Classic Rock
Steely Dan announces new tour dates for 2019
The classic rock band Steely Dan announced more tour dates for 2019. The band’s line-up has only one original member, that is the keyboardist and vocalist Donald Fagen.
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See the tour dates below:
- Aug. 27 – Youngstown, OH Foundation Amphitheater
- Aug. 30 – Rochester Hills, MI Meadow Brook
- Sept. 1 – Highland Park, IL Ravinia Festival
- Sept. 2 – Highland Park, IL Ravinia Festival
- Sept. 4 – Moline, IL Taxslayer Center
- Sept. 8 – Lincoln, NE Pinewood Bowl
- Sept. 13 – Lincoln, CA Thunder Valley Casino
- Sept. 14 – Santa Rosa, CA Luther Burbank Center
- Sept. 17 – Saratoga, CA The Mountain Winery
- Sept. 18 – Saratoga, CA The Mountain Winery
- Oct. 11 – Rochester, NY Auditorium Theatre
- Oct. 12 – Syracuse, NY Landmark Theatre
- Oct. 15 – New York, NY Beacon Theater (Aja)
- Oct. 16 – New York, NY Beacon Theater (The Royal Scam)
- Oct. 18 – New York, NY Beacon Theater (Popular Demand)
- Oct. 19 – New York, NY Beacon Theater (The Nightfly)
- Oct. 21 – New York, NY Beacon Theater (Gaucho)
- Oct. 22 – New York, NY Beacon Theater (Greatest Hits)
- Oct. 25 – Boston, MA Orpheum Theater (Aja)
- Oct. 26 – Boston, MA Orpheum Theater (The Nightfly)
- Oct. 29 – Boston, MA Orpheum Theater (Gaucho)
- Oct. 30 – Boston, MA Orpheum Theater (The Royal Scam)
- Nov. 1 – Boston, MA Orpheum Theater
- Nov. 2 – Uncasville, CT Mohegan Sun
- Nov. 5 – Bethlehem, PA Sands Casino
- Nov. 6 – Philadelphia, PA The Met (Aja)
- Nov. 8 – Philadelphia, PA The Met (Gaucho)
- Nov. 9 – Philadelphia, PA The Met (Greatest Hits)
The band
Steely Dan is an American rock band founded in 1972 by core members Walter Becker (guitars, bass, backing vocals) and Donald Fagen (keyboards, lead vocals). Blending rock, jazz, traditional pop, R&B, and sophisticated studio production with cryptic and ironic lyrics, the band enjoyed critical and commercial success starting from the early 1970s until breaking up in 1981.
Throughout their career, the duo recorded with a revolving cast of session musicians, and in 1974 retired from live performances to become a studio-only band. Rolling Stone has called them “the perfect musical antiheroes for the Seventies”.
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