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