Try Donald Fagen as well although you would need to pay £70 to £100 for Kamakiriad on vinyl but it's worth it.
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They were a bit "niche", similar style to a lot of early Eagles stuff. I just recall "Do it again" and "Rikki don't lose that number" in the early/mid 70's - the lyrics of both being a bit off the wall. It was all drug induced, crime related stuff - weird really, but listenable. Not sure I'd buy any of it now tbh.
Sad that he's dead but I can only vaguely remember Fagen & that's only because name was bit similar to Joe Egan, (another great band of that era, Stealers Wheel) & Joe Fagin - now there is a songwriter! Breaking Away & Back with the boys again, That's livin' alright (Auf Weidersehn Pet) springs to mind.
Dirty Work was always my favourite. Other than those two I never got into the rest of their stuff much.
Top group of the time Steely Dan just love there music it still sounds fresh today, all great groups of yesteryear manage to emit that feeling too a prime example is one of my early hero's Buddy Holly most of his tracks have stood the test of time and still stand out to day.
I often wonder how many of our current Bands and wanna be's will have the title Legend applied to them fifty years plus, not many I suspect.
Heads up Buddy Holly's Birthday tomorrow he would have been 81 I believe, how time flies it seems like only yesterday, so sad all his life before him, I wonder what music he may have made.
You are clearly trapped in the Three Chord Wonder Time Warp, nothing wrong with that of course some of the worlds finest Blues Music and Musicians are from the that school.
You need to get out a bit more and smell the Coffee there are clearly bigger and better musicians in the world than Presley always have been always will be, to give you some credit you mentioned two yourself Jerry Lee and Eddie Cochran, a very underrated guitarist was he, in fact when he toured here in 1960 another guitar great played guitar for him on that ill fated tour, do you know his name. Well I will let you into a not so well kept secret it was our own Joe Brown who Eddie rated very highly.
Agree with what you say Bridg4d - as I believe you played in a band at one time (So Stu Burgan tells me!) but I was talking about sound, not the artist's musical prowess. I suppose you could put Bert Weedon in the same category as Joe Brown (great instrumentalists) but somehow lacking the proper R&R sound. Buddy Holly, Chubby Checker, Fats Domino, The Platters, Little Richard, Carl Perkins to name a few more were my cup of tea.
Good to hear that Suckerman is a fan. His passion for jazz is the one thing that makes him human IMO. I always thought one needed intelligence to love jazz, but maybe not. Avoid, the Royal Scam, Joe, it's an anthem for dossers...