Brick House

Brick House

Commodores

From the album

Commodores (1977)

Written by

Commodores, James Anthony Carmichael, Lionel Richie +5

Key:A minor
Duration:3:28

Listen to the Song

Summary

Released in 1977 on the Commodores' self-titled album, "Brick House" became one of the defining songs of the funk era with its unshakeable groove, punchy horns, and infectious call-and-response vocals. The track peaked at number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and remains a staple at sporting events, parties, and pop culture moments nearly five decades later.

funkmotown70sparty anthemgroove

Musical Analysis

"Brick House" derives its harmonic power from radical simplicity. The song is essentially a one-chord funk vamp in A Dorian, with the Am7 serving as a tonal anchor for the entire track. The occasional appearance of D9 provides Dorian color without disrupting t…

Chords

verse:Am7
chorus:Am7 - D9

History

"Brick House" was a collaborative effort written by all six members of the Commodores — Lionel Richie, Milan Williams, Ronald LaPread, Thomas McClary, Walter Orange, and William King. The song emerged from a group jam session where the members collectively sha…

“All six Commodores members share writing credits, reflecting the group's democratic creative process”

Full Musical Analysis

"Brick House" derives its harmonic power from radical simplicity. The song is essentially a one-chord funk vamp in A Dorian, with the Am7 serving as a tonal anchor for the entire track. The occasional appearance of D9 provides Dorian color without disrupting the hypnotic groove. This minimalist approach — where rhythm, timbre, and arrangement carry the song rather than harmonic movement — is quintessential 70s funk. The use of extended chord voicings (7ths and 9ths) reflects jazz-funk heritage, while the pentatonic-based vocal melodies and call-and-response structure reveal blues roots.

"Brick House" was a collaborative effort written by all six members of the Commodores — Lionel Richie, Milan Williams, Ronald LaPread, Thomas McClary, Walter Orange, and William King. The song emerged from a group jam session where the members collectively shaped the groove, lyrics, and arrangement. The infectious bass riff and horn-driven hook came together organically as the band fed off each other's energy in the studio.

Released in 1977 on the Commodores' self-titled album, "Brick House" became one of the defining songs of the funk era with its unshakeable groove, punchy horns, and infectious call-and-response vocals. The track peaked at number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and remains a staple at sporting events, parties, and pop culture moments nearly five decades later.

Deep Analysis Available

Detailed analysis of this section is not yet available for this song.

Song DNA

Genre

Funk

Era

70s

Mood

Uplifting

Tempo

Upbeat

Key

Minor

Texture

Full Band

Sound

Bass-driven

Feel

Groovy

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Listen & Learn

Statistics

1.5M

Plays

413K

Listeners

147K

Genius Views

6

Annotations

100%

Popularity

3:28

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

CommodoresJames Anthony CarmichaelLionel RichieMilan WilliamsRonald LaPreadThomas McClaryWalter OrangeWilliam King

Produced by

CommodoresJames Anthony Carmichael

From the album Commodores