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Winter Pays for Summer

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Winter Pays For Summer
Studio album by
ReleasedMarch 29, 2005
RecordedBetween 2003 and 2004
StudioParamount Studios (Hollywood, California)
  • Mansfield Lodge (Los Angeles, California)
  • Mix This! (Pacific Palisades, California)
  • Starstruck Studios (Nashville, Tennessee)
GenreSinger-songwriter, Alternative rock
Length45:13
LabelLost Highway Records
ProducerJohn Fields
Glen Phillips chronology
Live at Largo
(2003)
Winter Pays For Summer
(2005)
Unlucky 7
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Rolling Stone[2]

Winter Pays For Summer is an album released in 2005 by Glen Phillips. The album was Phillips' debut for Lost Highway/Universal Records. It was recorded during 2003 and 2004. It was produced by John Fields at Paramount Studios and Mansfield Lodge, and features guest appearances by Jon Brion, Sam Phillips, Ben Folds, Andy Sturmer, Kristin Mooney, and Jonathan Foreman. The album boasts a well-produced, radio-ready sheen unheard since Phillips' days with Toad the Wet Sprocket.

It includes the debut single "Thankful", which was Phillips' first radio release for a major label since Toad the Wet Sprocket's 1997 release Coil. However, the song was pulled from radio following a slow start and "Duck And Cover" was pushed to stations as the album's first single.

After being in stores only a few months Lost Highway dropped promotion for the album mid-tour and Glen Phillips asked to be let out of his record deal to create the quiet, and less radio-geared "Mr. Lemons".

Track listing

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All songs written by Glen Phillips, except where noted otherwise.

  1. "Duck and Cover" – 3:23
  2. "Thankful" – 2:59
  3. "Courage" – 3:30
  4. "Released" (Phillips, Dan Wilson) – 4:04
  5. "Cleareyed" (Phillips, Wilson) – 3:59
  6. "Falling" – 3:15
  7. "Half-Life" – 4:14
  8. "True" (Phillips, Wilson) – 3:14
  9. "Easier" – 3:18
  10. "Finally Fading" – 3:27
  11. "Simple" – 4:05
  12. "Gather" – 3:10
  13. "Don't Need Anything" – 2:35

Personnel

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Production

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  • Kim Buie – A&R
  • John Fields – producer, engineer, mixing (10)
  • Steven Miller – engineer, mixing (4, 6, 7, 9-13)
  • Chris Testa – additional recording
  • Bob Clearmountain – mixing (1-3, 5, 8)
  • Robert Hadley – mastering
  • Doug Sax – mastering
  • The Mastering Lab (Hollywood, California)
  • Bethany Newman – art direction, design
  • Laurel Phillips – painting
  • Dana Tynan – photography
  • A2 Management – management

References

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  1. ^ Winter Pays for Summer at AllMusic
  2. ^ "Review". www.rollingstone.com. Archived from the original on October 2, 2007.