Sunday, December 28, 2025

Sparks - Collaborations Don't Work, Do They?!

Brothers Ron and Russell Mael from Los Angeles, USA, have been making diverse music since 1969 under various incarnations of Sparks.

Known for their quirky songwriting, their music has evolved through glam rock, synth-pop, new wave, and art pop, keeping them relevant and influential for over five decades.

Bands like Depeche Mode, New Order, and The Human League have cited Sparks as a key influence.

Listening to Spark’s golden oldie “This Town Ain’t Big Enough for Both of Us” recently it became very clear where Queen got their ideas for “Bohemian Rhapsody” from…

The first time I got aware of the ‘phenomenon’ called Sparks must have been in 1974 when they had a couple of TV appearances on the Dutch TV music program TOP POP.

If I remember correctly my whole family was watching their performance of ‘Never Turn Your Back On Mother Earth’ and afterwards everyone agreed that it was quite weird, both musically and (perhaps even more) visually!

I certainly didn't feel any urge to run to a record shop and buy their singles and albums.

However over the years I kept 'bumping' into them and slowly but surely began to appreciate their work.

Also more than a few blogs were singing their praises which began to make more and more sense…

Any band that comes up with songs like Your Call’s Very Important To Us. Please Hold.”, Dick Around”, “I Can’t Believe That You Would Fall for All the Crap in This Song”, and “(Baby, Baby) Can I Invade Your Country”, already deserve an award for being cooler than cool.

Since then I have seen Sparks twice, in Utrecht (2023) and earlier this month in Hong Kong, both excellent shows, no such thing as going through the motions at all!

By now they've released an astonishing number of albums, 26 if I'm not mistaken, and there's a similar huge amount of compilations, unreal...

This begs a question though, what are Sparks doing here at JOKONKY?

Well, this was triggered by their last performance at Clockenflap where I hoped they'd join Franz Ferdinand on stage for at least 1 song, but alas, no such luck.

Reason is that they'd recorded a whole album together as FFS in 2015, which wasn't bad either.

One of that album's songs is Collaborations Don't Work”, which got me thinking as Sparks have done all kinds of collaborations, and successfully too!

I started digging into their oeuvre and found plenty of 'team’ work evidence, both on their own albums (Annette Soundtrack, Indiscreet, & In Outer Space) and as guest performers on other artist/group albums (Gemma Ray, Gorillaz, Les Rita Mitsouko, Max Richter, Orbital, Pizzicato Five, SebastiAn, Simple Minds, Todd Rundgren, & Yoko Ono).

This resulted in a brand new JOKONKY special: Collaborations Don't Work, Do They?

As you will hear, collaborations can work sometimes, enjoy!

24 comments:

  1. Link: https://mega.nz/file/6c1WEJiB#t5Tjnzn-Ues9k-gaWB0AbBQQhGNVTETr9hYOA-IhIQQ
    Note that I didn't include any tracks from their album Plagiarism, as that one is more of tribute record, although it does include some collaborations as well...
    Question: Share with us any musical collaborations you really like.

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  2. Off the top of my head, I like Carl Perkins with NRBQ but not so much Yes and the Buggles.
    J.

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    1. Good example, I still have that Perkins album! Yes & the Buggles was new to me, so I read up a bit, quite a story!
      https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/flashback-the-buggles-join-yes-and-prog-chaos-ensues-707662/

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  3. In a world where The Beatles were contra The Rolling Stones, Mr Billy Preston collaborated with both. And I really enjoyed it.
    Charlie Parker, with Miles Davis, and he with John Coltrane, who with Eric Dolphy who worked with Han Bennink with whom half the universe collaborated.

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  4. Thank you very much! (Although I'm kind of a Sparks fan, more than half of these tracks are actually new to me.) What Anonymous J. says above reminds me that one musical collaboration I like a whole lot is ''She Sings, They Play," the album which NRBQ did with Skeeter Davis.

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    1. You're welcome Crab Devil! By the way, there's one more NRBQ collaboration: https://www.discogs.com/release/2804580-NRBQ-And-Captain-Lou-Albano-Lou-And-The-Q?srsltid=AfmBOorW_i-uZG-KvR1NVRJgbP-jaLZ-WfnULShw9gBJT0HKRpk26Gxx

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    2. There's also THIS collab with NRBQ, which I've never heard:
      https://www.discogs.com/release/2834534-John-Candy-NRBQ-Stormalong

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    3. Same here! Perhaps because it's a children's story book read by the author and NRBQ providing background music?

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  5. Since you asked for it: Filthy Phil And Fast Eddie 'Naughty Old Santa's Christmas Classics', perfect to get rid of your guests on New Year's Eve, and it's a Christmas album so 2 for the price of 1: https://youtu.be/8iVDIge2Jxc

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    1. As I had no idea about these 2, therefore did some background checking, Filthy Phil & Fast Eddie are the drummer & guitarist of Motorhead!

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    2. Absolutely right! When this came out, Fast Eddie was already kicked out of Motörhead, so with a little stretch one might consider this a "collaboration". Probably recorded it before, since they weren't exactly on good terms then. By the way, it really is a record to chase your guests away :) .

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  6. Sparks new track with gorillaz is mighty fine. Thanks for this swell comp.

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  7. Thinking about Koen's question, some of my favorite collaborators are vocalists like Iggy Pop and the late Mark Lanegan, each of whom added their deep, rich voices to a surprisingly broad range of guest appearances.

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    1. Oh yes, Iggy collaborated with loads of people!

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  8. Thanks Art58Koen! That year I moved to L.A. in CA for a job in 2002/3, first purchase was the SPARKS boxset from Tower Records (had never heard of them but they were local so had to get acclimated). My favorite collaboration was when Myron Lefevre hung out with Alvin Lee at his commune and recorded the 1973 album "On The Road To Freedom" which came at a key time for the artist. Happy New Year!!!!

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    1. You're welcome! Good collaboration example as well! Belated Happy New Year!

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  9. Mark E Smith and Ed Blaney! @ albums, I think ...

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  10. Marvin Gaye and Pink Floyd - Requiem for a Dream (1981)

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  11. Mouse on Mars with Mark E Smith - cut the gain

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  12. Anonymous John's wee brotherJanuary 4, 2026 at 4:37 PM

    Anything by Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood! Or Nico and Tangerine Dream. Or Otway and Barret. Or PJ Proby and Marc Almond. Or Olivia Rodrigo and Robert Smith. Or Paul Haig and Billy MacKenzie (swoon!). Or Robert Calvert with Bethnal. Or Scott Walker And Sunn O))). Or Shuttleworth featuring Mark E Smith. Or The KLF and Extreme Noise Terror. I could go on ... but should I?

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    1. This is a certified safe space for music nerds to carry on and on about deeply important concerns such as these.

      Just in case you Anons missed it, I cobbled together a set of Mark E Smith's collabs with Blaney, Shuttleworth, Mouse on Mars, etc. Eight years gone...

      https://jonderblog.blogspot.com/2019/01/guest-spots-mark-e-smith.html

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