Rikki Don't Lose That Number

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"Rikki Don't Lose That Number"
File:Rikki Don't Lose That Number - Steely Dan.jpg
Single by Steely Dan
from the album Pretzel Logic
B-side "Any Major Dude Will Tell You"
Released April 25, 1974
Format 7" single
Recorded 1973
Genre Soft rock, soul jazz
Length 3:58 (Single version)
4:30 (Album version)
Label ABC
Writer(s) Walter Becker, Donald Fagen
Producer(s) Gary Katz
Steely Dan singles chronology
"My Old School"
(1973)
"Rikki Don't Lose That Number"
(1974)
"Pretzel Logic"
(1974)

"Rikki Don't Lose That Number" is a single released in 1974 by rock/jazz rock group Steely Dan and the opening track of their third album Pretzel Logic. It was the most successful single of the group's career, peaking at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1974.[1]

The song features Jim Gordon on drums, as does the bulk of the Pretzel Logic album. The guitar solo is by Jeff "Skunk" Baxter who would soon go on to join The Doobie Brothers.

Victor Feldman's flapamba[2] (a variant of the marimba) introduction to the song, which opens the album, is cut from the original ABC single version. The MCA single reissue (backed with "Pretzel Logic") includes the flapamba intro but fades out just before the actual end of the track. The introductory riff is an almost direct copy of the intro of Horace Silver's jazz classic "Song for My Father".[3]

In the March 24, 2006 (2006-03-24) issue of Entertainment Weekly, in an article titled "Back to Annandale", it was revealed that Rikki Ducornet was the apparent inspiration for the song due to her friendship with songwriter Donald Fagen while he attended Bard College. Ducornet was pregnant and married at the time, but recalled that Fagen did give her his phone number at a college party at Bard and said that she believed she was the subject of the song. Fagen, however, would not confirm the story.[4]

Chart performance

Personnel

Cover versions

In 1983 Kenji Omura recorded his version of this song on his fourth album Gaijin Heaven.[citation needed]

In 1984 Tom Robinson recorded his version for the album Hope and Glory.

In 1992 Hank Marvin did an instrumental of the song on his album Into the Light.

In 1994 Far Corporation made a cover of the song for their album Solitude.

In May 2012, indie pop trio Hospitality performed a version of the song for The A.V. Club's A.V. Undercover series.[9]

References

External links