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Grant-Lee Phillips

 
Artist: Grant Lee Phillips
See Grant Lee Phillips Lyrics
  • Born: September 01, 1963, Stockton, CA
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic)
  • Representative Albums: "Mobilize," "Virginia Creeper," "Strangelet"

Biography

After spending his formative years in Stockton, CA, Grant Lee Phillips headed to Los Angeles to study film. Finding himself beneath the spell cast by local bands like the Rain Parade and the Dream Syndicate, Phillips soon partnered with Stockton acquaintance Jeff Clark to form Shiva Burlesque. The band dissolved after two critically acclaimed records, and Phillips began writing and demoing under the Grant Lee Buffalo alias. Following several solo performances, he invited former bandmates Joey Peters and Paul Kimble to join him, and the trio signed to the Warner Bros subsidiary Slash Records in 1992.

Phillips' golden, honey-soaked voice had largely gone to waste in Shiva Burlesque, but the new band enabled him to step out as a singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. Grant Lee Buffalo went on to release four very different LPs, although a cult following, several successful tours, and across-the-board critical acclaim (Phillips was voted Rolling Stone's Male Vocalist of the Year following the second LP) didn't translate into strong sales. Frustrated with his label's dead-on-arrival promotion, Phillips asked for his band to be released from their contract, and he was obliged. (It was erroneously reported that GLB had been dropped.) Phillips dissolved his band, anxious to forge a new path.

In October of 1999, he headed to Jon Brion's studio and recorded a handful of new songs, played exclusively by himself. Dubbed Ladies' Love Oracle, the album was self-released the following year online; Phillips also sold it during his numerous appearances at Largo in Hollywood. After landing a new contract with Zoe/Rounder Records, he issued the excellent Mobilize in 2001. The next year, Rounder reissued Ladies' Love Oracle in time for Phillips' joint tour with Kristin Hersh and Joe Doe. Virginia Creeper followed in 2004, marking the first time that Phillips had consciously eschewed all electric guitars in favor of a stripped-down, folksy sound. A covers album, Nineteeneighties, appeared in 2006, and Strangelet arrived one year later. For his next effort, Phillips assembled a band comprising Jay Bellerose, Paul Bryan, and Jamie Edwards, all of whom spent five quick days recording 2009's Little Moon. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Grant-Lee Phillips
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Grant-Lee Phillips
Birth name Bryan G. Phillips
Born September 1, 1963 (1963-09-01) (age 46)
Stockton, California,
United States
Genres Rock, alternative rock, folk, pop, Americana, indie
Instruments vocals, Acoustic guitar, Electric guitar, Bass, Banjo, Mandolin, Harmonica, drums, Piano, Synthesizer
Years active 2000–present
Labels Rounder Records
Associated acts Shiva Burlesque, Grant Lee Buffalo, Robyn Hitchcock, R.E.M.
Website www.grantleephillips.com

Grant-Lee Phillips (born Bryan G. Phillips, September 1, 1963)[1] is a singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist known for his versatile voice, intense lyrical narratives and dexterity on the acoustic twelve-string guitar, a style that often sees him compared to Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan.

Contents

Background

Born in Stockton, California, Phillips began playing the guitar in his early teens and persevered throughout high school. At age 19 he moved to Los Angeles where he worked tarring roofs to fund evening classes at UCLA and the possibility of forming a band at weekends. He eventually dropped out of college and linked up with an old friend from Stockton named Jeffery Clark. Together they formed Shiva Burlesque and released two lauded LPs Shiva Burlesque (Nate Starkman & Son; 1987) and Mercury Blues (Fundamental; 1990) which due to a failure to fit with LA's glam metal scene of the late 1980s did not make any commercial impact. Phillips and Clark disbanded shortly afterwards which duly meant the end of the band.

Grant Lee Buffalo

Following a handful of solo shows at clubs around Hollywood, Phillips recruited ex-Shiva members Joey Peters (drums) and Paul Kimble (bass) for rehearsals as Grant Lee Buffalo in mid-1991. Phillips was now writing lyrics as well as music and the trio quickly built up a local following, selling out clubs on the strength of Phillips's intense performance. His political storytelling was delivered in a recently discovered voice: both a soaring falsetto and a nourishing drawl that matched his aggressive acoustic guitar stomp and pouting physicality. One song, "Fuzzy", was released on Bob Mould's Singles Only Label in 1992 to huge critical acclaim and lead to Grant Lee Buffalo being signed to Slash Records. The debut LP, also called Fuzzy, was released a year later, upon which Michael Stipe of R.E.M. declared it "the best album of the year hands down".

A further three Grant Lee Buffalo albums followed. Mighty Joe Moon (1994), Copperopolis (1996), and Jubilee (1998) were all quite different and highly accomplished. A live performance of Mighty Joe Moon's title track is available online from the South by Southwest festival.[2] Though all were heavily promoted through concert touring, they never escaped cult status largely thanks to a lack of support from the Warner Bros label and a frustrated Phillips disbanded the band in early 1999.

Solo career

Phillips immediately signed to the Boston-based indie label Rounder Records and launched a solo career, issuing the intimate Ladies Love Oracle over the Internet in 2000. The recording was later more widely released. His first full-length LP, Mobilize, was released to enormous critical acclaim in 2001. Being praised as much for its gentleness as much as Buffalo were for their rock, it featured Phillips's talents on many instruments, including both dreamy pop and dark but comforting ballads. Touring followed with sets containing solo and Buffalo material in equal measure.

During a short tour with Robyn Hitchcock, Phillips co-produced and co-starred in a concert film of the tour shot in Seattle titled Elixirs & Remedies.

In 2004 Virginia Creeper arrived and with it a more folky, almost-country record noted for the complete absence of the electric guitar. In 2006 Phillips released another acoustic album, Nineteeneighties. An ambitious set of cover versions, it featured songs from The Smiths, Pixies, New Order, Robyn Hitchcock, R.E.M., The Church, and Echo & the Bunnymen. A new record of his own material, Strangelet, was released on March 27, 2007. On October 13th, 2009, Grant released his latest album of new material titled "Little Moon".

Trivia

  • In 1995 he was voted best male vocalist by Rolling Stone magazine.
  • Grant often collaborates with producer/musician Jon Brion as well as Rickie Lee Jones. He is currently writing with former Jayhawks frontman Gary Louris.
  • He can be found at the LA club Largo performing sporadically throughout the year.
  • He played a recurring minor character as the town troubadour on the television series Gilmore Girls. Solo songs featured on the show include "Beautiful Dreamers", "Heavenly", "Lily A Passion", "Mona Lisa", "Sadness Soot", "Smile", "Spring Released", and "Sunday Best". Grant Lee Buffalo songs featured on the show include "Everybody Needs A Little Sanctuary", "Honey Don't Think", "It's the Life", "Mockingbirds", and "Truly, Truly".[3]
  • He sings "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" with Aimee Mann on her Christmas album One More Drifter in the Snow. He was also part of her 2006 tour for that album.
  • Grant-Lee Phillips is of Native American descent and a registered member of the Creek Nations.

Discography

Year Album Additional information
2000 Ladies Love Oracle
2001 Mobilize
2004 Virginia Creeper
2006 nineteeneighties
2007 Strangelet
2009 Little Moon

External links

References

  1. ^ Family Tree Legends [1]
  2. ^ Grant-Lee Phillips: Might Joe Moon, Blender Online, retrieved on March 16, 2007.
  3. ^ Gilmore Girls Music, retrieved on December 03, 2007.

 
 
Learn More
Mighty Joe Moon (1994 Album by Grant Lee Buffalo)
Watch This! (2004 Music Film)
Jewels for Sophia (1999 Album by Robyn Hitchcock)

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