Blue Oyster Cult
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In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
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Blue Oyster Cult Biography
Blue Öyster Cult was the thinking man's heavy metal group. Put
together on a college campus by a couple of rock critics, it maintained
a close relationship with a series of literary figures (often in the
fields of science fiction and horror), including Eric Von Lustbader,
Patti Smith, Michael Moorcock, and Stephen King, while turning out some
of the more listenable metal music of the early and mid-'70s. The band
that became Blue Öyster Cult was organized in 1967 at Stony Brook
College on Long Island by students (and later rock critics) Sandy
Pearlman and Richard Meltzer as Soft White Underbelly and consisted of
Andy Winters (bass), Donald Buck Dharma Roeser (guitar), John
Wiesenthal -- quickly replaced by Allen Lanier -- (keyboards), and
Albert Bouchard (drums), with Pearlman managing and Pearlman and
Meltzer writing songs. Initially without a lead singer, they added Les
Bronstein on vocals. This quintet signed to Elektra Records and
recorded an album that was never released. They then dropped Bronstein
and replaced him with their road manager, Eric Bloom, as the band's
name was changed to Oaxaca. A second Elektra album also went
unreleased, though a single was issued under the name the Stalk-Forrest
Group.
Cut loose by Elektra, they changed their name again, to Blue Öyster
Cult, and signed to Columbia Records in late 1971, by which time
Winters had been replaced by Albert Bouchard's brother Joe. Blue Öyster
Cult, their debut album, was released in January 1972 and made the
lower reaches of the charts. Columbia sent a promotional EP, Live
Bootleg, to radio stations in October, and followed with BÖC's second
album, Tyranny & Mutation, in February 1973. Their third album,
Secret Treaties, was released in April 1974 and became their first to
break into the Top 100 bestsellers. (It eventually went gold.) BÖC
released a live double album, On Your Feet or on Your Knees, in
February 1975. In May 1976, came their fourth studio album, Agents of
Fortune, including the Top 40 (Top Ten on some charts) hit single
(Don't Fear) The Reaper (featured in the classic John Carpenter
horror film Halloween), which became their first gold and then platinum
album. (On Your Feet went gold shortly after.) BÖC's sixth overall
album, Spectres, was released in October 1977 and went gold in January
1978. In September 1978 came a second live album, Some Enchanted
Evening, which eventually would become BÖC's second million-seller,
followed by the studio album Mirrors in June 1979. A year later, BÖC
released its ninth album, Cultosaurus Erectus, with the gold Fire of
Unknown Origin, containing the Top 40 hit Burnin' for You, following
in June 1981.
In the summer of 1981, drummer Albert Bouchard was replaced by the
band's tour manager and lighting designer, Rick Downey. BÖC's third
live album, Extraterrestrial Live, was released in April 1982, followed
by the studio album The Revolution by Night in October 1983. Downey
left in 1984 and was replaced in 1985 by Jimmy Wilcox. The same year,
Lanier left and was replaced by Tommy Zvonchek. BÖC released its 13th
album, Club Ninja, in January 1986. Bassist Joe Bouchard left in 1986
and was replaced by Jon Rogers. In 1987, Lanier returned to the group,
and Ron Riddle replaced Wilcox on drums. BÖC's 14th album, the concept
recording Imaginos, became their final new album on Columbia Records in
July 1988. BÖC scored the movie Bad Channels in 1992, by which time
Chuck Burgi had replaced Ron Riddle on drums. In 1994, Blue Öyster Cult
released Cult Classic, an album of re-recorded favorites, in connection
with the use of their music in the TV miniseries of horror novelist
Stephen King's The Stand. Numerous lineup changes ensued throughout the
'90s (as the band kept on touring the world), and in 1995, were the
subject of a double disc anthology, Workshop of the Telescopes. By the
late '90s, BÖC had signed with the CMC label, resulting in their first
album of all-new studio material in ten years, 1998's Heaven Forbid,
and three years later The Curse of the Hidden Mirror. The group's music
reached a whole new generation of hard rock fans when Metallica covered
the BÖC classic Astronomy for their best-selling Garage Inc. album in
1998, as a few other best-of collections surfaced around the same time
-- Super Hits and Don't Fear the Reaper: The Best Of. In 2001,
Columbia/Legacy reissued BÖC's first four releases with a newly
remastered sound and added bonus tracks. ~ William Ruhlmann & Greg
Prato, All Music Guide
Written by William Ruhlmann