Exile in Guyville

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Exile in Guyville album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 69:19

eMusic Review 0

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Corey duBrowa

eMusic Contributor

06.23.08
The reissue of the seminal debut from indie-rock’s original riot grrl.
Label: ATO Records

In 1991 — at least five years before the first blog was identified as such — Oberlin art history grad Liz Phair quietly sent around a series of home-recorded cassettes she'd made under the moniker Girly Sound. The recordings were crudely rendered, rudely conceived (covering such post-feminist subjects as “Black Market White Baby Dealers” and “Willie the Six-Dicked Pimp”) and immediately caught the ear of alt-nation's underground cognoscenti, who recognized an art-damaged rebel without a cause when they heard one. Those recordings quickly went down in rock history as one of the finest albums of its era, maybe even of all time: she released 1993's Exile in Guyville, which for all intents and purposes reads today as an eighteen-track, album-length blog, replete with all the technologically-enabled oversharing and snarktastic, hit-and-run gender politics this description implies.

Phair was living at home with her parents in Winnetka, Illinois (suburbia being the best locale from which to wage war on an unsuspecting, male-dominated rock hierarchy) when she began re-recording some of her early Girly Sound demos with producer Brad Wood. What took shape was originally touted as a song-by-song response to Pussy Galore's noisy assassination of the Rolling Stones classic Exile on Main… read more »

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Looking Forward, Looking Back

MadDogM13

Liz's first (commercially released) album reminds me of the best Joni Mitchell albums of the early-mid 70s. Here's a woman who's part of a thriving music scene mostly dominated by men, writing about the joys and sorrows of being a questing, questioning, independent woman in relationships with them. Like Joni's songs, the songs here don't sound like anyone else's: eccentric chords and structures identify them as uniquely Liz's. Brad Wood's production smoothes out the edges of the sound just enough to make the jagged emotions go down easy. Liz has written songs this good since but never put all of them in one place like this.

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Flower

mrotis

God, 6'1" is such a standard - one you can always play. A great album through and through worth a whole listen (not many these days are). Wish I was the guy she talks about in Flower!

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Do the Math - High Water Mark

sixtwentysix

Boy, it was all down hill from here after this perfect album smashed her into everyone's permanent memory forever. Whip Smart was good, whitechocolatewhatever was aiight then it just subtracts further from there... Not worth 21 credits... come back with 12 emusic... I mean this CD can be found at any disc-go-round anywhere....If you want to see how far she falls? Watch that Extraordinary video and watch her try get some of that sweet sweet Cheryl Crow demographic... FAIL and kind of sad at that because Guyville proves she was once a giant well over 6'1.

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album of the 90's

eggman316

To this day, this still ranks on top of my list of albums of the 90's. I never get tired of any of the songs. Hoping she gets back to this creative level soon. The three bonus songs are OK, but unnecessary. It's better to seek out the Girlysound demos of all of these songs.

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songs to dig

adkil

all of it. If you are just now trying out Liz after years of listening to the hype, you are sure to be disappointed, initially anyway. The biggest obstacle, besides the hype, is the vocals in spots are just plain flat. The highlight of this album is the chunky Keith Richards-esque guitar and the naughty lyrics throughout. If I had to pick one song, it would be Stratford on Guy, or 6'1", or Mesmerizing, or Fuck and Run, or, well, hell. Just the get the whole thing. It is great. Go it.

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Instant Knockout

madformusic

No, not the price which is obscene. The music. That whole deadpan thing just rocks. Go buy the disk somewhere before shelling out 21 credits. One of the few truly independent albums that still hold up many years later.

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Fine album, though she lost her way later...

dalecooper

...but 21 credits, really? Why not just buy the CD at that point?

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Perfection...

cujogirl

One of my all time favorite albums. I never get tired of listening to it. I believe everyone should have this in their collection.

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Classic

Sten

This album is so good on so many levels. This and Whip Smart are almost perfection in my book (yes, I love whip smart!)I am simply grateful that Liz put this masterpiece together before devoting herself to pop treacle that she is producing now.

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Album that influenced so many others

mpgoroff26

Liz Phair burst out of Wicker Park (a hip neighborhood in Chicago circa 1990) with a seminal album that has been an influence on all the other strong woman artists to come afterwards such as Alanis Morrissette, Pink, and Avril Lavigne. Liz recorded a song for song response to Exile on Main Street on a 4 track recorder in her bedroom that grew into this album. Along with producer Brad Wood, she reached heights that she would never match again. Check out Help Me Mary, Fuck and Run, Flower, Divorce Song, Stratford on Guy, and Never Said. Definitely one of the top female albums of all time

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They Say All Music Guide

If Exile in Guyville is shockingly assured and fully formed for a debut album, there are a number of reasons why. Most prominent of these is that many of the songs were initially essayed on Liz Phair’s homemade cassette Girlysound, which means that the songs are essentially the cream of the crop from an exceptionally talented songwriter. Second, there’s its structure, infamously patterned after the Stones’ Exile on Main St., but not the song-by-song response Phair promoted it as. (Just try to match the albums up: is the “blow-job queen” fantasy of “Flower” really the answer to the painful elegy “Let It Loose”?) Then, most notably, there’s Phair and producer Brad Wood’s deft studio skills, bringing a variety of textures and moods to a basic, lo-fi production. There is as much hard rock as there are eerie solo piano pieces, and there’s everything in between from unadulterated power pop, winking art rock, folk songs, and classic indie rock. Then, there are Phair’s songs themselves. At the time, her gleefully profane, clever lyrics received endless attention (there’s nothing that rock critics love more than a girl who plays into their geek fantasies, even — or maybe especially — if she’s mocking them), but years later, what still astounds is the depth of the writing, how her music matches her clear-eyed, vivid words, whether it’s on the self-loathing “Fuck and Run,” the evocative mood piece “Stratford-on-Guy,” or the swaggering breakup anthem “6’1″,” or how she nails the dissolution of a long-term relationship on “The Divorce Song.” Each of these 18 songs maintains this high level of quality, showcasing a singer/songwriter of immense imagination, musically and lyrically. If she never equaled this record, well, few could. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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