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| “(Don't Fear) The Reaper” | |||||
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| Single by Blue Öyster Cult from the album Agents of Fortune |
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| Released | 1976 | ||||
| Format | 7" vinyl w/ "Tattoo Vampire" B-side | ||||
| Recorded | 1976 | ||||
| Genre | Psychedelic Rock,hard rock | ||||
| Length | 5:08 (album version)
3:45 (single edit) |
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| Label | Columbia | ||||
| Producer | Sandy Pearlman | ||||
| Blue Öyster Cult singles chronology | |||||
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"(Don't Fear) The Reaper" is a song by the rock band Blue Öyster Cult from their 1976 album, Agents of Fortune. It was written and sung by the band's lead guitarist, Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser, and is built around Dharma's guitar riff that opens the song and reappears throughout. The edited single version was Blue Öyster Cult's biggest US hit, reaching #12 on the American charts in November 1976.[1] The song remains a staple tune on classic rock radio playlists. In 1997, Mojo magazine ranked "(Don't Fear) The Reaper" at #80 in the "100 Greatest Singles of All Time". Rolling Stone magazine voted the song "Best Rock Single" of 1976 and in 2004 the magazine's list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time" ranked it at #397.[2] The reaper is a reference to the Grim Reaper, a traditional personification of death in European-based folklore. Lyrics such as "Romeo and Juliet are together in eternity" have led many listeners to interpret the song to be about a murder-suicide pact, but Dharma says the song is about eternal love, not death:[3]
| “ | I felt that I had just achieved some kind of resonance with the psychology of people when I came up with that, I was actually kind of appalled when I first realized that some people were seeing it as an advertisement for suicide or something that was not my intention at all. It is, like, not to be afraid of it (as opposed to actively bring it about). It's basically a love song where the love transcends the actual physical existence of the partners. | ” |
The shortened single version of the song omits the guitar solo from 2:30 - 3:25. The 2001 remaster of Agents of Fortune includes Buck Dharma's original 4-track demo of "(Don't Fear) The Reaper." The length of the version on the 2002 live album A Long Day's Night is 8:14.
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The song was the focus of a 2000 Saturday Night Live sketch in which guest host Christopher Walken played "famed producer Bruce Dickinson", who repeatedly demands "more cowbell!" during the recording of the song. Though a producer named Bruce Dickinson (no relation to Bruce Dickinson, lead singer of Iron Maiden) is in charge of the production and remastering of BÖC's back catalogue, he actually had no connection with the 1976 production of Agents of Fortune. The sketch also includes a completely fictional member of the band, "Gene Frenkle" (played by Will Ferrell), whose sole function is playing the cowbell.
In reality, the song does include a faint cowbell, which is best heard during the opening and other instrumental segments.
In recent years, BÖC has embraced the publicity generated by the SNL sketch, and has one of their roadies appear on stage when they play the song to re-create the "Gene Frenkle" character by enthusiastically banging a cowbell.
Blue Öyster Cult - "(Don't Fear) The Reaper"
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