BURT BACHARACH VS. JIMMY WEBB

pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
edited October 2007 in Strut Central
Both classic songwriters of the sixties who made quirky albums of their own, and were covered by every lounge lizard from Maine to Mexico (plus a surprising amount of soul acts)...in one corner, Bacharach:"Close To You""This Guy's In Love With You""The Look Of Love""Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head""Funky Nassau""That's What Friends Are For"and in the other, Webb (who has claimed to be influenced by Bacharach):"Wichita Lineman""By The Time I Get To Phoenix""Whoomp! There It Is""MacArthur Park""Up, Up & Away""Worst That Could Happen"So, in the realm of songs that no performer could make it through the late sixties without covering, who is the better man?

  Comments


  • Danno3000Danno3000 2,851 Posts
    There's no question: Burt (although Wichita Lineman is, like, the best song ever).

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    Wichita Lineman is, like, the best song ever.

    ...and if you think about it, the plotline is rather weird: some guy standing on a Kansas telephone pole, stalking some girl by overhearing her phone conversations???

    (at least thats what i think its about)

  • In terms of career achievement, Bacharach wins, hands down. He has such a personal and recognizable melodic style, among other things

  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts

    "Whoomp! There It Is"

  • Mike_BellMike_Bell 5,736 Posts
    BB

  • bassiebassie 11,710 Posts
    To Burt,

    Sha la la la la la la la
    Sha la la la la la la la
    Sha la la la la la la la
    Sha la la la la
    It's not the way you smile that touched my heart
    sha la la la la
    It's not the way you kiss that tears me apart
    Uh, oh, many, many, many nights go by,
    I sit alone at home and I cry over you
    What can I do
    Can't help myself, 'cause baby, it's you
    Baby, it's you
    You should hear what they say about you,
    Cheat, cheat
    They say, they say you never never never
    ever been true (cheat cheat)
    Oh no,
    It doesn't matter what they say,
    I know I'm gonna love you any old way

    What can I do, and it's true
    Don't want nobody, nobody, 'cause
    Baby, it's you.
    sha la la la la la la
    Baby, it's you
    sha la la la la la la

    Oh no,
    It doesn't matter what they say,
    I know I'm gonna love you any old way
    What can I do, when it's true
    Don't want nobody, nobody, 'cause
    baby, it's you
    sha la la la la la la
    Baby, it's you
    sha la la la la la la
    Don't leave me all alone
    Come on home

    + Little Red Book

  • To Burt,

    Sha la la la la la la la
    Sha la la la la la la la
    Sha la la la la la la la
    Sha la la la la
    It's not the way you smile that touched my heart
    sha la la la la
    It's not the way you kiss that tears me apart
    Uh, oh, many, many, many nights go by,
    I sit alone at home and I cry over you
    What can I do
    Can't help myself, 'cause baby, it's you
    Baby, it's you
    You should hear what they say about you,
    Cheat, cheat
    They say, they say you never never never
    ever been true (cheat cheat)
    Oh no,
    It doesn't matter what they say,
    I know I'm gonna love you any old way

    What can I do, and it's true
    Don't want nobody, nobody, 'cause
    Baby, it's you.
    sha la la la la la la
    Baby, it's you
    sha la la la la la la

    Oh no,
    It doesn't matter what they say,
    I know I'm gonna love you any old way
    What can I do, when it's true
    Don't want nobody, nobody, 'cause
    baby, it's you
    sha la la la la la la
    Baby, it's you
    sha la la la la la la
    Don't leave me all alone
    Come on home



    One of my all-time fave songs. I have a cool version at home somewhere by Nick Lowe and Elvis Costello.

  • Danno3000Danno3000 2,851 Posts
    Wichita Lineman is, like, the best song ever.

    ...and if you think about it, the plotline is rather weird: some guy standing on a Kansas telephone pole, stalking some girl by overhearing her phone conversations???

    (at least thats what i think its about)

    Totally! That's half the reason it's so great. Seriously, I love it. I'm always humming it and generally no one around me knows this classic and so my appreciation is tragically solitaire.

    Favourite version? Sergio Mendes.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    Wichita Lineman is, like, the best song ever.

    ...and if you think about it, the plotline is rather weird: some guy standing on a Kansas telephone pole, stalking some girl by overhearing her phone conversations???

    (at least thats what i think its about)

    Totally! That's half the reason it's so great. Seriously, I love it. I'm always humming it and generally no one around me knows this classic and so my appreciation is tragically solitaire.

    Favourite version? Sergio Mendes.

    its a tie between glen campbell and sammy davis jr. for me

  • SoulOnIceSoulOnIce 13,027 Posts


    Favourite version? Sergio Mendes.

    its a tie between glen campbell and sammy davis jr. for me

    I'm down with the Tony Joe White version.

    Also like the recent Johnny Cash one.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts

    Also like the recent Johnny Cash (version of "Wichita Lineman").

    what album was that on?

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    Both classic songwriters of the sixties who made quirky albums of their own, and were covered by every lounge lizard from Maine to Mexico (plus a surprising amount of soul acts)...in one corner, Bacharach:

    "Close To You"
    "This Guy's In Love With You"
    "The Look Of Love"
    "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head"
    "Funky Nassau"
    "That's What Friends Are For"

    and in the other, Webb (who has claimed to be influenced by Bacharach):
    "Wichita Lineman"
    "By The Time I Get To Phoenix"
    "Whoomp! There It Is"
    "MacArthur Park"
    "Up, Up & Away"
    "Worst That Could Happen"

    So, in the realm of songs that no performer could make it through the late sixties without covering, who is the better man?

    Errr.. Burt has some better songs than what you listed. Walk On By for one.

    I'll pass on both of them as solo artists.

    I think it's kind of cool that Burt (And Hal David) found their voice through a single artist. I'm not a big Dionne fan, but I think that is cool.

    I'll vote for Burt.

    Who wrote the worse song? Raindrops vs MacArthur Park.

  • Mike_BellMike_Bell 5,736 Posts
    Raindrops
    I actually like this song.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    Both classic songwriters of the sixties who made quirky albums of their own, and were covered by every lounge lizard from Maine to Mexico (plus a surprising amount of soul acts)...in one corner, Bacharach:

    "Close To You"
    "This Guy's In Love With You"
    "The Look Of Love"
    "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head"
    "Funky Nassau"
    "That's What Friends Are For"

    and in the other, Webb (who has claimed to be influenced by Bacharach):
    "Wichita Lineman"
    "By The Time I Get To Phoenix"
    "Whoomp! There It Is"
    "MacArthur Park"
    "Up, Up & Away"
    "Worst That Could Happen"

    So, in the realm of songs that no performer could make it through the late sixties without covering, who is the better man?

    Errr.. Burt has some better songs than what you listed. Walk On By for one.

    I know. I just thought I'd list the most dead-obvious songs so we'd all get a feel for who was who.

    I think it's kind of cool that Burt (And Hal David) found their voice through a single artist. I'm not a big Dionne fan, but I think that is cool.

    Yeah, Jimmy Webb's "voice" was Glen Campbell.

    One thing I always thought was interesting was that both men were covered extensively by black artists (and to my knowledge, neither man was intentionally trying to lean that way, it just happened)...I don't mean some one-hit soul singer laming their way through "This Guy's In Love With You" or "Phoenix" for album filler, but even the lesser-known things were covered by soul singers. Bacharach and David had the Scepter-Wand stable on lockdown for a while there (Dionne, Chuck Jackson, Tommy Hunt, etc.), and I think (but I'm not sure) that early in his career, Jimmy Webb was under contract to Motown as a writer. (He did eventually produce one of the Supremes' post-Diana albums.)

    Who wrote the worse song? Raindrops vs MacArthur Park.

    Yeah, those tunes are goofy, but I kinda like 'em both in a K-Tel "guilty pleasure" way...

  • Yeah, Jimmy Webb's "voice" was Glen Campbell.



    Don't forget his other voice(s)...



  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    Yeah, Jimmy Webb's "voice" was Glen Campbell.



    Don't forget his other voice(s)...



    yeah, they kept both Webb AND Laura Nyro rollin in royalties for a while!

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    Yeah, Jimmy Webb's "voice" was Glen Campbell.



    Don't forget his other voice(s)...



    yeah, they kept both Webb AND Laura Nyro rollin in royalties for a while!

    Next up Laura Nyro appreciation. Poverty Train is my cut.

  • SoulOnIceSoulOnIce 13,027 Posts

    Also like the recent Johnny Cash (version of "Wichita Lineman").

    what album was that on?

    It's on the the American Records "Vol. 4 - The Man Comes Around"
    ... but I just found out for the first time that it's only on
    the vinyl version of this album, not the CD! I only ever had the
    vinyl, so I didn't realize. Maybe they included it on that recent
    CD box of "unreleased" American material?

  • I've always like Hasbrook Heights by BURT!

  • SoulOnIceSoulOnIce 13,027 Posts

    Next up Laura Nyro appreciation. Poverty Train is my cut.

    Stoney End

  • SoulOnIceSoulOnIce 13,027 Posts
    I don't know who gave this thread the

    ... but what always bothers me about this argument is, isn't Jimmy Webb
    a lyricist, while Bachrach is a composer? Wouldn't Hal David vs Jimmy Webb
    make more sense?

    One thing is for sure, both of their solo records almost all completely suck.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    I don't know who gave this thread the

    ... but what always bothers me about this argument is, isn't Jimmy Webb
    a lyricist, while Bachrach is a composer? Wouldn't Hal David vs Jimmy Webb
    make more sense?

    Jimmy Webb is usually the only writer listed on the songs he penned. I never knew him to work as part of a team, so evidently he was supplying the music along with the words.

  • I don't know who gave this thread the

    ... but what always bothers me about this argument is, isn't Jimmy Webb
    a lyricist, while Bachrach is a composer? Wouldn't Hal David vs Jimmy Webb
    make more sense?

    Jimmy Webb is usually the only writer listed on the songs he penned. I never knew him to work as part of a team, so evidently he was supplying the music along with the words.

    Correct. Webb = music + lyrics

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    ...its a tie between glen campbell and sammy davis jr. for me

    Sammy Davis Jr. - I must hear his take on it. The Glen Campbell one is etched deep into my mind as it was seemingly always on the cab radio at 4AM when I had a regular early morning taxi ride. Makes a good soundtrack for riding semi-awake through a deserted city.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    ...its a tie between glen campbell and sammy davis jr. for me

    Sammy Davis Jr. - I must hear his take on it.

    It's pretty over-the-top, with the loudest horn section in the world and no humility at all. But then again, that's kinda why I like it - would you expect less from the man they called Mr. Entertainment? It's on his Something For Everybody album on Motown.
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