Lightning Show Us Your Stuff
2018's Widdershins presented a Grant-Lee Phillips who was willing to mount a soapbox and speak his mind about life in Trump-era America. Two years later, on 2020's Lightning Show Us Your Stuff, Phillips is feeling a bit quieter and more introspective, still a man of principles but less inclined to speak so loudly about them. This music isn't the work of someone who has resigned himself to unfortunate changes in America; instead, he takes his time training a keen eye on the world around him, and has plenty to say about the larger issues of a culture in chaos as well as the stuff that complicates the heart and soul of nearly all of us. The loneliness of "Leave a Light On" and the frustrations of a life going nowhere in "Straight to the Ground" rest comfortably besides the troubled ruminations of "Sometimes You Wake Up in Charleston" and the casual, sincere defiance of "Ain't Done Yet," and he confronts them all with honesty and purpose. As a songwriter, Phillips has always been eloquent