Have you heard of Sparks? No? Edgar Wright is here to fix that. The director behind Baby Driver and Shaun of the Dead has a new documentary, The Sparks Brothers, in which he makes the case that the LA duo are the most influential band you’ve never heard of. It’s a whirlwind overview of an eclectic band whose career covers 25 albums across five decades.
For the uninitiated, Sparks is a band built around two brothers, Ron and Russell Mael. Through the peaks and valleys of their career, they’ve been at the foreground of glam rock and electronic music and scored big hits in different decades on different continents. Their sound has changed, but they’ve consistently projected an impenetrable aura that makes people ask, “Wait, are these guys serious?” Picture two androgynous guys, one with a Hitler mustache, making catchy pop songs about good customer service or Sherlock Holmes. They’re still at it, too—they have a musical movie starring Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard out later this summer.
Sold yet? Wait until Wright gets to you. With help from Beck, Flea, Patton Oswalt, and a host of other fans, he spreads the gospel of Sparks through one of the most comprehensive rock docs in recent memory. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Wright shared fifteen of his favorite tracks that didn’t make it into The Sparks Brothers with GQ: Some of the best and weirdest deep cuts from one of the best, weirdest bands of all time. Check it out below.
“(No More) Mr. Nice Guys”
Ron and Russell were growing up in LA in the '60s. Obviously there were a lot of massive LA bands at that time that were playing live, like The Doors and Love, and yet Ron and Russell were total Anglophiles. The bands that really inspired them were The Kinks and The Who, and The Yardbirds, and the Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd. What's interesting is that I think in the first Sparks album, you can hear tracks that are two years ahead of other bands. For example, the first Sparks album is from 1971, [there’s a] song called “(No More) Mr. Nice Guys.” If you want to listen to that song, you can see the seeds of not only what Sparks will become, but also what maybe some other bands may or may not have taken influence from, Alice Cooper and Queen being two obvious examples. Alice Cooper himself released a song called “No More Mr. Nice Guy” a couple years later. Ron and Russell are too modest to hold up their hands and say, "Hey, so and so has written a song,” [but] I was quite happy to lay out the chronology and show people the receipts.
“Here in Heaven”