Product Description
Brand New ~ Sealed! Strictly Limited Edition Double Set On Quality Audiophile 180 Gram Vinyl. Released Exclusively For Record Store Day, 2021. The Legendary Steely Dan Comeback Album ~ For The First Time Ever On Vinyl!!
In 2000, Steely Dan duo Donald Fagen and Walter Becker achieved both commercial and critical success with their long-awaited album ‘Two Against Nature’, which was released following a twenty-year hiatus. The album charted at #6 on the US and Canadian Charts, earned a Platinum certification in the USA, and went on to win four Grammy Awards including the prestigious “Album of the Year”.
For RSD Drops 2021, ‘Two Against Nature’ is released on vinyl for the very first time, skillfully cut by the album’s original mastering engineer Scott Hull. It is pressed on audiophile black vinyl for the discerning Steely Dan fans, and features an etching on Side 4. Limited to 10,000 copies worldwide.
Side 1:
Gaslighting Abbie
What A Shame About Me
Two Against Nature
Side 2:
Janie Runaway
Almost Gothic
Jack Of Speed
Side 3:
Cousin Dupree
Negative Girl
West Of Hollywood
Side 4:
Vinyl Etching
AMG –
After two decades away, Steely Dan were back in 2000, as seductive and alluring as usual, with a similar emphasis on classy atmosphere and groove. Notorious for shunning concert performances, Steely Dan's improbable live reunion in the mid-'90s eventually turned into a full-fledged reunion album. Since Steely Dan fans went two decades without even the hope of a new record, the very prospect was a delight, but it was also a little worrying, since a botched comeback would tarnish the band's legacy. Fortunately, Two Against Nature is as seductive and alluring as the best of Steely Dan's later work, with a similar emphasis on classy atmosphere and groove. Pitched halfway between Gaucho and the immaculate production of Fagen's solo album Kamakiriad, it's a graceful, intricate record that works its subtle charms at its own pace. While that means it isn't a knockout on the first listen, it's a real grower -- a quietly addicting album that slowly works its way into the subconscious. It's also an uncannily natural extension of the duo's previous work, but surprisingly, it never sounds nostalgic or dated. It's clear that Becker and Fagen re-teamed because they simply enjoy working together: crafting the songs and arrangements, designing the production, shoehorning in-jokes into the lyrics, finding the exact performances that fit their specifications. In this sense, Two Against Nature is no different than any past Steely Dan effort; that's exactly why it's welcome, since they find nearly endless permutations within their signature sound. Lyrically, the album isn't quite as malicious as their '70s work, but they haven't lost their sharp humor, even on some mere throwaway lines. The real payoff, however, is musical. Each song gradually reveals its own identity through small, thrilling touches, giving the record depth and character, and fitting it comfortably into Steely Dan's acclaimed body of work. And that's as delightfully unexpected and peculiarly beautiful as anything else in their career.