The songs of Steely Dan made them sound like the hippest, smartest guys on the radio in their 1970s heyday. The group's arrangements were a sophisticated amalgam of jazz, rock and Tin Pan Alley. The protagonists were disaffected and wary of conformity, fleeing mundane safety for more picaresque environments and tossing out cynical bon mots along the way.
Guitarist Vernon Reid was listening and is now exploring the music of Steely Dan in his own nonconformist way.
"Steely Dan is the prototypical hipster band," said Reid, who came to fame as the leader of the funk-metal band Living Colour (hit: "Cult of Personality") and later founded the Black Rock Coalition with writer Greg Tate.
But there is also a racial component to why Reid successfully argued for Burnt Sugar — the sprawling, 17-piece band originally assembled by Tate as a blend of George Clinton's Parliament-Funkadelic and Sun Ra's Arkestra — to put together a performance that subverts and celebrates the Steely Dan catalog. Walker Art Center will present the show, complete with video clips assembled by Tate, on Saturday.
"Steely Dan took on race with these nerdy American obsessives — the one white guy who lives in a black neighborhood is a classic character in a Steely Dan song," continued Reid, who grew up in New York City. "On the one hand, they are bohemian slummers who bravely walk away from entitlement — they come from wealth and taste."
On the other hand, Reid heard an appropriation of black culture not unlike what occurred during the beatnik movement of the 1950s. (The name Steely Dan comes from a sex toy in the novel "Naked Lunch" by beatnik godfather William Burroughs.)
"As a fan of the band, what if I signified back, and used a largely African-American band to take these songs and turn them sideways?" Reid asked.
In the hands of Burnt Sugar, the answer to that question becomes provocative and illuminating. When the protagonist is an outsider not by choice, but societal fiat, the axis does indeed shift sideways.