




Spanning three decades, BLUE ÖYSTER CULT has a long and
storied history. The band got its start in the late '60s on Long Island, New
York, as the SOFT WHITE UNDERBELLY, but each member had been involved in bands
previously in high school and college, before ending up in the "right place
at the right time" to create the beginnings of BLUE ÖYSTER CULT.
The threads that eventually wove together to create Blue Öyster Cult got
their start in upstate New York.
Long Island native
Donald Roeser and Albert Bouchard (of Watertown, New York) met at Clarkson
College, in Potsdam, NY. The two were introduced by a mutual friend, Bruce
Abbott (who later co-authored "Golden Age of Leather" with Donald).
With Abbott and two other friends, they formed THE DISCIPLES and played college
parties and local beer halls. The next year, the band reformed and played
the same circuits as TRAVESTY (named after the Blues Project album). Through
all this, their studies fell by the wayside, and both Albert and Donald decided
to quit college to concentrate on playing music full-time.
Eventually TRAVESTY
broke up, Donald and Albert took seperate paths for a while. Donald went back
to Long Island, and Albert took a musical opportunity in Chicago. After moving
there, though, the band fizzled, and Albert returned to NY and joined Donald.
In the meantime, Donald had been jamming with local musicians, and had met
a person that would become very influential in their future: Sandy Pearlman.
Sandy Pearlman became
interested in rock music around the time of the British Invasion, and was
a pioneering voice of rock criticism, opening a new field for creative writers
like Lester Bangs. Both Pearlman and his friend Richard Meltzer were contributors
for seminal magazine "Crawdaddy!," the first magazine that dedicated
itself to analysis of rock music and its culture.
Allen Lanier came
into the fold by way of guitarist John Wiesenthal. Allen had accepted employment
at a film company at which Wiesenthal was also an employee. After becoming
acquainted, Wiesenthal invited Allen out to Long Island to meet and jam with
the loose group of musicians he played with, and Allen began to regularly
jam with them.
An old house near
Stony Brook College became ground zero for the formative band, and casual
jams with whomever happened to be hanging around began to turn into rehearsals
with a core band, which included Wiesenthal, Donald, Albert, Allen and Andrew
Winters, a school friend of Donald. It was 1967.