Never Said. Glory 4. Girls! Recently Added. After the early sessions with John Henderson, Liz Phair started working with producer Brad Wood at Idful Studios, in 1992. Work boots. [citation needed] In 2008, Phair stated it was originally "an orgy of Barbies floating in a pool",[8] a concept that Matador rejected, stating that such artwork wouldn't sell. Despite the outcome of the recording sessions, Henderson tipped off Brad Wood that Matador was interested in Phair. Style: Lo-Fi, Indie Rock. These sessions were thereby very different from the recording sessions with John Henderson. Guyville, because it was definitely their sensibilities that held the aesthetic, you know what I mean? Upcoming Lyrics. Phair reacted to the reception of Guyville, saying "I don't really get what happened with Guyville. I was yearning to be part of a scene. I was kind of at war with indie when I made that record." 196 on the Billboard 200 and was Matador's most successful release at the time. Listen to 6'1" by Liz Phair, 2,941 Shazams, featuring on Indie Rock Essentials, and ’90s Singer-Songwriter Essentials Apple Music playlists. However, the whole process was made difficult by the fact that he and Phair had opposite ideas regarding what direction to take in terms of sound. On March 15, 2018, Phair revealed that her former label Matador Records would be reissuing the album in celebration of its 25th anniversary. Play 9. The reissue was released on May 4, 2018 in four formats; the physical LP box set, the digital deluxe edition, as well as cassette and CD pressings. "http":"https";t.getElementById(r)||(n=t.createElement(e),n.id=r,n.src=i+"://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js",s.parentNode.insertBefore(n,s))}(document,"script","twitter-wjs"); Girls! Henderson brought in producer Brad Wood to help develop the 4-track demos into full songs. Girls! Liz Phair explained the concept of the album on a Billboard article, stating that "For me, Guyville is a concept that combines the smalltown mentality of a 500-person Knawbone, KY.-type town with the Wicker Park indie music scene in Chicago, plus the isolation of every place I've lived in, from Cincinnati to Winnetka". Eventually, a Girly-Sound tape had made it to the head of Matador Records. The album, which was out of print, was again available on CD, vinyl and, for the first time, in digital format. Produced by Liz Phair & Brad Wood. Never Said 6. You know what I mean? Liz Phair debuted at #27 on the Billboard 200. Glory Lyrics: He's got a really big tongue / It rolls way out / Snaking around in the club / It slicks you down / Scratching his face like a bum / He pulls you back / Circa nineteen-eighty-one Originally, Phair's recordings were supposed to come out on Henderson's label. Liz Phair - 6′1″ Lyrics. "Why Can't I?" Gerard Cosloy, co-president of Matador, stated that "We usually don't sign people we haven't met, or heard other records by, or seen as performers. It was the number one album in the year-end critics poll in Spin and the Village Voice Pazz & Jop critics poll.[21]. //