Episode 72

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Published on:

16th Jan 2026

072: Sparks - In Outer Space (1983) - Album history

We move into 1983 — MTV is turning videos into hits, synth-pop is fully mainstream, and Sparks are as close as they ever get to a real U.S. breakthrough. After the Munich-made band trilogy of Whomp That Sucker (1981) and Angst in My Pants (1982), Ron and Russell take the same core lineup into a new setting and a new sound: lighter, more electronic, more pop-forward — but still unmistakably Sparks.

This time the sessions shift from Musicland in Munich to Brussels, recorded at Telex’s Marc Moulin’s home-based studio (Sin Sound). For the first time, Ron and Russell produce the album themselves, aiming for less guitar and more synth, with Ron’s growing arsenal of keyboards (including a Roland Jupiter-8) driving the sound. The result is often described as Sparks “going pop,” with more youthful, party-leaning topics on paper — but filtered through their usual strange humor and lyrical twist.


A major change is the presence of Jane Wiedlin (The Go-Go’s), who duets with Russell on two tracks, including the lead single “Cool Places.” The single becomes Sparks’ highest-charting U.S. hit, peaking at #49 and also landing on the dance charts — giving them a genuine moment of 1983 visibility. Other singles follow (“All You Ever Think About Is Sex,” “Please Baby Please”), and the album itself reaches #88 on the Billboard 200, their best U.S. album showing since the mid-70s.


Critical response is mixed — embraced in places as fun synth-pop Sparks, dismissed elsewhere as overly coy or repetitive — but the live year is huge. Sparks spend much of 1983 on the road, including a major U.S. arena run opening for Rick Springfield, who personally chose them as support. At the same time, they’re increasingly pulled into film-related work and side projects, contributing songs to multiple soundtracks and continuing their odd pop-culture detours (including the Disney-connected “Minnie Mouse”).


This episode sets the scene for a pivotal Sparks year — bigger stages, sharper pop instincts, more synths, and a band still firing behind the Mael brothers as they push deeper into the 1980s. Next up: track-by-track, starting with “Cool Places.”

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About the Podcast

The Burning of the Midnight Amp
Dissecting music history one album at a time
Three Norwegian music enthusiasts delve into the rich tapestry of albums spanning genres and eras. Discover the stories behind the recordings, the artists who crafted them, and the tales their tracks tell.

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Frode Håvik Korneliussen

Meteorologist and music enthusiast from Norway.