Sparks Get Heroes’ Welcome at Hollywood Bowl Homecoming: Live Review
Landing a first headlining slot at the Hollywood Bowl is a cherished milestone for any major musical acts who claim Los Angeles as their home base. It can even mean a little more, probably, when it’s a sibling jubilee. Last summer, it was a homecoming-queens coronation for the Haim sisters, who got the honor a mere nine years into their professional career. This year, the Bowl debut honor for cherished locals goes to the Mael brothers, who only had to wait 52 years for their own crowning gig. What’s five decades among friends and family … everybody loves a slow build, right?
The brothers would never be mistaken for rank sentimentalists, but Sunday night’s Sparks show might have brought a hint of a tear to a waggish eye, knowing it was a boyhood dream. Or at least when Ron and Russell Mael’s mom brought them to see the Beatles at the venue in 1965, it was “probably some good education,” as Russell allowed near the beginning of the show. At the Bowl Sunday, Mom was likely not around, but they did have the closest thing they’ve probably had lately to a surrogate parent, director Edgar Wright, whose consciousness-raising documentary “The Sparks Brothers” can be loosely said to have kind of nurtured them across a sort of finish line. (The show-closing photo seen above, plus some video snippets below, are courtesy of Wright’s backstage camera.)
But enough of what the show meant to them. What did it mean to us, the L.A. Sparks fan, wanting some music that you can dance to as well as a valedictory moment? The great irony of any Sparks show in a halfway-modern era is that it’s going to be both fulfilling and frustrating — the former because of the tremendous catalog they have to draw upon, and the latter because of, you know, the tremendous catalog they have to draw upon. The 23-song setlist they’ve mostly stuck to for the entire international tour that is nearing its close can logically average just slightly less than one song from each of the 25 albums they’ve put out since their 1971 debut, and with five numbers being drawn from their excellent latest effort, “The Girl Is Crying in Her Latte,” that means not a lot of “Propaganda” to go around. The entire KROQ early-’80s era that made them icons for a certain subset of local fandom was represented via a single song, “Angst in My Pants,” this time around.
Yet the “I Predict” fan’s loss was the gain of even more O.G. fans who were hearing “Beaver O’Lindy,” from their second album, “A Woofer in Tweeter’s Clothing,” played on tour for the first time since… well, since never, since this oddity didn’t even rate any performances in 1972. (Dear reader, my heart leaped.) The fact is, compared to the setlist from the group’s last pre-pandemic tour, only a scant five songs overlapped, a refreshing reminder that, in their 70s, the Maels are committed to always keeping it fresh. Other than, like, Bob Dylan, how many rock artists of a five-decade-plus pedigree are doing setlists that seem to have mostly been drawn out of a hat on tour’s eve — and making that sequencing feel at least as fun and vital for the audience as if they’d gone straight down a list of their Spotify Most Popular? Birds of a feather, they and Bob are.