Pop Music Reviews : L-7 Serves Up a Moist, Intense Set at the Roxy
- Share via
The longer Hollywood grunge masters L-7 stay together, the sloppier they get--but in a good way. At the Roxy on Wednesday night, the guitars howled, the riffs were idiot-simple, the vocals approached the wolverine intensity of Stooges-era Iggy, and young woman after young woman climbed up on the stage and dove into the moiling crowd.
The newest thrash-group star on the Sub Pop Records roster, L-7 is not only the wildest live all-female band anybody can think of, but one of the hardest-rocking groups, period. This was the quartet’s biggest Los Angeles show in months, and the packed club reigned sweat.
In comparison, the headlining Lemonheads--best-known for their punky version of Suzanne Vega’s “Luka”--play precise, Husker Du-flavored power pop, spare, unpretentious and just a little too jangly for their own good. The Boston trio seems to have bad luck with opening acts: last year it headlined over Mudhoney, another Sub Pop band that blew them off the stage.
Lemonheads, dominated by school-boy cute singer-guitarist-songwriter Evan Dando, isn’t bad exactly, even if the new countrified material isn’t quite up to the chunky college radio stuff the band is best known for. It’s just a tad too earnest and dull.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.