Take two quirky brothers wielding sizzling pants and Hitler moustaches, add the sound of King Crimson laying waste to The Archies, and stir in 70s glam rock megastardom. That unrepeatable recipe raised the query we explored in 2012: how prog are Sparks?
“Once I was in The Futureheads,” recollects Peter Brewis of Area Music, ”Sparks had been a giant affect. In actual fact, you needed to like their albums Kimono My Home and Propaganda, and their single The Quantity One Music In Heaven, to be within the band!”
Sparks’ curiously serpentine melodies, twitchy time signatures and quirky-though-muscular musicianship – evident particularly on mid-70s albums Kimono, Propaganda, Indiscreet and Large Beat – are, in a weird manner, akin to bubblegum pop as carried out by a prog band.
Think about King Crimson (truly a favorite of Sparks within the early days) laying waste to The Archies. Though maybe Previous Gray Whistle Take a look at presenter Bob Harris’ estimation of brothers Ron and Russell Mael and their band comes nearer: a cross between The Moms Of Invention and The Monkees.
“They’re very melodic,” says Brewis. “All of the proginess and rhythmic strangeness comes from the melodies, which I all the time presumed Ron wrote on the piano. That’s what influenced us in Area Music – the modular nature of the songs, with their very outlined sections. Though they don’t go on for ages and ages like, say, Larks Tongues In Aspic, they nonetheless have little sections or modules.
“I can see why Todd Rundgren favored them,” he continues, referring to the time Rundgren urged label proprietor Albert Grossman to signal Sparks, then often known as Halfnelson, to Bearsville in 1970. “I can see quite a lot of that bite-sized-morsel method to pop on Todd’s A Wizard, A True Star.
“I grew up believing that was how pop songs had been meant to sound, with a great deal of totally different sections and sounds crammed right into a small house: Wizard, 10cc’s Une Nuit A Paris, Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody – and, after all, Sparks’ personal This City Ain’t Large Sufficient For Each Of Us. I believed that was what you needed to do should you needed to make pop music.”
In accordance with Russell Mael – whose tumbling female curls and near-operatic falsetto proved as a lot of a shock as Ron’s poker-faced stare and Hitler moustache – there was by no means an precise technique for pursuing the peculiar. However he does acknowledge they’ve led an unconventional profession, taking in glam, synthpop, new wave, laborious rock, electro, neo-classical chamber pop and – yup – prog, proper as much as their twenty second album, 2009’s The Seduction Of Ingmar Bergman.
“We by no means mentioned our motivation, even within the early days,” says Russell of the late-60s interval when the Los Angelinos and arch Anglophiles started making music below The Transfer, The Who, Procol Harum and Pink Floyd. “However we’ve all the time tried to do one thing particular, to be heard above all of the muddle that’s on the market.
“We don’t have board conferences, however the concepts has all the time been to do issues we haven’t tackled but – rehashing what you’ve already completed is much less thrilling than approaching one thing totally different . Whether or not we succeed or fall flat on our faces in every case is one other matter. However we need to try one thing the place we don’t know the end result.”
In a manner, Sparks are the Zeligs of rock, ingeniously mixing in with no matter period they occur to be in, however someway remaining aside from all of it. They refused to merge with the early-70s West Coast psychedelic or troubadour scenes with 1971 Rundgren-produced debut album as Halfnelson, or 1973 follow-up A Woofer In Tweeter’s Clothes.
However as soon as they’d settled in Britain they made good sense by way of flamboyance, matching Messrs Bowie, Ferry and Bolan each glam step of the way in which. For choral ambition they marched to the identical regal tune as Queen, and for sheer intricacy and idiosyncrasy they orbited the art-pop camp alongside 10cc.
In a way, Sparks additionally supplied variations of prog’s florid indulgence, solely compressed into three-minute pop ditties – helped in no small half by the heavyweight instrumental expertise of Martin Gordon (bass), Norman ‘Dinky’ Diamond (drums) and Adrian Fisher (guitar). It’s an idea that Russell says hasn’t come up earlier than in interviews; and now he thinks about it, that surprises him.
“We actually favored King Crimson loads, particularly twenty first Century Schizoid Man, and I do see sure similarities between us. For those who strip away the photographs and choose it purely on the music, you might put This City towards a King Crimson tune and its musicality and ambition it could match. A number of the blokes in Sparks at the moment had been massive followers of bands like Sure – so who is aware of if their taking part in seeped in to make the songs sound that manner? A number of the jagged rhythmic stuff on Kimono and Propaganda, and the construction of the songs, was very proggy.”
Between 1974 and 1975, Sparks made a number of visits to the UK charts with This City, Beginner Hour, By no means Flip Your Again On Mom Earth, One thing For The Woman With Every little thing, Get In The Swing and Seems to be, Seems to be, Seems to be. It may simply be argued that, given how astonishingly authentic and ingenious they had been, Sparks ought to have been way more in style.
Checked out one other manner, nevertheless, contemplating the feverishly eccentric nature of the music and absurdist logic of the lyrics, it’s a relentless supply of amazement that they offered any information in any respect. “We generally suppose that!” laughs Russell. “Each side are true.
Folks would say: ‘When are you going to place in your stage outfit?’ We’d be like, ‘That is our stage outfit!’”
“You have a look at outdated footage of Sparks and see the ladies screaming alongside to advanced items like This City and it’s actually bizarre. There was one thing in the way in which it was delivered – the picture of the band – that made younger individuals establish with it. How essential was my hair within the supply of that message? Extraordinarily essential! It nonetheless is. It’s all the time been 50 per cent concerning the music, and 50 per cent concerning the hair!”
Equally uncommon is the phase-like nature of Sparks’ success. Following their quasi-prog glam-era part, that they had a second spurt within the late-70s with The Quantity One Music In Heaven, Beat The Clock and Tryouts For The Human Race, all courtesy of Italian sequencer-disco producer Giorgio Moroder.
Ron and Russell had been recast as a proto-synthpop duo, with the latter as gregarious frontman and the previous tashe lugubrious keyboardist, offering a template for Smooth Cell, Erasure, OMD, Blancmange, Pet Store Boys and all the opposite odd electro {couples}. There was a interval once they had been large in France and Germany, with singles equivalent to Once I’m With You, and a silver streak within the 80s once they grew to become new wave stars in LA on the again of the albums Whomp That Sucker (1981), Angst In My Pants (1982) and In Outer Area (1983).
Then they got here again and did it yet again – notably in Europe – in 1994 with Gratuitous Sax & Mindless Violins and its hit When Do I Get To Sing ‘My Manner.’ Their important inventory within the early twenty first century has arguably by no means been increased, with the albums Lil’ Beethoven (2002) and Hi there Younger Lovers (2006, that includes the extraordinary baroque steel of Dick Round), and the record-breaking 20 consecutive dates they carried out in London in 2008, which culminated within the unveiling of album 21, Unique Creatures Of The Deep.
That album quantity 22, The Seduction Of Ingmar Bergman, was such an eccentric departure, even by their requirements, augurs properly for a fifth decade of exploratory forays and rampant experimentation.
Sparks followers like Peter Brewis most admire the persistently altering nature of their music, and their unrelenting adherence to the notion of play. “The bands of my era have been caught up within the thought of authenticity, which is ludicrous,” he states. “They don’t have that playfulness and it smacks of a scarcity of sense of humour. Right now’s bands are far more po-faced than any of the blokes in King Crimson. That’s what I like about Sparks rising up: I couldn’t imagine bands had been allowed to be that foolish!”
He compares Ron’s stern-headmaster persona and Russell’s androgynous preening to the theatricality of Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson and Genesis’ Peter Gabriel, in addition to to Bowie as Ziggy. The distinction was, within the Maels’ case, they weren’t play-acting or role-playing. “Particularly with Ron,” asserts Russell. “There actually is not any separation between his each day persona and his stage one. Folks would say: ‘When are you going to place in your stage outfit?’ And we’d be like, ‘This is our stage outfit!’”

Held in such esteem as they’re, Russell couldn’t be happier with Sparks’ present place and their freedom to create. When Prog means that that they had their thunder stolen considerably by Queen – who had been like Sparks with quite a lot of the idiosyncrasies ironed out – he agrees. However he has no regrets about refusing to bow to industrial calls for.
“For those who pile up our gross sales through the years in France and Germany and England and LA and Mozambique – we had been very massive in Mozambique – it could be a good sum by anybody’s requirements. Queen possibly discovered a strategy to make their music extra palatable to a much bigger viewers. Bother is we may by no means, as you say, iron out the idiosyncrasies. The idiosyncrasies are so embedded in what Sparks do!
We by no means had large industrial success, so we by no means fell into the lure of attempting to recapture it
“We’ve by no means given in to something. Our twenty second album is a musical opera a few Swedish movie director! Ours has not been a typical profession path, and that’s one thing I’m actually happy with. Since we by no means had large industrial success, we by no means fell into the lure of regularly attempting to recapture it – that freed us from not having to fret concerning the industrial facet of issues.
“And possibly that’s what our calling is; possibly that’s the benefit of being chameleonic, and why we’re nonetheless right here. We’re not motivated by gross sales – we’re motivated by a want to shake up the universe. And there’s not that many bands you may say that about.”