Biography
Lead guitarist and vocalist for Blue Öyster Cult, since its inception in 1967, Buck Dharma (born: Donald Roser) has successfully branched out to a variety of outside projects. He released a powerful solo album, Flat Out, in 1982, and wrote score "cues" for the 1992 film #Bad Channels, that were featured, along with two new Blue Öyster Cult tunes, on the soundtrack album. A four-CD box set, Archive, released in 2002, samples Dharma's home recordings since the mid-'70s. Dharma has also found time to add his distinctive playing to albums by Kasim Sulton and Tommy Zvoncheck.

The son of a jazz saxophone player, Dharma studied accordion as a child. Although he switched to the drums, his career as a drummer ended when he broke his left wrist while playing basketball. Teaching himself to play the guitar while recuperating, he found his natural voice on the instrument.

Sharpening his skill with a series of cover bands on Long Island, Dharma continued to play music after enrolling in Clarkson College, in the northern New York city of Potsdam. Striking up a friendship with future Blue Öyster Cult drummer Albert Bouchard, Dharma and Bouchard continued to play together in two Potsdam-based bands -- the Disciples and Travesty..

Although Dharma temporarily returned to Long Island, and Bouchard to Chicago, they reunited after a few months in Stony Brook, NY. While they initially attempted to balance music with studies at Stony Brook College, it was obvious that music demanded full-time attention. Moving into a "band house," they joined with bassist Andy Winters and keyboardist John Wiesenthal (soon replaced by Allen Lanier) to form Soft White Underbelly in 1967.

Signed by Elektra, Dharma and Soft White Underbelly added vocalist Les Bronstein before recording what should have been their first album. Instead, the album went unreleased, and, after dropping Bronstein, the band renamed itself Oaxaca. Although they worked on a second album, this too went unreleased. The only recording during the band's early days was a single credited to the Stalk-Forrest Group.

Dropped by Elektra, Dharma and bandmates went through further changes. Changing their name to Blue Öyster Cult, and replacing Winters with Bouchard's brother, Joe, they signed with Columbia in late 1971.

Although their first albums for the label barely broke into the Top 100, the group had its first international hit with (Don't Fear) The Reaper, featuring Dharma's lead vocals. The song's success provided the impetus that the band needed as their subsequent releases consistently achieved gold status. Dharma's vocals were also featured on Blue Öyster Cult's 1981 Top 40 hit Burnin' for You. ~ Craig Harris, Rovi




 
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What Makes This Song Great? "Don’t Fear The Reaper" Blue Oyster Cult
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