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Words and Music (Jimmy Webb album)

Words and Music
Words and Music (Jimmy Webb album) cover art.jpg
Studio album by Jimmy Webb
Released November 1970
Recorded 1970
MCA Studios, Universal City, California, USA
Genre Popular
Length 43:37
Label Reprise
Producer Jimmy Webb
Jimmy Webb chronology
Jim Webb Sings Jim Webb
(1968)Jim Webb Sings Jim Webb1968
Words and Music
(1970)
And So: On
(1971)And So: On1971
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars

Words and Music is the second album by American singer-songwriter Jimmy Webb, released in 1970 by Reprise Records. This was the first album authorized by the artist.

By 1970, Webb had achieved a measure of fame as a songwriter. From 1967 to 1970, his songs had given him two dozen entries on the Billboard Hot 100, among them several Top Ten hits, including "MacArthur Park" by Richard Harris, "Worst That Could Happen" by the Brooklyn Bridge, "Wichita Lineman" by Glen Campbell, "Galveston" by Campbell, and "Up Up and Away" by the 5th Dimension. "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" was recorded by numerous artists. These hit songs made him a favorite of middle-of-the-road pop singers like Tony Bennett, Tom Jones, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Dionne Warwick, and Andy Williams. He was also widely covered by easy listening artists like Ray Conniff, Percy Faith, Henry Mancini, and Lawrence Welk. By the late 1960s, the music industry had changed, and many songwriters were now singing their own compositions. Following the unpleasant experience of his first album, Jim Webb Sings Jim Webb—which consisted of demos that were overdubbed and released by Epic Records without his permission in 1968—Webb began performing his own material.Words and Music was Webb's first album that he produced, consisting of all new material.

In contrast to the full orchestral productions of many of Webb's 1960s hit songs, Words and Music presents the artist in a less elaborate framework. The album was recording largely alone with guitarist Fred Tackett, who also overdubbed bass, percussion, and trumpet. Traces of Webb's earlier style can still be heard, notably in the horn chart for "Sleepin' in the Daytime" which echoed that of Harris' "MacArthur Park" and in the "elongated song structures, employing multiple tempos."

The centerpiece of the album is "P.F. Sloan", a song about the costs and disappointments of being a creative groundbreaker. The song would later be covered by The Association, Jennifer Warnes, and Rumer. Webb himself would rerecord the song for El Mirage in 1977, and again for Just Across the River in 2010 with Jackson Browne.


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