By calling this 1977 release
Introducing Sparks, the Mael siblings were being ironic -- this was their seventh album, and they were famous in England even though they only had a small following in their own country. The second of two albums that
Sparks recorded for
Columbia,
Introducing Sparks gained a reputation for being its least essential album of the 1970s. To be sure, this LP isn't in a class with either
Big Beat (
Sparks' previous
Columbia release) or Island gems such as
Propaganda and
Kimono My House. But it isn't a bad album either -- uneven and imperfect, yes, but generally decent. Some of the album's more memorable songs range from the opener "A Big Surprise" and the
Beach Boys-minded "Over The Summer" (a '60s-like ode to summer love) to the Greek-influenced "Goofing Off." On the hilarious "Occupation,"
Sparks outlines various career options and has fun lampooning all of them -- for example, Russell Mael says of athletes: "We athletes run around and round/We moan and groan and hit the ground/And when we get to 35/We sell cosmetics and survive." Although not recommended to casual listeners,
Introducing Sparks has more plusses than minuses and is worth hearing if you're a hardcore
Sparks aficionado. ~ Alex Henderson, Rovi