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50 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Great American Songwriter
People talk about the Great American Songbook of Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, etc. There is a second Great American Songbook, populated by the likes of Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Burt Bacharach, and so on---writers who came of age in 60s and 70s, and whose work resonates deeply to this day.

Jimmy Webb is at the top of that list. He...
Published 19 months ago by Constant Listener

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26 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not a very original idea, but solid overall...
It is hard to be truly unique in popular music. Jimmy Webb comes about as close as anyone. He is the Godson of Brian Wilson, Cole Porter, George Gershwin and, just a tad, Hank Williams...and the step brother of Tom Waits. Webb's songs, if they can be defined by one characteristic (and they really can't - I am over simplifying), are centered in melancholy...
Published 19 months ago by kerouac's ghost


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50 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Great American Songwriter, June 29, 2010
This review is from: Just Across the River (Audio CD)
People talk about the Great American Songbook of Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, etc. There is a second Great American Songbook, populated by the likes of Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Burt Bacharach, and so on---writers who came of age in 60s and 70s, and whose work resonates deeply to this day.

Jimmy Webb is at the top of that list. He has made many great records of his own (Ten Easy Pieces and Land's End in particular) but never achieved status as a performer to equal his immortality as a songwriter, even though he tours regularly. This album goes a long way in re-connecting Jimmy with some of his greatest songs, and the connectors are a group of amazing voices. Some of the guests are artists who have sung his songs and had huge hits with them, like Glen Campbell and Linda Ronstadt and Willie Nelson. Others have loved and been influenced by Jimmy's work, like Jackson Browne and Lucinda Williams. And Billy Joel. His version of Wichita Lineman is a revelation! Everyone on the record obviously loves Jimmy and sings at their best. They inspire Jimmy to do his best singing ever. I feel like all of the versions of these songs are fresh and compare favorably with the original hits.

The production is great. Really transparent and supportive of the songs and the singers. The supporting musicians are some of Nashville's best, like Jerry Douglas. The whole album hangs together like albums used to do. It feels a little bit country, a little bit classic singer-songwriter pop, and never goes too far over the top and sentimental. These songs work best with a subtle touch.

If you've been into the James Taylor/Carole King album and tour, there's no way you won't love this record. Jimmy Webb's music comes from the same timeless place.
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26 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not a very original idea, but solid overall..., June 30, 2010
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This review is from: Just Across the River (Audio CD)
It is hard to be truly unique in popular music. Jimmy Webb comes about as close as anyone. He is the Godson of Brian Wilson, Cole Porter, George Gershwin and, just a tad, Hank Williams...and the step brother of Tom Waits. Webb's songs, if they can be defined by one characteristic (and they really can't - I am over simplifying), are centered in melancholy. Structurally, stylistically, they can be downright weird. In the most beautiful way. Listen to "Wichita Lineman" (Glen Campbell's towering, sonic version). He also represents an era long gone, try as some youngsters might to replicate it. Jimmy Webb is southern California. The Beach Boys. The Mammas and the Pappas. Tie dye t-shirts and sandals. Blonde bikini'd girls who break your heart. "Drinkin' margaritas all night in the old cantina." Jimmy Webb is laid back southern California pop's soul (though I understand he now lives in New York...yikes!).

On this record, some of Webb's classic (and some not so classic) numbers are taken on by some notable artists. To get the not-so-good stuff out of the way. "By The Time I Get To Phoenix", with Webb's best collaborator of days passed, Glen Campbell, is an obligatory version. Campbell should have been given something meatier to sink his teeth into (what could he possibly do with a song he has probably sung - literally - thousands of times). "Oklahoma Nights", with Vince Gill, sounds like Webb was forced, at gunpoint, to write a song for modern country radio. Ugh. Most disappointing is Billy Joel's contribution to the song that is widely considered Webb's masterpiece, the aforementioned "Wichita Lineman". Maybe we know too much about Joel, a man who made his bones singing with New York attitude and, often, with New York subject matter, to hear him sing about a lonesome lineman working on the desolate plains of Kansas. It just doesn't work.

Now, Jackson Browne's contribution to the absolutely wonderful-weirdo-quasi-psychedelic-sentimental mini masterpiece "P. F. Sloan" is fantastic. In addition, Webb sounds especially fired up on this tune and stretches his limited vocal range to exemplify his belief in what he is singing. When you hear Browne's always earnest voice kick in "I have been seeking P.F. Sloan"...well, it's almost enough to make you believe again. The very underrated singer J.D. Souther (more widely known for his songwriting contributions to the Eagles) brings a wonderful touch to a little known, but beautiful, Webb country flavored song, "I Was Too Busy Loving You". Willie Nelson chips in admirably with Webb on his delightfully weird "If You See Me Getting Smaller" ("We have spent a million dollars to find out what we've made"). That song, as much as any, is representative of Webb's weirdo-hippie-beautiful lyrical style:

God bless old Philadelphia
They were standing in the rain
Out in front of the Main Point
A wet and lonely train
Who knows who they came to see
A mad man full of beer
A four piece band and a charter bus
My border-line career

Sing those lyrics to a quasi-blue grass arrangement and, well, it's good to know Jimmy is still a little weird. It's absolutely beautiful.

Webb does a great solo job on "Do What You Gotta Do". Lucinda Williams' weather beaten voice on "Galveston" brings a new variable to that anti-war classic...and a different perspective. "All I Know" is given wonderful minimal pop effect by Webb and Linda Ronstadt (after Glen Campbell, maybe the best interpreter of Webb's music). After repeated listening (I was not sure at first) Mark Knopfler's input on "The Highwayman" brought something new to that great tune.

Some lesser known, but beautiful, Webb tunes like "Postcard From Paris", "Adios" and "No Signs of Age" (the latter still waiting for a definitive version to be recorded) are left out. "Macarthur Park" is also omitted. That much debated song has been the object of ridicule and praise for forty years. No one was up to taking it on for "Just Across The River".

Not sure who could be considered the heir to Jimmy Webb's songwriting style. He was one of many back in the day, though he was better than almost all the others - truly a poet writing pop songs. This record celebrates that accomplishment. Not a home run - there are even some strike outs here - but a very solid work altogether and certainly a work that provides impetus to look into Webb's unique career even further.

(Note: Webb's songs have been covered by everyone from Sinatra to Elvis. He has written hits for The 5th Dimension, Art Garfunkel, Waylon Jennings, Donna Summer, The Highwaymen...to name a few. That said, if you want to get to the heart of Webb's beautiful songwriting, the man to see is Glen Campbell. Campbell's deft interpretations of Webb's unusual songs are unmatched by any other artist. There are the well known sonic classics "Wichita Lineman", "Galveston" and "By The Time I Get To Phoenix", but lesser known gems like "Where's The Playground, Susie", "Still Within The Sound of My Voice", and "Light Years" resonate almost as strongly. Particularly worthy of investigation is the great "Reunion" LP from 1974. If you are interested in Webb's songs, Glen Campbell is the place to start.)
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thank you, Amazon!, June 29, 2010
By 
the fly (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Thanks to Amazon - Not only for the low price for this collection, but also for putting Jimmy Webb on the front page of their latest "New Releases" e-mail. Jimmy has been writing incredible songs for over 40 years and it's about time he made the front page! He certainly deserves to be applauded as one of the greatest songwriters of his time. The care taken with these tracks is worthy of his composing skills.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Up there with 10 Easy Pieces and El Mirage, July 7, 2010
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This review is from: Just Across the River (Audio CD)
Say what you want about rehashing old songs again and again; when the final product sounds as inspired as this, I have zero problem investing in it. Webb sounds as proud of every word as they day they came together as a song, and I can hear "Jimmy, I'd be HONORED" oozing from each guest artist. I couldn't be more pleased with the outcome, and bet everyone involved feels the same. Great stuff.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Silk for the soul, June 29, 2010
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All you need to know is that this music is as smooth as a Sunday morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, and playing footsies with your lover. If you want music to just mellow you out, here you go.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent companion to Ten Easy Pieces, July 22, 2010
By 
Rushmore (CHICAGO, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Just Across the River (Audio CD)
I am just a total sucker for Jimmy Webb's music. (Well, the old stuff is classic and awesome - most of the newer stuff is just OK.) I was so excited to see this new collection. Ten Easy Pieces is easily in my personal top ten. This could have been just a remake or reissue, but it has a very different sound. Webb has countrified his tunes and matched up with a cast of superstars. The results are marvelous.

I have already played this CD many times. When I first got it, the CD was in constant rotation for the first few days of a driving trip - perfect music for that. At least once a week, it is exactly the kind of music I want to hear.

I think Jimmy Webb has a fine voice and mixes beautifully with his singing partners. There is not a dud in this bunch of songs. Highly recommended.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another reworking of Webb-songs, but worth a listen, July 17, 2010
By 
William Merrill "eclecticist" (San Antonio, TX United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Just Across the River (Audio CD)
Just Across the River is Jimmy Webb's "Duets" album, except it's not posthumous (thank goodness), and the guest singers actually sang in the same studio during the same recording sessions as Mr. Webb. The guests are a very impressive bunch, including (in my personal "wow factor" order) Jackson Browne, Billy Joel, Glen Campbell, JD Souther, Lucinda Williams, and other well regarded singers. Mr. Campbell built a whole career singing Webb's songs, so it's particularly good to hear the two sharing "By The Time I get To Phoenix". There's a nice song selection from across the great songwriter's career, although Jimmy's written so many top tunes, it's easy to list some left-off favorites. What's there is still highly satisfying, though; plus we get one new song, the very beautiful "Where Words End," sung with Michael McDonald. With only the one new item, I can understand the frustration some fans have with this album being yet another re-do of Webb's songbook. Beginning with the Ten Easy Pieces CD, he's dug back into his bag of tricks several times now. But I have two responses to that notion. First, if anybody ever deserves to rest on his laurels, it's one of the very best American songwriters we've known. Second, these songs and the new versions are grand enough that I'm just thankful to hear them, even though I've heard the melodies many times before.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Real Deal, July 10, 2010
By 
Ivan (Hollywood Florida) - See all my reviews
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I knew Jimmy Webb mainly from his songs in the late 60's that were hits for Glen Campbell, Richard Harris, the Fifth Dimension and had lost sight of him since then and had figured he had gone the way of many other of the great song writers of those times but many of the songs were written later and Webb continues to be active a composer and performer

IF you like music where the lyrics matter and especially if you lost track (or never found) Webb this is a must have. The songs don't get any better, and the performances are fresh and original.

Not to shabby for an Okie.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Songs of A Great American Songwriter, July 6, 2010
By 
Alan Houston "alanhouston-texas" (Houston, Texas, United States) - See all my reviews
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Over the past four decades, some of America's best singers have been recording the songs of Jimmie Webb. This is a new recording of Jimmie Webb singing some of his best songs, backed by some of the many singers who have made his songs famous. The musicians and arrangements are outstanding. Jimmie Webb has an average singing voice, but he understands these songs, and interprets his own lyrics with mastery. I have heard his song "The Highwayman" many, many times, but it is only now, hearing Mr. Webb's version, that its religious undertones become clear...his faith that our creator has a plan for us...in Willie Nelson's version, it came across as a song about an outlaw.

At the bargain price of the download version of this album, no fan of Webb's music should be without this CD.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars just across the middle, February 23, 2011
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This review is from: Just Across the River (Audio CD)
I have Jimmy Webb's TEN EASY PIECES and I love it. This cd does not have the passion of the other. Some of the same songs are on both cd's. On TEN EASY PIECES he does have as many guests , so if that is what you want, stick with this one. Otherwise, the "older" cd is the way to go.
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Just Across the River
Just Across the River by Jimmy Webb (Audio CD - 2010)
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