Bricks Are Heavy – Christopher Thelen

Bricks Are Heavy
L7
Slash Records, 1992
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Aug 19, 1998

Back in 1992, when I was sent
Bricks Are Heavy from L7, a female punk quartet, I didn’t
get it. In a sense, I still don’t.

Donita Sparks and crew showed from time to time they could write
decent songs and execute them in the studio well. But
Bricks Are Heavy is an album you either get or don’t… and
I’m one of those in the latter category.

The quartet – guitarist/vocalist Sparks, bassist/vocalist
Jennifer Finch, guitarist/vocalist Suzi Gardner and drummer/backing
vocalist Demetra Plakas – enlisted the help of wunderkind producer
of the moment Butch Vig for this one. Mistake number one, in my
opinion; Vig’s style just isn’t the correct sound for L7, but you
at least have to give him credit for trying.

When the songwriting and performances are on,
Bricks Are Heavy works on many levels. The single from this
album, “Pretend We’re Dead,” is an enjoyable number that combines a
solid beat with good riffs and a catchy chorus that you’ll find
yourself humming at inopportune times. Likewise, “One More Thing”
captures almost a passive L7, and creates one of the more enjoyable
songs on the album.

Of course, the band has lots of time to show off the pissed-off
side of punk. “Shitlist” is a prime, and enjoyable, example of
this. “Wargasm,” the lead-off track, is a little too political, but
gets its message across with plenty of intensity.

The remainder of
Bricks Are Heavy is either just average or just plain
forgettable. Songs like “Scrap,” a ditty about a paint-sniffer, is
pretty much a waste of time (and the ending sound montage of the
song’s subject in the act of sniffing is a bit unsettling), while
“Everglade” and “Slide” aren’t bad songs, but they just don’t
motivate me one way or the other.

And in the end, this is the biggest problem with
Bricks Are Heavy. I always thought that punk rock was
supposed to challenge you to think about the status quo. The Sex
Pistols did; the Dead Kennedys did; Black Flag… nah, they were
just fun to listen to.
Bricks Are Heavy neither is always fun to listen to nor
challenging to the listener. In the end, it’s just a rock album,
and a moderate one at that.

Rating: C-

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