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Post Info TOPIC: "Drink Your Big Black Cow"


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"Drink Your Big Black Cow"


In the corner
Of my eye
I saw you in rudys
You were very high
You were high
It was a cryin disgrace
They saw your face

On the counter
By your keys
Was a book of numbers
And your remedies
One of these
Surely will screen out the sorrow
But where are you tomorrow

I cant cry anymore
While you run around
Break away
Just when it
Seems so clear
That its
Over now
Drink your big black cow
And get out of here

Down to greene street
There you go
Lookin so outrageous
And they tell you so
You should know
How all the pros play the game
You change your name

Like a gangster
On the run
You will stagger homeward
To your precious one
Im the one
Who must make everything right
Talk it out till daylight

I dont care anymore
Why you run around
Break away
Just when it
Seems so clear
That its
Over now
Drink your big black cow
And get out of here

     This is an old Steely Dan song I came across that brings back memories in more ways than one. Hope I can just "look back but don't stare" so I can keep on movin' on.  :) ......jaja

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Date:
RE: "Drink Your Big Black Cow"


I love this.....My ex A is a huge Steely Dan fan......these lyrics feed the bitter part of me right now and it feels sorta hard to accept that. Even tho he has been sober 7 months...the "book of numbers and remedies to screen out the sorrow" was still his way and it left me out and made me sad and I was left talking to myself till I was blue in the face all night...he never needed to talk it out...he was coping by running around....using or sober.

I am thankful that the break happened and that he is out of here. I read lyrics like this and the old pain stirs .....and I want to email this to him and say #$^$#@.....but I don't....and I breathe and I focus on the positive parts of my life that I want to feed. I hand him and his ways and the pain and the feeling this song stirs over to my higher power.

Fifi

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Posts: 472
Date:

This song, and all the others from that album (AJA) run pretty deep in my psyche.  Mainly reminding me of MY early drinking days.  These songs got lots of airplay in late 1977 through mid 1978.  I was working my first "real" job, out of town a lot... spent a lot of time by myself in bars.  Most of my drinking life after that, I was a stay-at-home drunk, but in those days I was never home.

There's also some great saxophone playing on that album!

Barisax


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Especially 'Deacon Blues'  Learned to work the saxophone...
At that time, I was trying to impress a guy (who I thought quite sophisticated) by trying to develop a taste for Scotch (his drink).  Thus, 'Deacon Blues' became my anthem ('drink Scotch whiskey all night long...')
Didn't stop to think that if you have to 'develop a taste' for something, YOU PROBABLY SHOULDN'T BE DRINKING IT!!!  Man, young, stupid and of legal age is a dangerous combination!
Marion

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Vocatus atque non vocatus, Deus aderit ("Bidden or not bidden, God is present") - Erasmus


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Posts: 472
Date:

mhgal wrote:

Especially 'Deacon Blues' Learned to work the saxophone...



Donald Fagen wrote Deacon Blues as a lament for his own inability to play sax, instead he became a great songwriter, band leader, pianist, and singer with one of the most instantly recognizable voices anywhere.

My saxophone teacher once met Fagin.  Quote "He's the weirdest dude I ever met".  This is coming from a fellow jazz musician smile

That's Tom Scott playing tenor on Deacon Blues.  Has played with SNL and the Blues Brothers, often anonymously.  Tom plays bari sax on "Sweet Home Chicago", which is interesting because you can hear it clearly even though there is no bari on stage with them in the movie.  Tom also plays sax for Lisa Simpson I believe.

The blazing, orgasmic tenor sax solo on Aja at the climax of the instrumental interlude is Wayne Shorter.

Barisax

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