Flat Out (Buck Dharma album)

Flat Out
Studio album by Buck Dharma
Released 1982
Recorded Boogie Hotel Studios, Port Jefferson, New York
Kingdom Sound Studios, Long Island, New York
North Lake Studios, North White Plains, New York
The Power Station and Warehouse Studios, New York City
The Automatt, San Francisco, California, 1981
Genre Rock
Length 38:21
Label Portrait
Producer Donald Roeser
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Flat Out is a solo album by Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser, lead guitarist and vocalist for hard rock band Blue Öyster Cult, released in 1982 (see 1982 in music). Although Roeser penned and sang BÖC's biggest hits ("(Don't Fear) The Reaper", "Godzilla", "Burnin' for You"), the band operated as a democracy, and some of the songs he brought to the band were deemed too poppy by the others, so he released many of them on this solo record. "Born to Rock" was the first single (and was played live by the full band on occasion in 1982 and again in 2004), and "Your Loving Heart" was also released as a single, but neither charted well.

The track "Come Softly to Me" begins with a 35-second backwards recording. When played in reverse, it is a conversation that mentions a bongo record that sounds like Channel 11 music used to be. The conversation, which takes place during a game of ping-pong, ends with, "I could kick your ass but I know this is just for a sound check." The Fan Club lyric book titles this song "Gnop Gnip" (ping pong spelled backwards).[2]

Track listing

All tracks composed by Donald Roeser; except where indicated

  1. "Born to Rock" (Neal Smith, Roeser) - 3:24
  2. "That Summer Night" - 3:44
  3. "Cold Wind" - 4:38
  4. "Your Loving Heart" (Roeser, Sandy Roeser) - 7:12
  5. "Five Thirty-Five" - 5:09
  6. "Wind Weather and Storm" (Richard Meltzer, Roeser) - 2:35
  7. "All Tied Up" - 4:16
  8. "Anwar's Theme / Gnop Gnip" - 4:11
  9. "Come Softly to Me" (Gretchen Christopher, Barbara Ellis, Gary Troxel) - 3:32

Additional track on the CD version (originally released on Guitar’s Practicing Musicians Volume 3, 1989):

  1. "Gamera Is Missing"

Personnel

Musicians

Hospital Staff on Your Loving Heart

Production

References

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