Secret Treaties
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Secret Treaties is the third studio album by American rock band Blue Öyster Cult, released on April 5, 1974 by Columbia.<ref name="Mojo2007">Template:Cite book</ref> It features the same band members and production team as their previous album.
The album spent 14 weeks in the US album charts, peaking at No. 53.<ref name="USA" >Template:Cite web</ref> It was certified gold by the RIAA in 1992.<ref name="RIAA" >Template:Cite web</ref>
In 1975, a poll of readers of the British magazine Melody Maker voted Secret Treaties the "Top Rock Album of All Time".<ref name="Mojo2007"/> In 2010, Rhapsody called it one of the all-time best "proto-metal" albums.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
It is the only BÖC album that does not feature a track with lead vocals sung by guitarist Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser. The band also did not write any of the lyrics to the album, handing that duty to producer Sandy Pearlman, rock critic Richard Meltzer and singer Patti Smith.<ref name="booklet">Template:Cite AV media notes</ref>
Cover art
The cover, with art by Ron Lesser, depicts the band standing beside and sitting on a German ME 262 fighter aircraft; this scene is inspired by the song of the same name.
While the LP cover has the band name in red (a darker red on the Japanese LP), on the CD it is in lime green.<ref name="booklet"/>
Songs
Lyrics to the lead-off track "Career of Evil" were written by future punk poet Patti Smith, a longtime contributor to the band (and, at the time, girlfriend of BÖC keyboardist and rhythm guitarist Allen Lanier).
A few changes were made to "Career of Evil" on the single version. The vocals are different: only Eric Bloom is heard for most of the song, instead of Bloom and Albert Bouchard singing together. Also, one verse was removed ("Pay me..." to "...kneeling in the rain"). Part of the bridge was changed also, presumably to make the song more acceptable to radio: "do it to your daughter" became "do it like you ought to." The line "I want your wife to be my baby tonight" was changed to "I want your life to be mine, maybe tonight".Template:Citation needed
The transition between the tracks "Harvester of Eyes" and "Flaming Telepaths" is marked by a piece of classical music played on a music box. Members of the band recall that it was something the sound engineer had found on an unlabeled recording, but they could not identify it. The piece and its composer were uncredited on the album. It has since been identified as an excerpt from a waltz by Ion Ivanovici called Waves of the Danube (Donauwellen). The source of the original recording remains a mystery.Template:Citation needed
"Career of Evil" was the inspiration for the title of the 2015 novel of the same name written by J.K. Rowling under the pen name Robert Galbraith.<ref name=Strike>Template:Cite web</ref>
The compilation Don't Fear the Reaper: The Best of Blue Öyster Cult contains a version of "Flaming Telepaths" without the music box intro. The original version with the complete sound effects is found on the compilation Workshop of the Telescopes.Template:Citation needed
The psychedelic folk group Espers covers "Flaming Telepaths" on their CD The Weed Tree in 2005.Template:Citation needed
Release history
In addition the conventional 2 channel stereo version the album was also released in a 4 channel quadraphonic version on LP record and 8-track tape in 1974. The quad LP release was encoded in the SQ matrix system.
The album was reissued on the Super Audio CD format in 2016 by Audio Fidelity. This edition contains both the stereo and quad mixes.
Track listing
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Personnel
- Band members
- Eric Bloom – vocals, rhythm guitar, keyboards
- Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser – lead guitar
- Allen Lanier – keyboards, rhythm guitar, synthesizers, second lead guitar on track 11
- Joe Bouchard – bass, vocals
- Albert Bouchard – drums, vocals
- Production
- Murray Krugman, Sandy Pearlman – producers
- Tim Geelan, Jerry Smith – engineers
- Lehman Yates, Lou Schlossberg – recording
- John Berg – cover design
- Bruce Dickinson – production (2001 remaster)
- Thom Cadley – mixing on tracks 10 and 11 (2001 remaster)
- Vic Anesini – remastering (2001 remaster)
Charts
| Chart (1974) | Peak position |
|---|
Certifications
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Accolades
| Publication | Country | Accolade | Year | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NME | UK | Albums of the YearTemplate:CN | 1974 | 13 |
| Dave Marsh & Kevin Stein | U.S. | The Best of the Album Chartmakers by Year: 1974<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 1981 | 36 |
| Kerrang! | UK | The 100 Greatest Heavy Metal Albums of All TimeTemplate:CN | 1989 | 22 |
| Mojo | UK | Mojo 1000 - The Ultimate CD Buyers Guide<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> | 2001 | No order |
| Rolling Stone | U.S. | The 50 Coolest Records of All Time<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> | 2002 | 47 |