Agents Of Fortune

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Agents Of Fortune album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 51:51

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A bit of let-down

Capnmidnight

unfortunately, I give it 4 stars for the sheer genius of "Don't Fear the Reaper," one of the all-time great hard-rock pop songs. Otherwise I've never been able to dig this album at all, to me their worst from the 70's, I prefer Mirrors and Spectres even. Sorry.

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Ya either LIKE 'em or ya DON'T

oneofsix1958

Personally I grew up with this stuff, so I'm liking quite a lot of it. But NOT everything. Tracks 3 thru 6 do it for me on this one... BOC has a smattering of great tunes scattered across their calalogue of recordings.... so get out there and check them out!!!

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This Ain't The Best Of BOC

buckeye_refugee

This may be the most memorable album by Blue Oyster Cult because it contains their most popular song "Don't Fear The Reaper" but take away that cut and the rest of the offering is a little flat. This was a major departure from their earlier work which appealed to a hard rock crowd, yet it also pales in comparison to some of their more polished work to come later in the early 80's.

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eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of Blue Öyster Cult’s Agents of Fortune

By Nate Patrin, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

If ever there were a manifesto for 1970s rock, one that prefigured both the decadence of the decade’s burgeoning heavy metal and prog rock excesses and the rage of punk rock, “This Ain’t the Summer of Love,” the opening track from Agents of Fortune, Blue Öyster Cult’s fourth album, was it. The irony was that while the cut itself came down firmly on the hard rock side of the fence, most of the rest of the album didn’t. Agents of Fortune was co-produced by longtime Cult record boss Sandy Pearlman, Murray Krugman, and newcomer David Lucas, and in addition, the band’s lyric writing was being done internally with help from poet-cum-rocker Patti Smith (who also sings on “The Revenge of Vera Gemini”). Pearlman, a major contributor to the band’s songwriting output, received a solitary credit while critic Richard Meltzer, whose words were prevalent on the Cult’s previous outings, was absent. The album yielded the band’s biggest single with “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper,” a multitextured, deeply melodic soft rock song with psychedelic overtones, written by guitarist Donald “Buck Dharma” Roeser. The rest of the album is ambitious in that it all but tosses aside the Cult’s proto-metal stance and instead recontextualizes their entire stance. It’s still dark, mysterious, and creepy, and perhaps even more so, it’s still rooted in rock posturing and excess, but gone is the nihilistic biker boogie in favor of a more tempered — indeed, nearly pop arena rock — sound that gave Allen Lanier’s keyboards parity with Dharma’s guitar roar, as evidenced by “E.T.I.,” “Debbie Denise,” and “True Confessions.” This is not to say that the Cult abandoned their adrenaline rock sound entirely. Cuts like “Tattoo Vampire” and “Sinful Love” have plenty of feral wail in them. The 2001 remastered edition contains four bonus cuts: an early version of “Fire of Unknown Origin” and unreleased demo versions of “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper,” “Sally,” and “Dance the Night Away.” Ultimately, Agents of Fortune is a solid record, albeit a startling one for fans of the band’s earlier sound. It also sounds like one of restless inspiration, which is, in fact, what it turned out to be given the recordings that came after. It turned out to be the Cult’s last consistent effort until they released Fire of Unknown Origin in 1981. – Thom Jurek

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