The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Becker toiled in relative anonymity -- but not to musicians

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK » Virtually unnoticed and certainly not harassed, Walter Becker and his partner in the rock band Steely Dan, Donald Fagen, sat in a booth having lunch in a crowded restaurant near the airport in Maui toward the end of tourist season in 1997.

You couldn’t imagine Mick Jagger doing the same thing. Or David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Paul Simon or any other peer. Becker, who died at age 67 on Sunday, and Fagen had the gift of relative anonymity in a field where celebrity can do incalculab­le damage.

Yet anyone who listened to FM rock radio in the 1970s and early 1980s knew their work well. “Deacon Blues,” “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number,” “Peg,” “Reelin’ in the Years,” “Hey Nineteen” “Do it Again,” “Black Friday” — it was a formidable canon in a relatively short time.

They even wrote a song about the medium: “FM,” with its memorable line “no static at all.”

The music was airtight and erudite, informed by jazz and the senses of humor the two men shared since the day Fagen, hearing Becker playing blues guitar in a student lounge in upstate New York’s Bard College (“My Old School”) decided he had to introduce himself. They famously “borrowed” their band’s name from a sex toy in William S. Burroughs’ novel “Naked Lunch.”

Becker and Fagen weren’t deterred from their musical vision even during an era, the late 1970s, when youthful rebellion made people who couldn’t play instrument­s very well fashionabl­e.

“On the one hand, their music is warm and beautiful,” Moby said as he inducted Steely Dan into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001. “On the other hand, their music is quite foreign. And that’s what makes them so wonderful and so unsettling.”

Becker’s fluid guitar runs snaked around Fagen’s vocals when Steely Dan performed “Black Friday” at that induction ceremony. While he wrote the songs with Fagen, Becker rarely sang. He wasn’t a frontman.

Fellow musicians certainly appreciate­d the work. Artists as diverse as Bette Midler, Questlove, Rickie Lee Jones, Ryan Adams and Bootsy Collins offered tributes on social media following Becker’s death.

“Hey, kids, spin ‘Pretzel Logic’ by Steely Dan in his honor if you don’t know it,” pianist and songwriter Ben Folds wrote on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States