the film FM (1978) and title/lead track off the soundtrack album, which won a 1979 Grammy for Best Engineered Album, non-classical.
“Don’t Take Me Alive” is cool til the end. Double meaning there.
The guitar solo you’re looking for is Don’t take me alive. AWESOME guitar solo.
I can remember when FM finally hit the airwaves, it was wild to actually hear music in stereo on your radio. Less static and sounds you couldn’t hear on AM radio. ✌🏻
takes me back to the days of our old FM radio station.... Z-102 Austin's Classic Rock (Now its something else)
Another great tune with top notch lead vocals and backing vocals.Horns, piano and drums are totally on point.If you have not done it yet then My Old School is a superb story and great instrumental accompanying it!
Aahh, you found one of my Steely Dan faves! Thumping bass, hot sax, soaring strings, Congo drums; what more could you ask for?
Please guys! I cant seem to get anyone to play Chain lightening off of Katy Lied by Steeley Dan ( or as some of us say: The Dan ) Its a great song, basically its the vibe you get if youre playing on a stage where famous musicians have played/people you admire! Please guys, youre my favorite music critics ( ya know rhe other ones stopping every few mins to review & replay!). Im 66 & waiting is a bummer! Bottom line, you two are my favorite guys 🏆💝
There was a Dan obsessive website a few years ago called Under the Banyan Tree in which the agreed upon theory of Chain Lightening's lyrics was that it was written from the point of view of some low level nazi soldiers at a Hitler rally fanboying on their fuhrer. Go back and read the lyrics again with that in mind. Knowing how perversely brilliant (dark lyrics/breezy music) Don and Walter were, it reads correct. If not, you'll never be able to listen to that song the same way again.
Drums here the late Jeff Porcaro (TOTO) and background vocals, The Eagles (Frey, Henley, Schmitt). Such an awesome song FM was and still is. Steely Dan, one of the best, Donald Fagen.....
With elements of Jazz, Blues, Rock, and Funk, Steely Dan is a genre all their own. There are 2 versions of this song. This one with the sax solo at the end, and another that has a lead guitar doing the outro. The 2nd version's guitar solo has almost a "Gilmourish" feel to it.
When you're so respected by other musicians that you can get The Eagles as your background singers! Also, great drums by Jeff Pocaro of Toto!
When I was in school I was asked who’s my favorite group and said steely Dan and boy was I made fun of and told Debbie Gibson is forever. Well where’s Debbie now??
You must have gone to a very uncool high school!😂 Debbie Gibson???
Always thought of FM as the slinky brother of Glamor Profession - first few listens it's yeah, cool track, but you find yourself going back to it again and again and again and before you know it you're on listen no 12,678. Serious groovewashing & one of their sneakiest masterpieces
"Listening to this song makes you 7% more cool"......A comment I read many years ago that someone posted about this tune 😃 I happen to agree!
I remember the before FM times..and how insanely wonderful it was when it came.
The High Heeled Sneakers mentioned early in the song was a tune from 1963 by Tommy Tucker.