Kimono My House

Not to be confused with Come On-a My House.

Kimono My House
Studio album by Sparks
Released May 1974
Recorded December 1973 – February 1974
Studio
Genre
Length 36:19
Label Island
Producer Muff Winwood
Sparks chronology
A Woofer in Tweeter's Clothing
(1972)
Kimono My House
(1974)
Propaganda
(1974)
Singles from Kimono My House
  1. "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us" b/w "Barbecutie"
    Released: April 1974
  2. "Amateur Hour" b/w "Lost and Found"
    Released: July 1974
  3. "Hasta Mañana Monsieur" b/w "Equator"
    Released: September 1974
  4. "Talent Is An Asset" b/w "Lost and Found"
    Released: November 1974 (NZ, US)[1]
Music sample
"Thank God It's Not Christmas"

Kimono My House is the third album by the American rock band Sparks. The album was released in May 1974 and is considered to be their commercial breakthrough album.

Title

The album's title is a pun on the song "Come On-a My House", made famous by Rosemary Clooney.[2] The pun has a precedent, however, in the title of a track on jazz guitarist Dick Garcia's 1956 album A Message from Garcia.

History

In 1973, prior to the recording of the album, the brothers Ron and Russell Mael had accepted an offer to relocate to the United Kingdom in order to participate in the glam rock scene. The previous lineup consisting of Earle Mankey, Jim Mankey and Harley Feinstein were replaced with British musicians: Martin Gordon, Adrian Fisher and Norman "Dinky" Diamond joined the band to play bass, guitar and drums respectively. The group signed a record contract with Island Records and recorded Kimono My House in 1974. Although the Mael brothers had wanted Roy Wood to produce the album, he was unavailable, so Muff Winwood was hired as producer. Winwood remained with the group to produce the follow-up album Propaganda later in 1974.

Sound

Musically, Kimono My House represented a shift in sound and a focusing of Ron Mael's songwriting (now the indisputable lead songwriter). Sparks' two albums with the Mankey brothers had been diverse albums that featured a number of different styles, such as a cover of Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Do-Re-Mi", "Here Comes Bob", which was performed by a small string section, and "The Louvre", which mixed both English and French lyrics.

The new album embraced the more pop-oriented side of the Mael brothers' song-writing, which had previously been evident in songs such as "Wonder Girl" and "High C". Now, backed by the new British line-up and boosted by Winwood's simpler production, the songs were more focused. The album slotted in with the current popularity of glam rock—which was dominating the charts—in particular, the more experimental and electronic sound of Roxy Music and David Bowie. Lyrically, the songs remained unusual and humorous. The great number of words filled with pop-culture references, puns and peculiar sexual content sung often in falsetto by Russell Mael set Sparks apart from other groups.

The particularity of their sound, which matched pop songwriting with complex lyrics, defined the group to their UK audience. Integral to the sound was Adrian Fisher's bluesy guitar playing and Martin Gordon's sonorous Rickenbacker bass. This was aided and abetted by the physical presence of the group. Ron and Russell milked their peculiar image: Ron's toothbrush moustache, reserved wardrobe and usually silent demeanour sat in diametrical opposition to his younger brother's long curly hair and energetic and flamboyant stage persona. Taken together, the sound and look of the group caused a sensation, producing what seemed to the mass audience to be an "overnight success."

What sounds like a honking saxophone line at the end of ”Equator”, is in fact a mellotron played by Ron Mael; the seductive whispers on the track are delivered by a speeded-up Russell Mael.[3]

Cover

The cover is notable for having neither the name of the band nor the album title on the front cover. The two girls pictured, in kimonos, were members of a Japanese dance company touring England in 1974.[4]

In 1980 cover star Michi Hirota (pictured on the right side, the winking geisha) would add vocals to David Bowie's "It's No Game".[5][6]

The inner sleeve for the original vinyl record was printed with a full set of song lyrics on one side and a black and white photograph of the Mael brothers, framed in a spotlight, on the reverse.

Release

Kimono My House became a popular release, reaching #4 on the UK Albums Chart, and was awarded gold status by the BPI in September 1974.[7] The single "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us" was a surprise hit and reached #2 in the UK Singles Chart, being certified as silver in June 1974.[7] It was held off the top spot by The Rubettes' bubblegum pop song "Sugar Baby Love", which remained at #1 for four weeks. Sparks' second Island era single, "Amateur Hour", reached the top ten in the UK later that summer.

Outside the UK, Kimono My House and its singles made a significant impact across Europe, notably in Germany, where both singles reached #12. In the US, the album reached #101 on the Billboard 200.[8] The group's two Bearsville albums had garnered critical praise but few sales. The only significant chart performance had been for "Wonder Girl", which had been a minor regional hit and had crept into the lower reaches of the Cashbox chart at #92.[9] In place of "Amateur Hour", "Talent is an Asset" was selected as the album's second single in the US, and the album's third in New Zealand.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[10]
Classic Rock[11]
Rolling Stone(mixed)[12]

UK singer and Smiths frontman Morrissey has frequently cited Kimono My House as one of his favorite albums and famously wrote a letter to the NME at age 15 extolling its virtues. He later told the Mael brothers that it had been a key influence on him deciding to embark upon a music career.[13] In 2010, Morrissey included it on a formal list of his 13 favorite albums of all-time for The Quietus.[14] Kurt Cobain has also named the album as one of his all-time favourites.[15]

Re-release

Kimono My House was re-issued and remastered by Island in 1994 and 2006. The first issue by the Island Masters subsidiary added the non-album B-sides "Barbecutie" and "Lost and Found". The '21st Century Edition' added a live recording of "Amateur Hour" recorded by a subsequent (1975) line-up of the group and sleeve notes by Paul Lester, the deputy editor of Uncut magazine.

A remastered 40th Anniversary Edition was released on 15 December 2014 on vinyl only, including previously unreleased demo material from the band's archives.[16] Coinciding with the release, the entire album was performed along with the 35-piece Heritage Orchestra at the Barbican Centre on 19 and 20 December, where the band also performed brand new orchestral arrangements by Nathan Kelly. The programme also featured songs from their other 22 albums.[17] The second date was added after the first night sold out.[18]

Track listing

All tracks written by Ron Mael; except where indicated. 

Side one
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us"    3:05
2. "Amateur Hour"    3:37
3. "Falling in Love with Myself Again"    3:03
4. "Here in Heaven"    2:48
5. "Thank God It's Not Christmas"    5:07
Side two
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
6. "Hasta Mañana, Monsieur"  Russell Mael, Ron Mael 3:52
7. "Talent Is an Asset"    3:21
8. "Complaints"    2:50
9. "In My Family"  Russell Mael, Ron Mael 3:48
10. "Equator"    4:42
21st Century Edition bonus tracks
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
11. "Barbecutie"    3:07
12. "Lost and Found"    3:19
13. "Amateur Hour (Live at Fairfield Halls, Croydon, London, 9 November 1975)" (Features the Indiscreet line-up of Sparks)  4:44

Personnel

Other credits

External links

References

  1. "45cat - Sparks - Talent Is An Asset / Lost And Found - Island - USA - IS 009". 45cat. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
  2. "GUEST WRITER MADELINE BOCARO revisits Sparks' classic album Kimono My House on its 40th anniversary". elsewhere.co.nz. 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2015-08-05.
  3. "Sparks - Kimono My House: The Island Years". .sparksmael.co.uk. Retrieved 14 December 2014.
  4. "Michi Hirota". discogs.com. Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  5. "It's No Game by David Bowie". songfacts.com. Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  6. 1 2 "Chart Stats - Sparks". chartstats.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-23. Retrieved 2008-07-22.
  7. "Allmusic - Billboard Albums - Sparks". Billboard. Retrieved 2008-12-04.
  8. Thompson, Dave. "Wonder Girl". Allmusic. Retrieved January 17, 2013.
  9. AllMusic review
  10. Makowski, Peter (December 2006). "Still able to start a fire: Sparks Reissues". Classic Rock. p. 101.
  11. Rolling Stone review
  12. "Kimono My House - Sparks' Third Album".
  13. "Morrissey Reveals His Favourite LPs of All Time". Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  14. "A List Obligatory. The Top Glam Rock Albums". earbuddy.net. Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  15. "Sparks to release 40th anniversary edition of Kimono my House". louderthanwar.com. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
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