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11 September 2025

SPARKS release Porcupine video starring SELF ESTEEM

‘Porcupine’ is taken from the band’s first EP - MADDER!



Sparks, Ron and Russell Mael, have released the official video for their new single ‘Porcupine’ starring Self Esteem.

 

‘Porcupine’ is taken from the band’s first EP - MADDER! - released October 3, 2025

 


 

Having announced their first EP ‘MADDER’ and the release of lead single ‘Porcupine’, Sparks have shared its accompanying video, starring musician and songwriter Self Esteem. Directed by Fred Rowson, produced by Blink Productions, with special effects by Selected Works, the release of the video follows Ron and Russell’s surprise appearance with Gorillaz at the Copper Box Arena in London and coincides with the North American leg of their band’s MAD! Tour.

 

Watch: Sparks In Concert




Pre-save MADDER!: https://transgressive.lnk.to/madder

Stream/buy ‘Porcupine’: https://transgressive.lnk.to/porcupine


After conquering the world with their 28th studio album MAD!, the eternally-creative Ron and Russell Mael are releasing the first EP of their illustrious career.

 

Credit Munachi Osegbu



Four-track EP MADDER! is a companion to the Mael brothers’ record-breaking MAD! album, which gave them their career-best UK chart position. MADDER! follows on the tail of their rapturously received tours of Europe and Japan earlier this year, and alongside a string of North American dates.

 

“Not wanting the Mad!ness to end and buoyed by the phenomenal reaction to MAD!, we made a hasty but intense retreat to the studio to record a Sparks first: an EP,” say the band. “MADDER!, a four-song companion piece to the album, is for everyone who isn’t yet MAD! enough.  We hope these new songs will take you to an even MADDER! place.” 

 

The worldwide release of MADDER! is October 3, although physical copies – on CD, black vinyl and picture disc – will be on sale to fans during Sparks’ North American tour in September. The first single from the MADDER! EP is ‘Porcupine’, released today, a song of a guy’s fascination with a woman who possesses, shall we say, a prickly personality, all to a verse with a highly infectious organ riff that yields to heavy guitars in the choruses. “She’s a porcupine,” Russell croons---a metaphor or something more troubling?



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