REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: September 13, 2021

SPARKS – Propaganda

This band had a big impression on me when I was a young very impressionable school boy back in ’74. The release of Kimono My House, and especially the single This Town Ain’t Big Enough For The Both Of Us, blew my tiny little mind. If you can, watch Edgar Wright’s awesome docufilm The Sparks Brothers as it tells the tale of this amazing band. They sort of operate in a musical world of their own. Every now and then that world seems to align perfectly with what’s happening at the time.

This album was the follow up to Kimono and was also released in ’74. That’s what bands did back then – not like today when you can wait 5 years for your favourite band to record an album. I would dare suggest that Sparks are one of the ultimate Prog rock bands as they change styles and sounds and constantly evolve. Yes it’s pop, but not as we know it. As The Beach Boys did before them, they tried to innovate within a format that can be throwaway at times and has a very fickle audience.

My favourites on this record are the superb Never Turn Your Back On Mother Earth, and Something For The Girl With Everything – both are superb mid seventies pop tunes with great arrangements, but they sound as though they could be from the now.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

KIX – s/t

I know Midnite Dynamite and Blow My Fuse were big albums for the band, but to me, this is their best album. It shows the band as their true selves – before record company nonsense kicked in. A cross between glam/power pop and good old rock n roll, this is one fun record. I bought this as a cold buy and had never heard the band before – I just liked the cover and the song titles.

I was super stoked when I first dropped the needle on the record as first song, Atomic Bombs, is a great fun up-tempo rocker. Every song is just pure gold and has that big feel good vibe. Love At First Sight has a killer groove and sing-a-long chorus and should have been a single. Heartache is an ode to young lust. Poison is a monster glam/sleaze track with a killer beat and groove, and has an awesome solo – plus a great call and response section. The Itch closes out Side 1 and reminds me of AC/DC with the guitar sound and main riff.

Side 2 kicks off with the band’s signature song, Kix Are For Kids, and a fun fast old school rock n roll romp it is. Contrary Mary follows and is Faster Pussycat before they were a thing. This album came out in ’81, and I would say this album was an influence on quite a few bands that came after. If I had to choose between this and Crudley Motts first album, I would go for this every time. Better songs, better playing, better frontman, and a way better guitar player. Anyway back to the record. Next up is The Kid, which starts with a solo guitar piece before the full on stomp glamfest kicks in. Last track is Yeah Yeah Yeah, and I know it’s cheesy as hell, but I love the simplicity and the fun vibe of this track – even though lyrically it’s not very PC.

So this record is not gonna change the world, but if it doesn’t put a smile on your face and happy feeing in your soul, then you are in need of therapy.

9/10 from The Grooveman.