SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Secret Treaties (1974).
With Secret Treaties, BOC moved into the stratosphere. The first three tracks are outstanding. “Career of Evil,” again cowritten by Patti Smith, sets the tone: heavier, louder, more guitars and yet, no less of Allen Lanier’s piano. “Dominance and Submission” is an absolutely classic heavy metal song (and live, it gets absurdly long).
“ME 262” is another of their heavy boogie songs (complete with “dit dit dit’s” in backing vocals (and the sound of bombs dropping!). While “Cagey Cretins” features more ooh’s and backing vocals, which belie the sinister guitar riff.
They still haven’t lost their bizarro-ness with the delightfully titled, “Harvester of Eyes.” But the highlight has got to be “Astronomy” a song so nice they recorded it twice (again in 1988 reworked for the album Imaginos). It’s long, it tells a story, it has multiple parts, and it’s simply fantastic.
The disc is totally worth investigating if you like psychedelic heavy metal.
[READ: February 22, 2010] North World: Other Sagas
I’ve enjoyed the North World series since the beginning. This third volume is a short story collection about characters other than the major dude from the series. And I have to say it’s engaging, funny and wholly enjoyable. I think it’s the most fun book of the three.
This is not to dismiss the main story line of the series at all. However, now that the story of Conrad has more or less run its course, it would be kind of sad to keep bringing him back out of retirement (he should save that for like the 12th book or something). So, this collection fleshes out North World, the city, by showing other magical characters and the mini adventures they go on.
In case you’re unfamiliar with the premise, North World is a town that’s set in the 21st century. However, in addition to regular folks, it is populated by wizards, warriors, spell casters and sword wielders. There’s also giant marauding animals (which gives the warriors something to fight). So you have scenes like a cyclops giving away free kittens at the side of the road. Or a viking raid in a pizza store. There’s plenty of combat, plenty of action and plenty of humor.

SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Tyranny and Mvtation (1973).
The album cover is similar to the first disc (a simple black and white), but this one adds a touch of red. Similarly, the music adds a touch of something that makes this disc leap beyond the foundation of their first.
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT–Blue Öyster Cult (1972).
Craig Ferguson mentions that the only concert he saw as a teen in America was Blue Öyster Cult. My guess is that it would have been around the Agents of Fortune or Spectres tour (ie, around “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper”) so that must have been a killer show.
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Spectres (1977).
Let’s face it, Blue Öyster Cult are silly. If I didn’t know better I would swear that Spinal Tap is a takeoff on them. And yet, they have such well regarded people associated with them: Patti Smith; Michael Moorcock! I first got into BOC because of MTV. Back when MTV first came out they played videos by basically anyone who had a video. And it seemed that at the time it was mostly new wave and metal bands. And naturally, we metal heads embraced all of the metal videos and scoffed at the new wave ones. But it was through MTV that I found out about some of the best metal bands around: Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Blue Öyster Cult to name just a couple. And it was through MTV that I got Fire of Unknown Origin, my favorite BOC record. Several years later when I got to college my roommate was a huge Rush and BOC fan. He got me into BOC in a big way, and even though I know they’re silly, I still love ’em. And this album is a pretty strong classic.