Liz Phair Explains an Iconic Guyville Photo to Rolling Stone

Liz Phair Explains an Iconic Guyville Photo to Rolling Stone

i’ve lived a whole career in those faces.
PHOTO CREDIT:
You are literally looking at me singing "Divorce Song" to those faces. That’s the world in which I stood up in.
That wasn’t just one night; that was every single day and every single night. That’s how isolated I was to be the female creator [...] There were other women I was not the only woman on stage by any means, but I had not been assigned a chaperone; I had not been assigned a manager; I had not been assigned a Svengali. I was unbound by male ownership which was strange, that was unusual
There’s Guyville! like if you didn’t get it there it is. That was the wind, those are the faces I saw every day and every time I wanted to say something in some kind of recording studio since. Those are the faces I’m seeing. Every time i want to do something different with my career those are the faces I’m seeing.
Any time I want to do anything or say anything, those are the faces I see. it didn’t stop with Guyville, it wasn’t over once that record was finished it was really just beginning. I’ve lived a whole career in those faces.

Liz Phair to the Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Albums Podcast on the environment that bred her immortal debut record Exile in Guyville and never seemed to go away. Listen here.

Check out our Shrine to Guyville here.

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You are literally looking at me singing "Divorce Song" to those faces. That’s the world in which I stood up in.
That wasn’t just one night; that was every single day and every single night. That’s how isolated I was to be the female creator [...] There were other women I was not the only woman on stage by any means, but I had not been assigned a chaperone; I had not been assigned a manager; I had not been assigned a Svengali. I was unbound by male ownership which was strange, that was unusual
There’s Guyville! like if you didn’t get it there it is. That was the wind, those are the faces I saw every day and every time I wanted to say something in some kind of recording studio since. Those are the faces I’m seeing. Every time i want to do something different with my career those are the faces I’m seeing.
Any time I want to do anything or say anything, those are the faces I see. it didn’t stop with Guyville, it wasn’t over once that record was finished it was really just beginning. I’ve lived a whole career in those faces.

Liz Phair to the Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Albums Podcast on the environment that bred her immortal debut record Exile in Guyville and never seemed to go away. Listen here.

Check out our Shrine to Guyville here.

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