What are you listening to, right this minute, right this moment?

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Freakin magical wonderment. And I haven't even gotten to the electric set yet.
 
Monkey House - It Works for Me



It's kind of a Steely Dan homage band that attracts current & former Dan players/collaborators. I'm fine with that, because I love Steely Dan, but it's strange hearing music that sounds so much like them without Becker & Fagen.

Monkey House's latest effort, "Left," is a continuation of the top notch jazz/pop fusion songwriting and arranging last seen four years ago on "Headquarters." It feels like a continuation of that album while still being wholly original and unique, bouncing around in styles and feel. Don Breithaupt's ear for lush horn-filled arrangements that still have space and freedom has been responsible for Monkey House's ear-grabbing sound since the 1992 debut album "Welcome To The Club," but it wasn't until recently that he had the financial backing to fully capture the sounds he had dancing around in his head. Co-producer Peter Cardinali and engineer John ‘Beetle’ Bailey helped Breithaupt craft a big, vibrant sound that can just as easily slip into pindrop-quiet introspection. As an extra treat, the Prague Philharmonic even provides an orchestral backing to the dynamic, powerful "The Art of Starting Over" to close out the album.

Steely Dan fans will instantly recognize their influence on Breithaupt's songwriting, as complex chords and jazz-inflected instrumental breaks spice up catchy pop numbers. In fact, Steely Dan alums Jay Graydon, Elliott Randall, Michael Leonhart, and Drew Zingg appear on the album as soloists. The Monkey House sound is its own flavor, however, and brings a wide range of influences and unique touches that create its own space in the crowded music world.

Swirling Fender Rhodes electric piano and horns underpin the homesick melancholia of an LA transplant in "It's Already Dark In New York." Driving percussion in the chorus lifts up the dark chords and open, sparse stanzas in "Anyone." A wah-bent Clavinet and funky rhythm parts drive the point home -- be wary of a lover trying to change you too much -- in "Death By Improvement" (She knows best/She chose you above the rest/Now what you had beating in your chest/Has gone the way of abstract art").

On "What Exactly Is It That You Do All Day," Don Breithaupt's brother Jeff helps contribute clever, funny, yet biting lyrics ("Your boyfriend the drummer/Loved Fountains of Wayne//And doing cocaine/And your oldest friend Jane"). Other guest co-songwriters Graydon (Good To Live) and Marc Jordan (Maybe None Of This Would Have Happened), and Julie Crochetière (The Art Of Starting Over) add their own touches to the album, but every song feels like it fits into the same jigsaw puzzle to complete the picture, and it's a beautiful one.
 
The first thing that popped to my mind i "makes sense", and then I thought of the context and a smiled like a fool...

Now I'm on the last track "And the Psychic Saw"
 
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