Cottonwood Farm | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Jimmy Webb and The Webb Brothers |
Cover: | Cottonwood_Farm_CD.jpg |
Released: | September 22, 2009 |
Recorded: | 2008–2009 |
Genre: | Popular, Country |
Length: | 44:51 |
Label: | Proper Records |
Producer: | Justin Webb |
Cottonwood Farm is a collaborative album by Jimmy Webb and the Webb Brothers, released in September 2009 by Proper Records. The album tells the story of the Webb family through the voices of three generations.[1]
Recorded during various sessions in 2008 and 2009, Cottonwood Farm is a family affair, featuring Jimmy Webb and his sons Christiaan, Justin, James, and Cornelius—the Webb Brothers, who have three critically acclaimed albums of their own under their belts—as well as Jimmy Webb's daughter, Camila, and his 86-year-old father, Bob Webb, who sings a "delightfully endearing version" of the classic "Red Sails in the Sunset", making this album a "three-generation family affair".[1]
Regarding the genesis of the project, Jimmy Webb wrote:
After opening with Webb's classic, "Highwayman", the album moves into what music critic Steve Leggett called its "emotional center" with "Cottonwood Farm", a twelve-minute epic that is "one of Webb's finest" and is "perfectly suited to the familial tone of the project." Jimmy Webb wrote the song in the early 1970s for his grandfather, but never recorded it.[1] The album then moves into three songs by the Webb Brothers, including the lush and elegant "Mercury’s in Retrograde" which shows that "the sons clearly inherited a lot of their father's pop sense."[1] The album transitions back to two Jimmy Webb classics, "If These Walls Could Speak", first recorded by Amy Grant, and "Where the Universes Are", which he wrote for his friend Waylon Jennings. The album also includes Jimmy Webb's "A Snow Covered Christmas", written in the 1980s and recorded here for the first time.
In his review for Allmusic, Steve Leggett called the album "a warm fusion of history and melody from a remarkable family with an uncanny affinity for crafting its own elegant brand of pop Americana."[1] The album received four out of five stars on Allmusic.