#88 Brick- Ben Folds Five

I’m feeling more alone/
Than I ever have before.

“Brick” by The Ben Folds Five is a song about a young couple that drives downtown to get an abortion the day after Christmas. We know they are young because they fund the abortion by selling some of their Christmas gifts. Also, they live at home.

The abortion story is the background to the unraveling effect it has on the relationship. It puts her into a depressive state that she is unable to recover from. She feels like a brick that is sinking and he’ll either have to hold on and sink with her or perhaps, let go…in order to save himself. “Brick” is a very strong metaphor.

Brick Meaning
Ben Folds Five

“Brick” is a great song because it feels so emotional and personal, and a story that many teenagers and twenty-year olds can relate to. Folds describes the scene in a matter of fact way so that we can almost picture it in our mind’s eye. Notice he doesn’t place blame on either of them. They are in it together throughout, until much time goes by and he begins to wonder if being together is the best thing for them.

“Brick’s” unique piano track adds a lot of the personality to this song. It is relatively simple, but catchy. When Folds goes into the high register during the chorus, he sounds good and it sounds like he is providing a lot of the emotion that the otherwise black-and-white storytelling is lacking. It is an interesting technique.

Brick Lyrics

6 a.m.
Day after Christmas
I throw some clothes on in the dark
The smell of cold
Car seat is freezing
The world is sleeping
I am numb

Up the stairs to her apartment
She is balled up on the couch
Her mom and dad went down to Charlotte
They’re not home to find us out

And we drive
Now that I have found someone
I’m feeling more alone
Than I ever have before

She’s a brick and I’m drownin’ slowly
Off the coast and I’m headed to nowhere
She’s a brick and I’m drownin’ slowly

They call her name at seven-thirty
I pace around the parking lot
And I walk down to buy her flowers
And sell some gifts that I got

Can’t you see
It’s not me you’re dying for
Now she’s feeling more alone
Then she ever has before

She’s a brick and I’m drownin’ slowly
Off the coast and I’m headed to nowhere
She’s a brick and I’m drownin’ slowly

As weeks went by
It showed that she was not fine
They told me, “Son it’s time to tell the truth, ” and
She broke down and I broke down
Cause I was tired of lying

Driving back to her apartment
For the moment we’re alone
Yeah she’s alone
And I’m alone
Now I know it

She’s a brick and I’m drownin’ slowly
Off the coast and I’m headed to nowhere
She’s a brick and I’m drownin’ slowly

written by Ben Folds

#87 Wuthering Heights- Kate Bush

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold

Kate Bush was never big in the states. “Wuthering Heights” was her greatest work and she wrote it at the age of eighteen. If you couldn’t tell, she was a big Emily Bronte fan. The lyrics tell some of the basics of the story of Wuthering Heights, but mostly it introduces the characters Heathcliff and Cathy. You don’t hear many rock songs with “Heathcliff” in them.

Wuthering Heights Meaning
Kate Bush

The chorus is the best part of “Wuthering Heights”, and luckily, she repeats it often. We can hear Bush delight in pretending to be Cathy calling out for Heathcliff in the chorus. She creates a lot of the drama of the book in the way she uses her language throughout the song. She changes her voice a bit for the different characters—but not too much.

She also manages to capture the language of the Bronte era without overdoing it. That is, without making the language too opaque. No normal 20th century woman would say “Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy, I’ve come home.” But the actual language Bronte used in the book would sound incomprehensible in a rock song. So, we understand that she’s trying to convey to us “Old English”. Very clever.

Her vocals aren’t for everyone. Some people just can’t get past them.  But she was extremely influential and she sounds great.

Wuthering Heights Lyrics
Out on the wiley, windy moors
We’d roll and fall in green
You had a temper like my jealousy
Too hot, too greedy
How could you leave me
When I needed to possess you?
I hated you, I loved you, too

Bad dreams in the night
They told me I was going to lose the fight
Leave behind my wuthering, wuthering
Wuthering Heights

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold
Let me in through your window

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold
Let me in through your window

Ooh, it gets dark, it gets lonely
On the other side from you
I pine a lot, I find the lot
Falls through without you
I’m coming back, love
Cruel Heathcliff, my one dream
My only master

Too long I roam in the night
I’m coming back to his side, to put it right
I’m coming home to wuthering, wuthering
Wuthering Heights

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold
Let me in through your window

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold
Let me in through your window

Ooh, let me have it
Let me grab your soul away
Ooh, let me have it
Let me grab your soul away
You know it’s me, Cathy

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold
Let me in through your window

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold
Let me in through your window

Heathcliff, it’s me, I’m Cathy
I’ve come home, I’m so cold.

written by Kate Bush

#86 Zombie- The Cranberries

It’s the same old theme/
Since nineteen-sixteen.


“Zombie” was The Cranberries greatest work, and it is one of the greatest protest songs of all-time. The Cranberries were a proudly Irish Band. The song was written after an IRA bombing killed two young children.

Her message is clear: the same shit has been going on for the last hundred years. Everyone is walking around brainless with their big guns and bombs blowing each other up without thinking of the consequences. The military industrial complex has churned out a bunch of zombies that are happy to kill.

Zombie cranberries meaning
Dolores with a pink coif

Dolores O’riordan, lead singer of The Cranberries’ death was a deep shock to anyone who grew up with The Cranberries. She was such a kick-ass, punk rocker chick that seemed to be bigger than life (in a small package). She played the guitar and sang lead on all their songs, and every public appearance her hair would be a new neon color.

The sound of The Cranberries on “Zombie” differed from most of The Cranberries other music. This song was angry. Not only could you hear it in the lyrics, you could hear it in the loud distorted guitars and the way she would howl out “Zombie”. It is a very raw, emotional song. The band plays an excellent extended outro to end the song.

Zombie Lyrics

Another head hangs lowly,
Child is slowly taken.
And the violence caused such silence,
Who are we mistaken?

But you see, it’s not me, it’s not my family.
In your head, in your head, they are fightin’.
With their tanks and their bombs and their bombs and their guns,
In your head, in your head, they are cryin’.

In your head, in your head,
Zombie, zombie, zombie-ie-ie.
What’s in your head, in your head?
Zombie, zombie, zombie-ie-ie-ie, oh.

Another mother’s breakin’
Heart is takin’ over.
When the violence causes silence,
We must be mistaken.

Written by Dolores O’riordan