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Grant-Lee Phillips

YULETIDE

tranparent green 12" ep (import) - £14.99 | Buy
Acclaimed singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Grant-Lee Phillips has unwrapped a new gift for the Christmas season: an EP of Americana-crooning holiday ...
In the Hour of Dust
  1. Little Men
  2. Did You Make It Through the Night Okay
  3. Closer Tonight
  4. Bullies
  5. Stories We Tell
  6. She Knows Me
  7. Someone
  8. No Mistaking
  9. Dark Ages (CD / Download Only)
  10. American Lions
  11. Last Corner of the Earth (CD / Download Only)

Grant-Lee Phillips

In the Hour of Dust

yep roc
  • Limited *Signed* Clear Golden Smoke LP (1000 Only) + Download with 2 Extra Tracks (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 5th Sep 2025

    £25.99
    Preorder
  • Limited *Signed* CD with 2 Extra Tracks (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 5th Sep 2025

    £13.99
    Preorder

Several years ago, Grant-Lee Phillips found himself wandering the elegant halls of the Norton Simon Art Museum in Pasadena, California.

Amid a collection of highly detailed Indian paintings, one piece stood out. He jotted a note in his notebook, struck by both the imagery and the ominous title. That entry would eventually inspire the name of his 12th solo album: 'In the Hour of Dust'.

“A common theme throughout Indian poetry and painting,” Phillips explains, “is this concept of ‘the hour of cow dust.’ It’s that moment when cows are led home and kick up dust; a cue to prepare the lamps. Night is about to fall.” While Phillips doesn’t shy away from today’s larger societal issues, 'In the Hour of Dust' is an intimate, self-produced album. Its stripped-down musical presentation and often autobiographical lyrics reflect personal reckonings, all set “against this larger discordant backdrop.”

Like many, Phillips grapples with staying afloat in the chaos of modern life. For him, songwriting is a way to push back against the encroaching dark - to light the lamps and find a path forward, for both himself and his listeners. “We can focus on all the various freedoms being threatened,” Phillips says, “things we might’ve taken for granted a year or two ago. But eventually, it comes back to very human, primal things. I don’t see songs of love and songs of protest as that far apart. It’s all about recognizing the value of connection in a disconnected time.”