Kimono My House

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (24 ratings)
Kimono My House album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 47:23

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Incomparable

EagleRocker

This is the album that, more than any other, proves the greatness of the Mael brothers. A timeless classic that manages to sound better with each listen.

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probably the best Sparks album

flatfive

Not *arguably* one of their best albums, definitely one of their best, along with Propaganda. Super-strong melodies, great arrangements, funny and bizarre lyrics. The arrangements are elaborate, but many feature a big guitar. Tracks 1,2,3,4,6, and 7 are all amazing. Tracks 11-13 weren't on the original release.

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Soundtrack of my Youth

cpwfour

This album was the soundtrack of my youth. From the time I saw the Brothers Mael on Don Kirchner's Rock Concert TV program, I was hooked. But back in the mid-70s, you had to listen to Sparks behind closed doors or be forever branded a geek. Thank goodness geekiness is fashionable now and everyone can listen to Sparks unencumbered by peer judgment. Remove the brown paper wrapper and enjoy!

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Remarkable album!

Jeddygee

This has great songs. Funny, witty, well done and it rocks! And check Woofer in Tweeter's Clothing that is a great album!

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They Say All Music Guide

Arguably one of Sparks’ best albums, 1974′s Kimono My House finds the brothers Mael (Ron wrote most the songs and played keyboards, while Russell was the singing frontman) ingeniously playing their guitar- and keyboard-heavy pop mix on 12 consistently fine tracks. Adding a touch of bubblegum, and even some of Zappa’s own song-centric experimentalism to the menu, the Maels spruce up a sleazy Sunset Strip with a bevy of Broadway-worthy performances here: as the band expertly revs up the glam rock-meets-Andrew Lloyd Webber backdrops, Russell sends things into space with his operatic vocals and ever-clever lyrics. And besides two of their breakthrough hits (the English chart-toppers “This Town Ain’t Big Enough for Both of Us” and “Amateur Hour”), the album features one of their often-overlooked stunners, “Here in Heaven.” Essential. – Stephen Cook

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