Barnes & Noble
One of the most pleasurable pop albums ever made, KATY LIED is also one of the weirdest. Steely Dan principals Walter Becker and Donald Fagen combined off-kilter but catchy song constructions with jazz motifs, killer guitar solos, and an almost avant-garde approach to lyric writing to create a series of unaccountably beautiful and lasting albums in the 1970s. Most Danophiles consider this 1975 album, the pair's fourth, to be their unlikely masterpiece. It contains none of Steely Dan's well-known hits, but in their place is something like a concept album. It's hard to tell from the actual lyrics: Lines like "Pull out your gold teeth/ And see how they roll" aren't designed to enlighten. But a few hints here and there -- along with the very adult mournfulness permeating the record -- tell the story. You can hear it in the rueful "Bad Sneakers," the wistfully perverse "Everyone's Gone to the Movies," and, closing things off, one of the most emotionally exhilarating tracks of the duo's now 25-year career, "Any World (That I'm Welcome To)." Bill Wyman
All Music Guide
Building from the jazz fusion foundation of Pretzel Logic, Steely Dan created an alluringly sophisticated album of jazzy pop with Katy Lied. With this record, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen began relying solely on studio musicians, which is evident from the immaculate sound of the album. Usually, such a studied recording method would drain the life out of each song, but that's not the case with Katy Lied, which actually benefits from the duo's perfectionist tendencies. Each song is given a glossy sheen, one that accentuates not only the stronger pop hooks, but also the precise technical skill of the professional musicians drafted to play the solos. Essentially, Katy Lied is a smoother version of Pretzel Logic, featuring the same cross-section of jazz-pop and blues-rock. The lack of innovations doesn't hurt the record, since the songs are uniformly brilliant. Less overtly cynical than previous Dan albums, the album still has its share of lyrical stingers, but what's really notable are the melodies, from the seductive jazzy soul of "Doctor Wu" and the lazy blues of "Chain Lightning" to the terse "Black Friday" and mock calypso of "Everyone's Gone to the Movies." It's another excellent record in one of the most distinguished rock & roll catalogs of the '70s. Stephen Thomas Erlewine