Blue Oeyster Cult scored big with
Agents of Fortune and its now-classic
rock hit,
"(Don't Fear) The Reaper." It took the album into the stratosphere and the band's profile with it; it put them in the visible
pop space they'd tried for years to get to. But upon arrival, they found that kind of success difficult to respond to. Not only did
the Cult want to respond, they wanted to cement their place.
Spectres is not the masterpiece that
Agents of Fortune is, but it didn't need to be. However, upon hearing
Spectres again, the album offers proof that the commercial and creative bent of
Agents of Fortune was still in place at certain moments, and the band laid out a major single in the opening cut,
"Godzilla," a tune -- however silly it may be -- that is every bit as memorable as
"(Don't Fear) The Reaper." It's not the only big number here either:
"Goin' Through the Motions" and the truly spooky
"I Love the Night" by
Buck Dharma also scored. The former track is a wonderful blend of
Tommy James & the Shondells,
Boston, and
Mott the Hoople's
roots rock glam attack. Written by
Eric Bloom and
Ian Hunter, it's a stunning single. It sounds less like
the Cult than anything they'd recorded, but as a classic
rock & roll single it succeeds in spades. And
"I Love the Night" (with its guitar part resembling
"Reaper" for a moment) is one of
rock & roll's truly strange and seductive love songs. There is more spook and darkness here, of course, in the album's closer,
"Nosferatu." As a closer,
"I Love the Night" may have been a better choice, but this track has all those layered harmonies, a reverbed piano,
Dharma's power chords, and lyric fills that never lose their sense of menace and once more, a story.
BOC were the only band in their league, walking the line between
AOR rock and
metal, and offering such detailed narratives.
Spectres also contains tunes that were ready-made for touring, which is what
the Cult did immediately after, resulting in the wildly successful live album
Some Enchanted Evening. In sum, the only reason
Spectres is not regarded as a classic is because it followed
Agents of Fortune. Other than the false
funk of
"Searchin' for Celine," it's flawless as a finely tuned tome that begins with
sci-fi humor and ends with gothic horror -- all of which can be hummed to. [A Strictly Limited Collector's Edition was released in 2013.] ~ Thom Jurek