Two Against Nature

by 
AlbumFeb 29 / 20009 songs, 51m 30s
Pop Rock Jazz Pop
Popular

After reviving Steely Dan for a string of concerts in the mid-Nineties, Donald Fagen and Walter Becker officially ended their twenty-year hiatus in 2000, with the release of *Two Against Nature*. Unbelievably, Fagen and Becker have lost none of their taste or technical expertise. The album picks up exactly where *Gaucho* left off. The duo’s fusion of jazz, pop and rock is as precisely rendered and spotless as a figure of fine glassware. Even better, their lyrics have become more incisive with age. Rather than pursue a simple nostalgia trip, *Two Against Nature* follows a cast of characters, who, like Fagen and Becker, are reuniting and reexamining their former lives. The names alone are priceless: Bobby Dakine, Madame Erzulie, T-Bone Angie, Janie Runaway, and Anna de Siecle, to name a few. The album’s theme of love misplaced and inevitable loneliness is epitomized in “What A Shame About Me,” in which a former flame’s invitation to a hotel rendezvous is met by abdication: “I said babe you look delicious / And you\'re standing very close / But like this is lower Broadway / And you\'re talking to a ghost / Take a good look it\'s easy to see / What a shame about me.”

1.6 / 10

If you are a die-hard Steely Dan fan from "back in the day," let me first congratulate you on figuring ...

Check out our album review of Artist's Two Against Nature on Rolling Stone.com.

8 / 10

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