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No. 1 In Heaven

 
Album Review: No. 1 in Heaven

  • Artist: Sparks
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1979
  • Total Time: 33:48
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

It may not have been the most natural match in music history, but the marriage of Sparks' focus on oddball pop songs to the driving disco-trance of Giorgio Moroder produced the duo's best album in years. From the chart hits "Number One Song in Heaven" and "Beat the Clock" to solid album tracks like "La Dolce Vita," No. 1 in Heaven surprises by succeeding on an artistic and commercial level despite the fact that neither the Mael brothers nor Moroder tempered their respective idiosyncrasies for the project. Moroder's production is just as dizzying, chunky, and completely rhythm-driven as on his best work with Donna Summer, and the Mael brothers prove on "Tryouts for the Human Race" and "Academy Award Performance" that their bizarre songwriting wasn't compromised. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Tryouts for the Human Race Ron Mael, Giorgio Moroder, Russell Mael Sparks (6:08)
Academy Award Performance Ron Mael Sparks (5:01)
La Dolce Vita Ron Mael, Giorgio Moroder, Russell Mael Sparks (5:54)
Beat the Clock (Lyrics) Ron Mael, Russell Mael Sparks (4:24)
My Other Voice Ron Mael, Giorgio Moroder, Russell Mael Sparks (4:55)
The Number One Song in Heaven Ron Mael, Giorgio Moroder, Russell Mael Sparks (7:26)

Credits

Giorgio Moroder (Mixing), Chris Bennett (Vocals (Background)), Jack Moran (Vocals (Background)), Dan Wyman (Synthesizer), Ron Mael (Synthesizer), Ron Mael (Vocals), Keith Forsey (Drums), Steve Smith (Assistant Engineer), Moshe Brakha (Photography), Giorgio Moroder (Synthesizer), Giorgio Moroder (Engineer), Steve Bartel (Design), Jim Cypherd (Assistant Engineer), Ron Mael (Keyboards), Dennis Young (Vocals (Background)), Juergen Koppers (Engineer), Giorgio Moroder (Producer), Dan Wyman (Programming), Russell Mael (Vocals), Manhattan Focus, Manhattan (Design)
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Wikipedia: No. 1 In Heaven
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No. 1 In Heaven
Studio album by Sparks
Released September 1979
Recorded 1979 Musicland Studios
Sound Arts
Westlake Studio
Genre Disco, Synth-pop, Electronica, Pop
Length 33:44
Label Virgin
Producer Giorgio Moroder
Professional reviews
Sparks chronology
Introducing Sparks
(1977)
No. 1 In Heaven
(1979)
Terminal Jive
(1980)
Singles from No. 1 In Heaven
  1. "The Number One Song In Heaven"
    Released: April 1979
  2. "Beat the Clock"
    Released: July 1979
  3. "Tryouts for the Human Race"
    Released: October 1979
  4. "La Dolce Vita" b/w "My Other Voice"
    Released: 1979

No. 1 In Heaven is the eighth album by Sparks. Released in 1979 it renewed interest in the band after disappointing sales of albums like Big Beat and Introducing Sparks.

Contents

History

In 1973, Sparks had decamped from the US to the UK, the move resulted in a change of line up and English musicians were hired to fill the roles of guitar, bass and drums. This decision had proved a good one, and Sparks enjoyed their first period of success wherein their singles and albums sold well and were received warmly by the critics. Indiscreet; the third of Sparks' UK based albums was more ambitious than the former two but had sold less well. The Maels then chose to return to LA to rejuvenate the group.

Initially they had returned to work with the early Sparks member Earle Mankey and recorded the song "England" with him. Eventually the group turned to Rupert Holmes and recorded the heavier and slicker Big Beat with a number of session musicians. Although the album employed a more "American" sound, it did little business in the US or the UK. The next album Introducing Sparks was much lighter but was equally slick and was no more successful than Big Beat. This new "West Coast" sound was deemed a failure as they felt the results were "bereft of personality".[1] The Mael Brothers found themselves at a 'what do we do now?' moment. By 1978 they had tired of the rock band format and determined to take their music in a more electronic direction.

In 1978 Sparks teamed up with pioneering Italian producer Giorgio Moroder to record No. 1 In Heaven at Musicland Studios, West Germany. They had expressed admiration for Giorgio Moroder, creator of the iconic disco anthem "I Feel Love" performed by Donna Summer, to a German journalist who turned out to be a friend of his.

Sound

No. 1 In Heaven had a dramatically different sound to that of Sparks' previous seven albums. The group dropped the standard guitar, bass and piano from the musical palette. The new sound was dominated by layers sequencers and synthesizers which built upon the drums and percussion of Keith Forsey. Russell Mael's voice which employed his distinctive Falsetto was overlaid in a number of overdubs and complemented by backing vocalists. Musically, the sound of the album matched that of "I Feel Love" and that of Moroder's solo work. Aside from Ron Maels Lyrics and Russell's vocals the sound of songs like "Tryouts for the Human Race" and "La Dolce Vita" continued the vein of Donna Summer's music. A sound that began in 1977 with "I Feel Love", was continued on Once Upon a Time ("Now I Need You", "Working the Midnight Shift", "Queen for a Day") and appeared again on 1979s Bad Girls in songs like "Sunset People".

Release

No. 1 In Heaven was promoted by the release of three singles over 1979. The first single "The Number One Song In Heaven" became the groups first hit since "Looks, Looks, Looks" in 1975. It reached #14 in the UK[2] and made #5 on the Irish Singles Chart.[3] Beat the Clock, the follow-up, did even better in the UK and reached the top ten in July of that year.[2] The final single (released after the album) "Tryouts for the Human Race" fared less well but still charted, hitting #45.[2] All three singles were released on picture disc/coloured vinyl with exclusive remixes/edits. "La Dolce Vita" was also released as a single in some European countries in a new edit.

The album itself while reaching the charts in the UK, and therefore faring better than Sparks' former two albums, managed only one week at the lowly position #73 in September 1979.[2]

Track listing

All songs by Ron Mael/Giorgio Moroder/Russell Mael except where noted.

Side one
# Title Length
1. "Tryouts for the Human Race"   6:05
2. "Academy Award Performance" (Written by Ron Mael) 5:00
3. "La Dolce Vita"   5:56
Side two
# Title Length
4. "Beat the Clock" (Written by Ron Mael/Russell Mael) 4:23
5. "My Other Voice" (Written by Giorgio Moroder/Ron Mael/Russell Mael) 4:54
6. "The Number One Song In Heaven"   7:26

Personnel

  • Chris Bennett - Backing Vocals
  • Keith Forsey - Drums
  • Ron Mael - Keyboards, Synthesiser, Vocals
  • Russell Mael - Vocals
  • Jack Moran - Backing Vocals
  • Giorgio Moroder - Synthesiser, Vocoder, Producer
  • Dan Wyman - Synthesiser Programming
  • Dennis Young - Backing Vocals

References

  1. ^ Easlea, Daryl (July 2003). "Sparks Interview". Record Collector Magazine Issue 287. 
  2. ^ a b c d "Chart Stats - Sparks". chartstats.com. http://www.chartstats.com/artistinfo.php?id=2474. Retrieved 2008-07-22. 
  3. ^ "The Irish Charts - Sparks search". irishcharts.ie. http://www.irishcharts.ie. Retrieved 2008-07-22. 

 
 

 

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