more cowbell
Tim
ma-paharper at IOPENER.NET
Sun Jan 30 08:43:20 EST 2005
thanks Gary
tim
gary shindler wrote:
>
> ') ; document.write('') ; document.write('') ; document.write('') ;
> document.writeln ( '' ); document.write('') ; document.write('') ;}//-->It's a
> vamp about the SNL "Behind the Music" skit about "Don't Fear the Reaper" with a
> brief synopsis of a concert. Here it is...
>
>
> Blue Oyster Cult, Playing Along With 'More Cowbell'
> By Paul Farhi
> Washington Post Staff Writer
> Saturday, January 29, 2005; Page C01
>
> There was something missing the other night when Blue Oyster Cult, the '70s
> stadium rockers, kicked into their signature song, "(Don't Fear) The Reaper," in
> a gig at the Rams Head Tavern in Annapolis.
>
> Fans of the band, and of "Saturday Night Live," knew exactly what the song
> needed: More cowbell.
>
> Ever since April 2000, when "SNL" first broadcast a skit parodying "Reaper's"
> recording session, the 29-year-old rock anthem has been inseparable from the
> humble cowbell. And perhaps from Christopher Walken's portrayal of "legendary"
> record producer Bruce Dickinson, who repeatedly pleads in the skit for "more
> cowbell."
>
> In fact, a kind of cult has sprung up around the Blue Oyster Cult bit and its two
> magic words. "More cowbell" appears on T-shirts, coffee mugs and buttons, and the
> spoof is still discussed and debated on Web sites across the Internet. It has
> become a stock witticism in clubs and bars as bands begin to play (indeed, one
> group in Upstate New York named itself More Cowbell). Snippets from the skit pop
> up regularly on the radio. When the cable entertainment channel E! named its 101
> Most Unforgettable 'SNL' Moments last fall, "Cowbell" ranked among the top five.
>
> For those who've never seen it, the sketch's hilarity probably defies a printed
> description (it's best to see it for yourself at mknx.com/v/cowbell.wmv). Suffice
> to say, Will Ferrell, who wrote the skit, plays a band member named Gene Frenkle
> whose specialty is the cowbell (and whose shirt fails to cover his flopping gut).
> Walken, ever intense, is the producer who is determined -- good taste and common
> sense notwithstanding -- to get more cowbell into the song's recording. He urges
> Frenkle to "really explore the studio space" while whaling away on his cowbell --
> which Ferrell does, in a breathtaking bit of physical comedy.
>
> Despite the obvious irritation of the rest of the band, Walken's Dickinson
> persists. "Guess what?" he says between takes. "I got a FE-ver, and the only
> prescription . . . is more cowbell!"
>
> Walken, an actor who has specialized in portraying the slightly unhinged, has
> described the six-minute sketch as career-defining. "People . . . I don't know .
> . . I hear about it everywhere I go," he told the Orlando Sentinel in October.
> "It's been years, and all anybody brings up is 'cowbell.' I guess . . . you never
> know what's gonna click."
>
> Among the more amused viewers of the bit are the actual members of Blue Oyster
> Cult. "We didn't know it was coming," says Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser,
> co-founder and lead guitarist of the group. "We all thought it was phenomenal.
> We're huge Christopher Walken fans." He adds, "I've probably seen it 20 times and
> I'm still not tired of it."
>
> Roeser says the TV sketch accurately portrayed the look of the band in its
> mid-'70s heyday, but took some artistic license with a few details. For example,
> "SNL" player Chris Parnell, portraying the group's lead singer, is referred to in
> the skit as "Eric." That presumably would be a reference to longtime band member
> Eric Bloom, but it was actually Roeser, not Bloom, who was in front of the group
> when it made "Reaper." And while there really is a record producer named Bruce
> Dickinson, he had nothing to do with the recording of the song. (Dickinson did
> work on some of the group's later releases.)
>
> What's more, the cowbell skit is presented as an episode of VH1's "Behind the
> Music," a real show that chronicles the lurid rise and fall of real-life bands.
> But Blue Oyster Cult never really was a "Behind the Music" kind of band. "We did
> our share of drugs, but we never really [expletive] up," Roeser says. In fact,
> after a break in the mid-'80s and a few lineup changes, the group (featuring
> three of its members from the 1970s) has toured continuously, and plays about 80
> to 90 dates a year.
>
> Roeser said people still ask the band about poor Gene Frenkle, whose image
> appears in a still frame at the end of the sketch with the words "In Memoriam.
> 1950-2000."
>
> Roeser breaks into a laugh. "That's a total fiction," he says. "They made up that
> character."
>
> Fact is, there is a cowbell on "Reaper." If you listen closely to it on oldies
> radio, you can make it out in the background. But it was an afterthought. The
> song was recorded without it, and was added as an overdub at the last minute.
> According to former BOC bassist Joe Bouchard, an unnamed producer asked his
> brother, drummer Albert Bouchard, to play the cowbell after the fact. "Albert
> thought he was crazy," Bouchard told the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press in 2000. "But
> he put all this tape around a cowbell and played it. It really pulled the track
> together."
>
> During its show at the Rams Head on Thursday night, the five-member group dusted
> off its hits from three decades ago, including "R.U. Ready 2 Rock," "Burnin' for
> You" and "Godzilla." Then, after a long guitar preamble, it snapped into its
> set-closer, "(Don't Fear) The Reaper."
>
> The familiar sweet notes swooped and soared, drawing the mostly middle-aged crowd
> back to its headbanging youth.
>
> Of course, it could have used . . . well, you know.
>
>
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> ---------------------------------
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