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    Hello Young Lovers

    03/07/2006 | In The Red Records 

    All Music Guide Review

    Why it is that after years or even decades some artists continue to thrill and entertain while others just burn out badly is one of those great mysteries, but in the example of Ron and Russell Mael, aka Sparks, they're firmly in the former category. Hello Young Lovers is their 20th studio album in 35 years, not to mention one of their best. Following on from their enjoyable all-classical instrumentation experiment, Lil' Beethoven, Sparks take their cue here from the album's one song that added full rock band instrumentation to all the strings, "Ugly Guys with Beautiful Girls." The resulting fusion on Hello Young Lovers -- with the brothers and drummer Tammy Glover now accompanied full-time by former touring guitarist Dean Menta, along with Redd Kross' Steve McDonald guesting on bass and Jim Wilson on guitar -- audibly harks back to the U.K. glam era of the band but crucially does not simply replicate it. Instead, it's as close to a full mélange of all the band's various sounds thus far over the years, as Lil' Beethoven's orchestral swoops are shot through with feedback and subtler hints of the various dance incarnations of the duo. Opening track "Dick Around," with its rapidly ascending and descending melodies, absolutely precise performance (Russell's voice continues to be one of the best ever in the field while Ron's ear for immediate but busy-as-heck hooks similarly hasn't gone stale), and back-and-forth arrangements between strings and guitar is a tour de force on its own, not to mention showing that the trademark Mael misanthropic wit remains fully intact. From there, Hello Young Lovers is off to the races, with only a tiny misstep or two along the way ("Here Kitty" is cute but slight, "Metaphor" takes a while to connect fully). First single "Perfume" is a delight, a finger-snapping swing of a song that's still very 21st century, with a classic Russell spoken word break to boot. Other highlights include the outrageous "(Baby Baby) Can I Invade Your Country?," a reworking of the American national anthem that turns into the slyest post-9/11 song yet, and the stellar conclusion "When I Sit Down to the Play the Organ in the Notre Dame Cathedral." "Waterproof" might be the best song in the end, Russell singing like butter couldn't melt in his mouth about being a merrily heartless bastard untroubled by his former love's "Meryl Streep mimicry" while the sound moves from chamber music to a hint of '30s jazz to a full rock-out apocalypse. If, as is often alleged, Queen ripped off Sparks to fully kick-start their own career, Hello Young Lovers is Sparks having the last and best laugh, not just on their former rivals but on all those bands now and then whose members may have listened in but never showed even a tenth of the Maels' genius and inspiration. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

    Credits

    • Ron Mael
    • Arranger, Keyboards, Producer, Orchestration

    Notes

    In The Red is over the moon to announce that we will be releasing the new album by SPARKS this March. Titled "Hello Young Lovers", the Mael brothers prove that they are indeed the maestros of music with moments of sheer beauty, frenzy, dissonance, harmony, pure genius it rocks!!

    Sparks have always dared to be different, and its off-kilter charms are on full display on its new album, "Hello Young Lovers." Although SPARKS has enjoyed its biggest success in the United Kingdom (to where the U.S.-born Maels once relocated), "Hello Young Lovers" took shape in the brothers' native Los Angeles. "We wanted to preserve the spirit of non-convention that we hinted at with [2002's] 'Lil' Beethoven,' but take things miles further," Ron Mael says. "Again, we wanted to steer clear of the pop conventions that for us now sound archaic. We explored other ways to structure songs that aren't simply verse/chorus/bridge. We also explored ways to not always work in standard pop music instrumentation."

    According to Mael, fans of bizarre Sparks classics like "The No. 1 Song in Heaven" and "This Town Ain't Big Enough for the Both of Us" should enjoy the new release. "We are very proud of 'Hello Young Lovers,' and feel that it is musically as daring as any of the earlier Sparks albums were at their release," he says.



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