Dr Wu Lyrics

Lyric discussion by WritingIsMyReligion 

Cover art for Dr Wu lyrics by Steely Dan

Like HexKaster said, this song is about heroin abuse. Fagen has said in many interviews online, however, that while heroin abuse is a major part of this song, the FOCUS of the song is on the "love-triangle" between the narrator, "Katy," and "Doctor Wu."

I think that it is "Doctor Wu," not "Katy," who is heroin personified. This may seem weird, but stick it out with me.

I see this song as being about an addict, the narrator, who is really down on his luck, really poor, a big bum off his friends ("just when I'd spent the last piaster I could borrow") in order to finance his addiction. Then he meets Katy, whom he believes will help him through this time, maybe get him clean, whatever.

He hangs out with Katy, and they "sing that stupid song"--probably here that means telling themselves over and over again how everything is going to be okay. They're trying to use a little positive reinforcement, or brainwashing, however you see it. :>)

But even then things don't seem right, somehow, so he gets to talking to his dope, his heroin, who, as I said, is "Doctor Wu." The doctor is his old buddy, so the narrator is just checking in, making sure he's still there, still the same old "ordinary" cat as before.

Something happens to our narrator while he's talking to Doctor Wu. Sometime during that astounding alto sax solo, Katy has "left" him. It's obvious--he's looking for her everywhere, after all, all through the slums ("Biscayne Bay"), looking for that "song," that bit of reinforcement/brainwashing they gave one another.

When he finds her, he finds that she's been lying. She's been a two-timer. She's been betraying him. He finds "Doctor Wu" (dope) in Katy's eyes.

In her attempts to be our poor narrator's angel, his therapist, Katy has become an addict herself.

So it's all over from there, obviously. The 'Dan love miserable endings, and this is one of their rawest. Katy was just a two-timing little thing after all. She was going to help the narrator, but she got caught "cheating" on him with his own "lover." It really is a "love-dope triangle," as Fagen put it in an interview.

So the end, therefore, is just the narrator talking to his heroin once more, after he realizes what has happened to Katy. In the first chorus, he questions the heroin (and, through the heroin, himself), wondering whether things are as bad, as crazy as they seem. In the second chorus, he confirms that things ARE as bad as he thought, and that Katy has finally gotten to Doctor Wu, taken him in, become a fellow slave of addiction.

Just my long opinion, based on what I've read of what Fagen has said on the song. What makes this song so strange to deal with is the lack of a clear direction on who "you" is. Sometimes the narrator is talking to Katy, and sometimes he's talking to heroin and to his heroin-laden self.

He's just another 'Dan protagonist who's been tricked, is all.:>)

@WritingIsMyReligion I Love your interpretation, thanks for sharing it.

@WritingIsMyReligion That explanation gave me goose bumps.

@WritingIsMyReligion
Ummm, no.

Katy tried [Katy is the addictive drug (heroin? we don't know) Short for “Katy was tried”. Narrator tried the drug and then:]

I was halfway crucified I was on the other side Of no tomorrow [Narrator hits rock bottom from drug use]

You walked in And my life began again [drug user gets help from Dr Wu who runs a treatment program] Just when I'd spent the last piaster I could borrow [Got help after he hit rock bottom, out of money]

All night long We would sing that stupid song And every word we sang I knew was true...