Jimmy Webb
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Jimmy Webb (born August 15, 1946 in Elk City, Oklahoma) is an idiosyncratic American popular music composer.
Jimmy Webb is responsible for writing numerous popular and Top 10 hits sung by a disparate group of artists, including Glen Campbell ("By the Time I Get to Phoenix", "Wichita Lineman", "Galveston"); Art Garfunkel ("All I Know"); Richard Harris and Donna Summer ("MacArthur Park"); The Fifth Dimension ("Up, Up and Away"); and The Highwaymen, consisting of Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Linda Ronstadt; and many others.
Webb's father was a Baptist minister and a former Marine. His mother died when he was a teenager. His most popular songs were all composed when he was between 19 and 21 years of age.
"By the Time I Get to Phoenix" is one of the most recorded songs of the 20th century.[citation needed]
Webb has had his songs recorded by a wide range of artists, including R.E.M. and Frank Sinatra. As one of the few "classic" songwriter specialists of the rock age, he has been compared to the great composers/songwriters/arrangers of the past, including George Gershwin, Cole Porter and Burt Bacharach. Webb's "The Girls' Song," according to the liner notes for the CD re-release of The Fifth Dimension album The Magic Garden, was explicitly intended as an homage to Bacharach.
He is noted for having written songs that were hits in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, and is the only person to receive Grammy Awards in all three categories: music, lyrics and orchestration. Webb has also written musicals, commercial jingles and film scores, including the music for the animated film The Last Unicorn. He has written for television as well, including music for the show ER.
Webb is also a performer of his own music, although his solo output has never matched the commercial success of recordings of his work by other performers.
In 1998 he authored a book, Tunesmith: Inside the Art of Songwriting, which was well received by songwriters and performers. He still continues to do live performances.
He was elected to the National Academy of Popular Music Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1986; in 1990 he was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
[edit] Solo albums
- Jim Webb Sings Jim Webb (1967)
- Words and Music (1970)
- And So: On (1971)
- Letters (1972)
- Land's End (1974)
- El Mirage (1977)
- Angel Heart (1982)
- Suspending Disbelief (1993)
- Ten Easy Pieces (1996) A collection of Webb's best-best known songs performed mainly with only a piano accompaniment.
- The Moon's A Harsh Mistress: Jimmy Webb in the Seventies (2004) This was a limited edition boxed set published by Rhino Handmade and including all his albums from the 1970s, plus bonus tracks and "Live at the Royal Albert Hall", a live album recorded in 1972 which subsequently became one disc of the two disc set "Archive & Live".
- Twilight of the Renegades (2005)
- Archive & Live (2005) Two disc set: one disc was a previously-released compilation; the other was the "Live at the Royal Albert Hall" recording.
[edit] Trivia
Jimmy Webb was the original owner of a Shelby 427 Cobra equipped with twin Paxton superchargers, of which only 2 were ever built. This car sold at the 2007 Barrett-Jackson Collector Car Auction for a record $5.5 million.
[edit] External links
- Official artist's site
- Jimmy Webb at All Music Guide
- Ultimate Band List page
- Quote on Xfm.co.uk from Ricky Gervais
The songwritter from the arid and landlocked SouthWest now lives on the beach in Bayville, NY, not far from the home of another great songwriter, Billy Joel. Joel credits Jimmy Webb as one of his inspirations.