Mesmerizing

Liz Phair In Birmingham, AL, February 4, 1999



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The following description of Liz's performance in Birmingham is courtesy of David Peisner (taken from the website Music Boulevard):

Subject: Morissette, Phair Deliver Snarling Rock In Atlanta Show
Date: Tue, 02 Aug 1999

In many ways, Liz Phair paved the road to success for Alanis Morissette. Phair wanted to be our "blow job queen" two years before Morissette even thought of going down on anyone in a theatre. And the critical and relative commercial success of such sexual frankness on Phair's 1993 debut Exile in Guyville made the music world a safer place for Morissette's somewhat toned-down behemoth, Jagged Little Pill.

Both women have moved away from such brash declarations with their recent releases, (Phair's whitechocolatespaceegg and Morissette's Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie), but the parallels between them continue. Performing at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta on the second date of their tour together, Monday (Feb. 1), it was clear that despite the fact both Phair and Morissette write catchy pop songs, deep down, they just wanna rock.

Phair opened the show gently, though, sauntering out in a black evening gown and high heels to the delicate "Chopsticks" from her 1994 album, Whip-Smart. From there, she strapped on a guitar and charged into three roughed-up rockers from her debut: "6'1"," "Never Said," and "Mesmerizing." Though Phair's voice was in good form, the louder, denser arrangements forced her to stetch its limits and occasionally she missed notes badly. The band hit its stride, though, on a raucous version of "Polyester Bride," one of only three songs Phair included from her new album.

Perhaps sensing her older, more sexually explicit songs would go over best with the nearly sold-out crowd, Phair leaned her set in that direction despite her obvious awkwardness with some of the material. Now a wife and a mother, she delivered "Fuck and Run" with a wry, knowing smile and stifled laughter through the particularly raunchy "Flower." A tight, impassioned "Divorce Song" closed her set on a high note.

The following description of Liz's performance in Birmingham is courtesy of Alan (taken from the website The Spaceegg Corner):

Subject: Fox Theatre - Atlanta, Georgia
Date: Tue, 02 Aug 1999

Okay, I went to the show last night. Mind you this is the first time I've ever listened to Liz Phair. Also there were some problems with the sound. Her voice wasn't coming through properly and the music was way too loud. But there she was all cleavaged out. Okay, lets begin... She had some really good music. Very rifey with guitar loops that would make someone go crazy in their seat. Her voice was deep and sultry which accented very well with the backup singer (who by the way I thought was Joan Ozborne). When she sang "Porcelan Bride" her emotion shot up at us like a wave of ideas and thoughts that foarced themselves out. Her use of "verbal provocations" raised a few eye brows from me and some laughs betweet me and my friends. I especially liked it when she said something along the lines of "I'm your blowjob queen", and "We can do it while watching TV backwards" or something like that. All and all her performance was rich in emotion and provocativness. It stimulated the mind and tickled the libitoes of just about everyone in the theatre. But I have to say that when it was all over, Alanis took us by the heads and threw us into a wall because she rocked our worlds beyond what my extensive vocabulary could even begin to comprehend, and that I'm still recovering from.




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Last Updated: February 7, 1999