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