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"Supernova" is a song by American singer-songwriter Liz Phair from her second album, Whip-Smart, released in 1994. The song received heavy rotation on radio stations and its music video was frequently aired on MTV. The song went on to hit number 6 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart and number 78 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Phair was born in New Haven, Connecticut, [5] on April 17, 1967. [6] She was adopted at birth by Nancy, a historian and museologist, [7] and John Phair, later an AIDS researcher and head of infectious diseases at Northwestern Memorial Hospital; [8] her mother later worked as a professor at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Whip-Smart is the second album by American singer-songwriter Liz Phair, released in 1994, the follow-up to Phair's critically well received debut, 1993's Exile in Guyville. Despite not being as critically well received as her previous record, Whip-Smart debuted at No. 27 on the Billboard 200 [3] and ultimately achieved gold status. As of July ...
Sexually explicit lyrics by female artists are common now, but when trailblazing Chicago singer-songwriter Liz Phair released her voice-of-a-generation debut album Exile in Guyville back in 1993 ...
Cashbox awarded the song their 'Pick of the Week', commenting that "the title track from Phair’s critically-lauded second album is an even more infectious pop single than the album’s first focus track, “Supernova". Where that song helped push Phair further into the mainstream, this one will continue her ascension into pop culture.
A Perfect World, by Takida, 2016; Songs "Perfect World" (Broken Bells song), 2014 ... "Perfect World", by Liz Phair from whitechocolatespaceegg, 1998
If you’re Gen X and living in Los Angeles, there’s a good chance you were at the Wiltern on Friday night, bathing in nostalgia as Liz Phair performed her seminal 1993 album “Exile in ...
Whitechocolatespaceegg is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Liz Phair, released in 1998.It peaked at number 35 on the Billboard 200. [11] As of July 2010, the album had sold 293,000 copies. [12]