On
Tyranny and Mutation,
Blue Oeyster Cult achieved the seemingly impossible: they brightened their sound and deepened their mystique. The band picked up their tempos considerably on this sophomore effort, and producers
Sandy Pearlman and
Murray Krugman added a lightning bolt of high-end sonics to their frequency range. Add to this the starling lyrical contributions of
Pearlman,
rock critic
Richard Meltzer, and poet-cum-rocker
Patti Smith (who was keyboardist
Allen Lanier's girlfriend at the time), the split imagery of Side One's thematic, "The Red" and Side Two's "The Black," and the flip-to-wig-city, dark conspiracy of
Gawlik's cover art, and an entire concept was not only born and executed, it was received. The Black side of
Tyranny and Mutation is its reliance on speed, punched-up big guitars, and throbbing riffs such as in
"The Red and the Black," "O.D'd on Life Itself," "Hot Rails to Hell," and
"7 Screaming Diz-Busters," all of which showcased the biker boogie taken to a dizzyingly extreme boundary; one where everything flies by in a dark blur, and the articulations of that worldview are informed as much by atmosphere as idea. This is screaming, methamphetamine-fueled
rock & roll that was all about attitude, mystery, and a sense of nihilistic humor that was deep in the cuff. Here was the crossroads: the middle of
rock's Bermuda triangle where
BOeC marked the black cross of the intersection between New York's other reigning kings of mystery theater and absurd excess:
the Velvet Underground and
Kiss -- two years before their first album -- and the " 'it's all F#$&%* so who gives a rat's ass" attitude that embodied the City's
punk chic half-a-decade later. On the Red Side, beginning with the syncopated striations of
"Baby Ice Dog," in which
Allen Lanier's piano was as important as
Buck Dharma's guitar throb, elements of ambiguity and bluesy swagger enter into the mix.
Eric Bloom was the perfect frontman: he twirled the words around in his mouth before spitting them out with requisite piss-and-vinegar, and a sense of decadent dandy that underscored the music's elegance, as well as its power. He was at ease whether the topic was necromancy, S&M, apocalyptic warfare, or cultural dissolution. By the LP's end, on
"Mistress of the Salmon Salt," Bloom was being covered over by a kind of aggressively architected
psychedelia that kept the '60s at bay while embracing the more aggressive, tenser nature of the times. While
BOeC's
Secret Treaties is widely recognized as the
Cult's classic album, one would do well to consider
Tyranny and Mutation in the same light. ~ Thom Jurek