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WORKSHOP OF THE TELESCOPES 2 CD BEST OF BLUE OYSTER CULT
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| | | | | (All images copyrighted) | | | | | | This seller's catalog is temporarily unavailable. Seller's welcome page may contain an explanation. |
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| | Track
listing | DISC 1:
1. Cities on Flame With Rock and Roll
2.
Transmaniacon MC
3. Before the Kiss, A Redcap
4. Stairway to the Stars
5. Buck's
Boogie
6. Workshop of the Telescopes - (previously
unreleased)
7. Red and the Black, The - (previously
unreleased)
8. 7 Screaming Diz-Busters
9. Career of Evil
10. Flaming
Telepaths
11. Astronomy
12.
Subhuman
13. Harvester of Eyes
14. M.E. 262
15. Born to Be Wild - (studio
version)
DISC 2:
1. Don't Fear the Reaper
2. This
Ain't the Summer of Love
3. E.T.I. (Extra
Terrestrial Intelligence)
4. Godzilla
5. Goin' Through the Motions
6.
Golden Age of Leather
7. Kick Out the Jams
8. We Gotta Get Out of This Place
9.
In Thee
10. Marshall Plan, The
11. Veteran of the Psychic Wars
12. Burnin' For
You
13. Dominance and Submission
14. Take Me Away
15. Shooting Shark
16. Dancin' in the Ruins
17. Perfect
Water
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Details | Distributor: | Sony
Music Distribution ( | Recording type: | Mixed | Recording mode: | Stereo | SPAR
Code: | n/a |
| Album notes |
Blue Oyster Cult: Eric Bloom (vocals, guitar); Donald
"Buck Dharma" Roesser (guitar); Allen Lanier, Tommy Zvonchek
(keyboards, guitar); Joe Bouchard (bass); Albert Bouchard, Rick
Downey, Tommy Price (drums).
Producers: Murray
Krugman, Sandy Pearlman, David Lucas, Blue Oyster Cult, Martin
Birch .
Compilation producer: Bob Irwin.
Recorded between 1971 and 1985. Includes liner notes by
Arthur Levy.
All the Blue Oyster Cult you'll ever
need? Well, yeah, more or less; this two-CD chronologically
arranged best-of gathers most of the band's best material from the
period between 1972 and 1986. The Cult has always been something of
an anomaly--brainier and quirkier than most metal bands, and
unafraid to take chances, as witnessed on the potentially disastrous
live version of the MC5's "Kick Out the Jams" included here.
The second CD, which kicks off with "Don't Fear the Reaper,"
and moves on to the group's poppier material, is marginally less
interesting than the first CD's mutant sci-fi metal, but no
matter--taken as a whole this is a first-rate career
retrospective.
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