When Sparks Sparked

I DJ'd my very first "radio show," closed-circuit not broadcast, in 1974 to an audience of about 15 in the Chagrin Falls High School cafeteria. I was nervous as hell. The first band I played was Sparks - I was practically born cool.

The L.A. band Sparks' first two albums (from '72 and early-'73) failed to generate much more than embarrassed silence. The Mael brothers - Ron and Russell - then broke up the original band and moved to England in mid-'73, where at least the press had been kind.

Sparks was reformed in late-'73 with Adrian Fisher on guitar, Martin Gordon on bass, and Dinky Diamond on drums, in addition to Ron's varied keyboards, and Russell's mock-operatic vocals. The new band kicked with greater rhythmic intensity, and the Mael brother's songwriting found its voice in a hard-charging art-pop: a bizarre alliance of Roxy Music, Richard Wagner, and the Chipmunks. Evidence of this was amply provided on the album Kimono My House, a garden of freakish delights.

"This Town Ain't Big Enough For the Both Of Us" follows Russell over a busy roller-coaster melody conveying a series of Walter Mitty scenes involving stampeding zoo animals, aerial combat, cannibals, and the terrors of pursuing women. Dynamically alternating between orchestral keyboard accompaniment and kick-ass rock, "This Town" is one of the great singles of the '70s.

"Amateur Hour" marches to a double-time beat, as Russell's comparatively naturalistic singing recommends practice as the remedy for sexual naivete. "Thank God It's Not Christmas" is an impassioned rocker that pursues the recurring theme of awkwardness between the sexes, as does "Hasta Manana, Monsieur" and "Equator." Fisher's guitar rocks throughout the album and the tough arrangements balance Russell's tendency toward twee.

Propaganda was a worthy follow-up to Kimono, with similar themes and virtues. "Never Turn Your Back On Mother Earth" is an elegant Spectorish pop song cautioning the listener that Mother Nature can be bitch. "Something For the Girl With Everything" is favorably reminiscent of "This Town" without being derivative. "Achoo" is the album's best and most thought-provoking song, using the sneeze as metaphor for everything from a romantic brush-off to the voice of the downtrodden, culminating in an astonishing multitracked chorus of "achoos."

Sparks took many twists and turns and by the '80s rode the crest of new wave to considerable success in the U.S. that has continued on and off to this very day - they just released a new one, Lil' Beethoven, in July - but they have never again been as quirky, fresh and provocative as on this pair out of left field in the mid-'70s.

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Article Author: Eric Olsen

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  • Kimono My House Kimono My House

    Digitally remastered reissue of 1974 album includes two unmarked bonus tracks, 'Lost & Found' & 'Barbecutie'. 12 tracks total including 'This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us', which Siouxsie ...

  • Propaganda Propaganda
  • The Best of Sparks The Best of Sparks
  • Lil' Beethoven Lil' Beethoven

Article comments

  • 1 - Marco

    May 01, 2004 at 9:39 am

    IMHO, what made them great earlier (Kimono times) was the fact that it was a band not a solo project. Once they got an obedient lineup it seemd to get a bit one dimensional. And one of the great contributors - again IMO, of course - was Martin Gordon, bassist. You can hear on his Baboon in the Basement, as well as all the other stuff he's done, that he has a serious pop genius for composition and arrangement. Didn't do any composing for Sparks but some serious arranging goin on there....

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    May 01, 2004 at 11:33 am

    I agree the Gordon-era stuff was their best - there was a manic energy and eccentricity. Bands are often greater than the sum of their parts.

  • 3 - HW Saxton Jr.

    May 01, 2004 at 4:27 pm

    Not even a single mention of "A Woofer In Tweeters Clothing"? HMMPH.

  • 4 - HW Saxton Jr.

    May 01, 2004 at 4:53 pm

    I partially retract that statement Eric.
    They were referenced,just not by name.
    My mistake."ATIWC" definitely was not as
    "accessible" as "Kimono"& "Propanganda",
    if accessible is even an applicable term
    in the case of the Brothers Mael.

    Sparks used to be on TV often.I saw them
    on Don Kirshners Rock Concert & Midnight
    Special.I even saw them on The Real Don
    Steele Show on KHJ Ch.9.

    I broke out "Kimono" after reading this
    article and must say that Sparks still
    sound very contemporary to this day some
    30 years after the fact.

  • 5 - HW Saxton Jr.

    May 01, 2004 at 4:58 pm

    The above should read:"it was referenced
    not "they were referenced". DOH!!!

  • 6 - Eric Olsen

    May 01, 2004 at 7:20 pm

    HW, you are a gentleman and a musical scholar - I was pretty amaed when I listened to them to write this. Talk about ahead of your time!

  • 7 - Aaron Betty

    Aug 02, 2005 at 4:18 pm

    300 songs on and Sparks are still going strong - now that's perseverance!

    Ultimate Sparks tracklisting here

  • 8 - Eric Olsen

    Aug 02, 2005 at 9:08 pm

    wow, that's a lot of Sparks - you're a real fan!

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