Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, a couple of cynical New York jazz fans 
wormed their way into a record contract and astonished critics with their first 
album 'Can't Buy a Thrill' in 1973. Nine albums later, they were among the 
biggest selling acts in the world. 
Steely Dan were different from the rest of rock's super-sellers. They rarely gave 
interviews and, after some early bad experiences on the road, they refused to 
tour. They didn't have their photographs taken and few people knew what they 
looked like. Steely Dan weren't even a proper group; it was two musicians and 
a producer, yet every top notch player in the world lined up to appear on their 
albums.
Brian Sweet, former editor and publisher of Metal Leg, the Steely Dan fanzine, 
draws back the veil of secrecy that has surrounded Becker and Fagen, presenting 
the true story of how they made their music and lived their lives