But after all these years of listening to Do It Again," it's the two solos that still knock me out. Denny Diasa criminally underrated guitarist and the author of several other noteworthy SD solosplays a sublime electric sitar solo that's rare in that it doesn't sound like he's trying to ape East Indian music. It still manages to feel exotic all the same. Fagen follows with a pitch-shifting organ solo that gets points not so much for technique, but for the eerie sound he makes with it, matching well with that overall spooky vibe of the song. Credit also goes out to the way the song way recorded: Multi-Grammy award winning engineer Roger Nichols begins his vast legacy right here.
Everyone knows this is a song from 1972, but the combination of the Becker/Fagen songwriting team, precision musicianship and top-notch production makes this one of the most enduring songs from that time. It didn't always click this well early on, but it was clear right from this beginning that Steely Dan was setting its standards high.