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Youtube tunesmith
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Sloan" and the Supremes, with both "5:30 Plane" and "Cheap Lovin'." There are some unexpected, inspired inclusions of artists not known for singing the kind of things Webb writes, like Ian Matthews (with "Met Her on a Plane"), Paul Revere & the Raiders ("Song Seller"), Arlo Guthrie ("Oklahoma Nights"), Lowell George ("Himmler's Ring"), and the Three Degrees ("Everybody Gets to Go to the Moon"). As for some of the big names weighing in with strong performances, there's Dusty Springfield's "Magic Garden" Scott Walker doing both "If Ships Were Made to Sail" and "Where Does Brown Begin?" Jackie DeShannon's "The Girl's Song," (a highlight of her late-'60s work) the Four Tops' "Do What You Gotta Do," (certainly Webb at his most soul-oriented) Judy Collins' "The Moon Is a March Mistress" the Association's quirky early-'70s single "P.F. There are also some Webb compositions of interest that are not represented here in any form whatsoever, like the aforementioned "Paper Cup" and "Carpet Man," not to mention "Orange Air," also first covered by the 5th Dimension.Įven with those missing entries taken into account, there are a bunch of interesting interpretations and/or rarities here sure to be of interest to any Webb fan, or indeed to many soft rock fans in general. But it's doubtful anyone would call King Harvest's medley of the two songs the most definitive interpretation, or Stevie Wonder's "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" as memorable as Hayes' take on the tune, or R.E.M.'s "Wichita Lineman" a match for the Campbell recording. True, "Wichita Lineman" and "By the Time I Get I to Phoenix" are represented here in different versions. Among the absentees are Campbell's "Wichita Lineman" and "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," Isaac Hayes' "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," and the 5th Dimension's "Paper Cup" and "Carpet Man," though presumably anyone serious about listening to Jimmy Webb songs already has, or knows, where to get those recordings.

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As far as the biggest Webb-written hits, several of them are indeed here: Richard Harris' "MacArthur Park," Glen Campbell's "Galveston," the 5th Dimension's "Up, Up and Away," the Brooklyn Bridge's "Worst That Could Happen," and Art Garfunkel's "All I Know." At the same time, however, some of the biggest Webb-penned smashes are missing, at least in the versions that made it the biggest. While this two-CD, 46-song compilation of Webb interpretations is highly worthwhile for fans of the songwriter, it falls somewhere between being a collection of the best-known Webb covers, and a more esoteric anthology of obscurities. Jimmy Webb's songs have been covered by so many artists, and so many of his songs have been covered in multiple versions, that no compilation of Webb covers could please everyone.













Youtube tunesmith