JIMMY WEBB “Still Within The Sound Of My Voice”

$30.00 Inc GST

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Description

For well over four decades, Jimmy Webb’s songs have helped shape the American musical landscape. And “landscape” is the operative term. A native of Oklahoma, Webb imbues his songs with a cinematic expansiveness and a musical sophistication that smooths the edges of his rootsy sources. They sometimes evoke specific places – “Wichita Lineman,” “By the Time I Get to Phoenix” – but more often Webb’s songs summon an internal realm of the imagination. Yearning and regret loom large in Webb’s songbook, as does a particular kind of American loneliness, the emotional flip side of the country’s obsession with individualism. His work uniquely explores how it’s possible to feel so alone, regardless of whether you’re finding love or losing it.

All this is indelibly clear on Still Within the Sound of My Voice, an equally appealing follow-up to Webb’s 2010 release Just Across the River. The two albums work on the same premise: Prominent singers – in this case, Lyle Lovett, Keith Urban, Kris Kristofferson, Art Garfunkel, Joe Cocker and Brian Wilson, among others – join Webb for duets on some of his greatest tracks. It’s a tribute to Webb’s craftsmanship and the depth of his catalog that after 27 songs, the quality of the selections on these two albums has not dipped a notch. And it’s a testament to the power of Webb’s own highly personal, granular style of singing that none of those high-profile guests ever quite overshadows Webb himself.

The high point is a trenchant version of Webb’s classic hit “MacArthur Park,” on which Wilson’s Beach Boys-style backing vocals, Mollin’s Americana touches and Webb’s own craggy recitation both reinvent a classic and capture its timelessness. Really, that’s true of this entire album, proof that more than a decade into the 21st century, we are all still within the sound of Webb’s endlessly alluring songwriting voice.