When Blue Oyster Cult Returned With ‘Tyranny and Mutation’
The second month of 1973 was one of dire deeds and dark omens, ranging from the unanimous congressional vote establishing the Watergate Investigation Committee to the sophomore release by the enigmatic Blue Oyster Cult, a Feb. 11, 1973, album prophesying Tyranny and Mutation.
Few bands in rock 'n' roll history have so willingly wrapped themselves in mystery and misdirection like Blue Oyster Cult did, to the extent that their music frequently took a backseat to their perplexing words of intrigue. Whether these were totally imagined or truly rescued from some arcane repository of planetary secrets, one can only guess.
Whatever the answer, in retrospect, this approach ensured that the band's discography possessed the qualities of conspiracy theories, only propagated in musical form, naturally.
Having said all that, from a structural standpoint, many songs found on Tyranny and Mutation were still essentially rooted in all-too-obvious blues-rock fundamentals, which Blue Oyster Cult proceeded to invigorate either with manic intensity ("The Red and the Black," "Hot Rails to Hell") or minor-key shadings powered by roaring guitars and malicious melodies ("O.D.'ed on Life Itself").
Listen to Blue Oyster Cult Perform 'The Red and the Black'
As had been the case with the previous year’s debut, band manager and de facto propaganda director Sandy Pearlman was deeply involved with the songwriting process. BOC also looked elsewhere for collaborators, however, working with Pearlman's fellow Crawdaddy! magazine contributor Richard Meltzer on "Teen Archer," and emerging punk poetess Patti Smith on "Baby Ice Dog." Both of these showcased broader dynamic experiments leading to utmost melodic fruition on the revealing "Wings Wetted Down" – a glimpse of things to come.
As for Blue Oyster Cult's famously abstruse lyrics, it could be argued that the band was never more cryptic than on Tyranny and Mutation. To this day no one seems to know for sure what "7 Screaming Diz-busters" is all about (though the song's harrowing references to Lucifer suggest a minor caste of demons), and we frankly don't want to know what "Mistress of the Salmon Salt (Quicklime Girl)" is referring to – unless its some sorta harmless chemistry experiment.
In sum: all of these musical ingredients helped further establish Blue Oyster Cult as the ultimate thinking man's metal band. And over the course of their ensuing "career of evil," the Long Island natives would keep fans and detractors alike thinking … thinking … and thinking – often in a vain attempt to decipher these ambiguous messages, surely as intended by the group.