Phair Liz Lyrics — by Popularity
| 1 | Why Can't I |
| 2 | Flower |
| 3 | Cinco De Mayo |
| 4 | Supernova |
| 5 | Whip-Smart |
| 6 | Crater Lake |
| 7 | Chopsticks |
| 8 | The Dogs Of L A |
| 9 | Girls! Girls! Girls! |
| 10 | X-Ray Man |
| 11 | Alice Springs |
| 12 | Don't Have Time |
| 13 | Strange Loop |
| 14 | Combo Platter |
| 15 | Go West |
| 16 | Fuck And Run |
| 17 | May Queen |
| 18 | Support System |
| 19 | Never Said |
| 20 | Mesmerizing |
| 21 | Help Me, Mary |
| 22 | Gunshy |
| 23 | Shane |
| 24 | Stratford-On-Guy |
| 25 | Jealousy |
| 26 | Shatter |
| 27 | Glory |
| 28 | Nashville |
| 29 | Soap Star Joe |
| 30 | Johnny Sunshine |
| 31 | 6′1″ |
| 32 | Canary |
| 33 | Cyclone ( Hurricane Cindy ) |
| 34 | Dance of the Seven Veils |
| 35 | Divorce Song |
| 36 | Dogs of L.A. |
| 37 | Explain It to Me |
Phair Liz Albums
About Phair Liz
Liz Phair is an American singer-songwriter from New Haven who emerged in the early 1990s as a pioneering voice in alternative rock with her brutally honest, sexually frank lyrics and lo-fi indie sound. Her 1993 debut "Exile in Guyville," conceived as a track-by-track response to the Rolling Stones' "Exile on Main St.," became a landmark of '90s indie rock with songs like "Flower" and "Supernova" that challenged male-dominated rock narratives with unflinching female perspective. Follow-up "Whip-Smart" continued her confessional style, while later efforts like "Why Can't I" showed her evolution toward more polished pop-rock production. Phair's willingness to address female sexuality, relationships, and anger with unprecedented directness made her a crucial figure in alternative rock and influenced countless female artists who followed.