Throw a kiss and say goodbye
May 10, 2016
Walter Becker: Donald had a house that sat on top of a sand dune with a small room with a piano. From the window, you could see the Pacific in between the other houses. "Crimson Tide" didn't mean anything to us except the exaggerated grandiosity that's bestowed on winners. "Deacon Blues" was the equivalent for the loser in our song.
Donald Fagen: When Walter came over, we started on the music, then started filling in more lyrics to fit the story. At that time, there had been a lineman with the Los Angeles Rams and the San Diego Chargers, Deacon Jones. We weren't serious football fans, but Deacon Jones's name was in the news a lot in the 1960s and early '70s, and we liked how it sounded. It also had two syllables, which was convenient, like "Crimson." The name had nothing to do with Wake Forest's Demon Deacons or any other team with a losing record. The only Deacon I was familiar with in football at the time was Deacon Jones.
(...)
Donald Fagen: The song's fade-out at the end was intentional. We used it to make the end feel like a dream fading off into the night.
Walter Becker: "Deacon Blues" was special for me. It's the only time I remember mixing a record all day and, when the mix was done, feeling like I wanted to hear it over and over again. It was the comprehensive sound of the thing: the song itself, its character, the way the instruments sounded and the way Tom Scott's tight horn arrangement fit in.
Donald Fagen: One thing we did right on "Deacon Blues" and all of our records: We never tried to accommodate the mass market. We worked for ourselves and still do.
Donald Fagen: When Walter came over, we started on the music, then started filling in more lyrics to fit the story. At that time, there had been a lineman with the Los Angeles Rams and the San Diego Chargers, Deacon Jones. We weren't serious football fans, but Deacon Jones's name was in the news a lot in the 1960s and early '70s, and we liked how it sounded. It also had two syllables, which was convenient, like "Crimson." The name had nothing to do with Wake Forest's Demon Deacons or any other team with a losing record. The only Deacon I was familiar with in football at the time was Deacon Jones.
(...)
Donald Fagen: The song's fade-out at the end was intentional. We used it to make the end feel like a dream fading off into the night.
Walter Becker: "Deacon Blues" was special for me. It's the only time I remember mixing a record all day and, when the mix was done, feeling like I wanted to hear it over and over again. It was the comprehensive sound of the thing: the song itself, its character, the way the instruments sounded and the way Tom Scott's tight horn arrangement fit in.
Donald Fagen: One thing we did right on "Deacon Blues" and all of our records: We never tried to accommodate the mass market. We worked for ourselves and still do.
-- Donald Fagen and Walter Becker talking to Marc Myers of The Wall Street Journal, 10-9-2015