cover image Tunesmith: Inside the Art of Songwriting

Tunesmith: Inside the Art of Songwriting

Jimmy Webb. Hyperion Books, $24.95 (448pp) ISBN 978-0-7868-6131-6

The only artist to receive Grammy Awards for music, lyrics and orchestration, Webb has written many of the most memorable songs performed by the Fifth Dimension (""Up, Up and Away""), Donna Summer (""MacArthur Park"") and Amy Grant (""If These Walls Could Speak""), among others. Here he seeks to impart the tools of the trade to songwriters ""who may be attempting the delicate transition from amateur to professional."" Covering technical matters from basic chord theory and rhyme schemes to the protocol of pitching songs, Webb draws on a trove of personal anecdotes from a career spanning more than two decades. In addition to salient comments on today's music scene, Webb cites numerous examples from the past and includes sections on writing for the stage and film. Of greatest value, perhaps, are the exercises suggested for developing song ideas, which will help anyone stumbling through a period of writer's block. While Webb's fans will revel in the behind-the-scenes details of his career and a candid view of his artistic process, others may wish that the asides, finger pointing (at arrogant co-writers) and Webb's own pet peeves (e.g., no-talent spouses who insist on songwriting credits on their partner's records) had been left out. And Webb's nuts-and-bolts approach somehow undercuts every songwriter's need for that spark of absolute inspiration. For those interested in the latter, Songwriters on Songwriting: The Expanded Version (Da Capo, 1997), a collection of interviews between editor Paul Zollo and a variety of songwriters, including Webb, is the ticket. (Sept.)