Plagiarism

Plagiarism Artist: Sparks
Label: Oglio Records
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 790058910924
EAN: 0790058910924
ASIN: B00000AGLZ


Release Date: 1998-09-22

Plagiarism


Related Categories:

Proto Punk Proto Punk
Categories | Hardcore & Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New Wave New Wave
Categories | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Rock | Styles | Music
Dance Pop Dance Pop
Categories | Compilations | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
Glam Glam
Categories | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
New Wave New Wave
Categories | Alternative Rock | Indie Music | Stores | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Indie Music | Stores | Music

Tracks:

  1. Pulling Rabbits Out Of A Hat
  2. This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us
  3. The Song No.1 In Heaven (Part 2)
  4. Funny Face
  5. When Do I Get To Sing 'My Way'
  6. Angst In My Pants
  7. Change
  8. Populartity
  9. Something For The Girl With Everything
  10. This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us
  11. Beat The Clock
  12. Big Brass Ring
  13. Amateur Hour
  14. Propaganda
  15. When I'm With You
  16. Something For The Girl Who Has Everything
  17. Orchestral Collage
  18. The No. 1 Song In Heaven
  19. Never Turn Your Back On Mother Earth

Similar Items:

  1. Balls
  2. Lil' Beethoven
  3. Whomp That Sucker
  4. Interior Design
  5. Pulling Rabbits Out of a Hat

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars You can't go home again.......2005-07-09

I'm a Sparks admirer, but I am reluctantly compelled to point out that this is not their best work. It is perfectly OK to revisit your stuff and redo it -- you have the copyright, after all. But I must say that two-thirds of these remakes are poorer than the originals. They substitute lush "101 Strings" orchestrations for the faster-than-the-speed-of-thought drive and precision of the originals. This comes perilously close to elevator music. There are two versions of their breakthrough hit, "This Town Ain't Big Enough for the Both of Us," and the first is pretty lame. The second almost, but not quite, measures up to the incandescence of the original. There is a very skillful a capella rendition of "Propaganda" that is worth listening to, though it sounds rather silly and faux-Elizabethan. The remake of "Funny Face" has a rather sweet,sad, precious, chiming quality to it, quite far from the original and very pretty. It is the equal, but not the superior, of the original. But it lacks the final, resolving chord that ties the whole song together. I thought "Change" was a travesty of the original, which is one of the Sparks' strongest, most brilliant tunes. "Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth" is another vivid embarrassment. It sounds as if it were scored by Mantovani. "Angst in my Pants" is a somewhat interesting do-over, but again, not a patch on the original. "Beat the Clock" may be a hair's breadth better than the original, in that the head-pounding rhythms have been toned down and the music is allowed to flow more freely. "Big Brass Ring" is a pleasant enough instrumental, but it sortv reminds me of the background music in "Miami Vice." It is accompaniment. "Amateur Hour," is, to my mind, the best cut on the CD. The Sparks have added an extra filigree of electronic gold to the brocade. It is the most harmonically satisfying thing on the whole disk.

I don't want to turn anyone away from the Sparks with this tepid review. They are an extremely interesting and talented group and "Li'l Beethoven" is astounding. But this is the problem. I don't think anyone would go crazy over the Sparks on the basis of this album. No one would say: "My God! I've got to hear more of these guys!" This is not an album for beginners, but rather for dyed-in-the-wool Sparks afficionados, or completists, who want to have every single note they ever recorded. Perhaps this is the highest compliment of all: The Sparks are so "sui generis" that they cannot be plagiarized, even by themselves.

5 out of 5 stars My fave album of 2005.......2005-07-05

I stumbled across a copy of this at a used CD store for nickels. I like Sparks but I'm no Sparks kook and I fell in love with this beast 15 seconds in. The covers of their own songs are brilliant, danceable, and great fun. What wonderful songwriters these guys be. What wonderful arrangements. This is a minor masterpiece and I like it tons better than the last fifty fool things by important modern bands I've heard. God was shining blessings on me the day this fell into my hands.

5 out of 5 stars A surprise!.......2005-06-25

I didn't read the fine print very well when I purchased this album on a trip abroad, thinking it was a best-of. Instead, I found that I had bought something very different indeed, and it's better than a best-of could be. Normally I wouldn't have bought a remakes album, but the version of "This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us" with Faith No More (Mike Patton sounding a bit like the singer of Turbonegro in this case) is worth the £3.99 I paid for it. It is truly something spectacular and strange, and a fine addition to the Sparks catalogue. Highly recommended.

5 out of 5 stars Sounds Familiar!!.......2004-10-14

Plagiarism is the ultimate covers album. It's Sparks (Ron and Russell Mael) paying tribute to themselves, and why not? Sure, countless other bands should have, and eventually would have done it, but after more than a quarter century as musical manipulators, nobody has formally paid Sparks homage. The Mael brothers are the perfect guys for the job. In fact, they auditioned themselves just to be sure!

There are numerous records which would have been drastically different had Sparks not left America for Europe in 1972 to become a subliminal, steadfast, non-conformist fixture on the worldwide pop music scene, crossing over and reinventing every musical style imaginable across three decades.

Plagiarism was a means to introduce Sparks' younger fans to their long and incomparable history. The album, jam-packed with nineteen tracks, spans their catalogue from 1974 to 1994.

The Mael brothers' love of film surfaces on re-workings of "Something For the Girl With Everything" and "This Town Ain't Big Enough For Both of Us". The complex orchestral arrangements coupled with their, grand and verbose lyrics, visually animate the songs. At once wacky (lyrically) and beautiful (melodically), these arrangements conjure up playful cartoon images. The unique, cinematic writing style of Ron Mael remains unrivaled. "Propaganda" now has four verses, and the beautiful "Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth" is given a glorious, hallowed treatment with Russell seemingly joined by a choir of angels.

There are re-workings of 1980's tunes like "Funny Face", transformed from an up-beat pop song into a poignant ballad (quite amusing since the lyrics retain classic Sparks humor). Their French hit "When I'm With You" is not radically different here, yet it's been updated for the 90's. "Angst In My Pants" has a fresh new twist, a rockier synth-tinged sound which is a favorite among fans. "Change" is a four-minute honky-tonk cabaret symphony with three movements, utilizing at least twenty instruments. It's guaranteed to short-circuit your brain waves.

Plagiarism contains some collaborations; one with Erasure (a pure synth-pop version of "Amateur Hour") and two with Faith No More (once again, "Something For the Girl..." and "This Town..."). The combination of Russell's falsetto vocals and Mike Patton's grunting sounds like Bambi singing with Godzilla, but these speedy grunge/punk versions rock hard!

The only artists covered by Sparks in their lengthy career are the Beatles ("I Wanna Hold Your Hand"), Stevie Wonder ("Fingertips") and Rodgers & Hammerstein ("Do Re Mi"). They can now add themselves to this short, yet prestigious list.

5 out of 5 stars TOTAL SPARKS, TOTAL GREATNESS! THESE GUY'S DESERVE AN AWARD!.......2002-12-10

Sparks those 2 wacky brothers Ron & Russell Mael are back in action with a
terrific new CD. Plagiarism/Oglio is just what the title implies. These
guys have ripped themselves off and rerecorded 13 of their prime tunes
along with 1 new tune. A couple of the tunes have 2 new versions which
brings us to 18 sparkling tunes on this snappy CD! Plagiarism was
originally released in Europe last year on both Virgin & Roadrunner, but
now with a new deal in the U.S. with Oglio Records all us Spark's die hards
can now have it. Spark's are joined by some friends to help out on this CD.
They include Faith No More, Jimmy Somerville & Erasure who all turn in
sparkling performances on their respective tunes they contribute to. First
off, the new tune is "Orchestral Collage" and is a lil' instrumental of
sounds which David Bowie or Bill Nelson would have a field day with. Of the
duplicate remakes we have "Something For The Girl With Everything" & "This
Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us" (the versions with Faith No More
Kill!), "The No. 1 Song In Heaven" both versions are brilliant and Jimmy
Somerville tunes in a primo performance on one. "Amateur Hour" with
Erasure is quirky, snappy and a major joy. "Angst In My Pants" again with
Faith No More is a smash. This tune is completely over the top and ROCKS!
Of the other remakes, all I can say is that they are completely different
from the original versions we all know and have come to love. My other
faves? "Funny Face," & "Change" both are crisp new versions which are very
subliminal where the camera's eye meets the mind eye. Ron's keyboards are
as usual brilliant and Russell's voice is the strongest it has ever been.
He hits those highs & lows with such ease, its breathless! Hey, the cover
is great! Ron and Russ as body building bozo chimps is like chow mien with
pizza! Get your glowing slice of Spark's now by picking up Plagiarism and

Music Album:

  1. Wonder of You ~ Elvis Presley
  2. Chariot of Astral Light ~ Tommy Peltier , and Judee Sill
  3. So Much for Secrets ~ James Guffee
  4. Soul Rush ~ Nicolai Dunger
  5. Don't Touch Me There ~ Silent Rage
  6. Starving Winter Report ~ Deadstring Brothers
  7. Spin This! ~ Danny Wilde & The Rembrandts
  8. Hi-Five My Remix ~ Freezepop
  9. Fuzzy Duck ~ Fuzzy Duck
  10. Devils & Dust ~ Bruce Springsteen

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Mcgriff Avenue ~ Jimmy Mcgriff

Soup ~ Otomo Yoshihide, Bill Laswell, Yoshigaki Yashuhiro

Artie Shaw at the Hollywood Palladium ~ Artie Shaw

Coltrane ~ John Coltrane Quartet

Diggin' Thru Jazz ~ Zipflo Weinrich

One & Only ~ Herman Foster

Rio Grande ~ Eddy Mitchell

Man From the Glen ~ Richie O'Shea

Subaru ~ Zan

Committed