By the Time I Get to Phoenix

Album: By the Time I Get to Phoenix (1967)
Charted: 26
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  • By the time I get to Phoenix she'll be rising
    She'll find the note I left hangin' on her door
    She'll laugh when she reads the part that says I'm leavin'
    'Cause I've left that girl so many times before

    By the time I make Albuquerque she'll be working
    She'll probably stop at lunch and give me a call
    But she'll just hear that phone keep on ringin'
    Off the wall, that's all.

    By the time I make Oklahoma she'll be sleepin'
    She'll turn softly and call my name out low
    And she'll cry just to think I'd really leave her
    Tho' time and time I've tried to tell her so
    She just didn't know I would really go Writer/s: Jimmy Webb
    Publisher: BMG Rights Management, Kanjian Music, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 35

  • Philip Cushman from ArizonaI've been reading my colleagues comments on the timing of the song and what Google Maps shows today. The roads were much different when Jimmy Webb wrote this song. For example, Interstate 10 did not exist. The singer would have taken what is now Highway 60 which roughly parallels I-10 but swings south to go through Palm Springs and Indio in California. In Arizona, Highway 60 swings north to go through Salome, Aguila, and Wickenburg before going south again to Phoenix. After driving through Phoenix, the singer would continue east on Highway 60 to Globe, through the Salt River Canyon to Pinetop. At Pinetop, he would take Highway 77 north to Holbrook, Arizona and Highway 66. Highway 66 roughly parallels Interstate 40 and would take him through Albuquerque and eventually Oklahoma. He could also follow Highway 60 through New Mexico to Socorro and then head north to Albuquerque along Highway 85 which is now Interstate 25. Speed limits were different back then as well and these roads went through mountains, farm lands, and congested cities, probably the reason he was driving at night (LA traffic was just as bad back then as it is now only with fewer freeways). I don't know why he didn't get on Highway 66 in the first place since it ends in LA unless there was a lot more traffic on it but there were further distances between civilization. He could have named it "By the Time I Get to Flagstaff" and have the same timing and meaning. So, in closing, that I think that the the timing is right and it is a lot of fun to take the old roads that the singers in the old songs would take.
  • E Walls from Seattle#Heat Michael Mann movie with deniro and Pacino, one of my favs is when #BigAl goes to that scrap yard and starts singing this song all f'ed up "by the time I get to Phoenix, I'll be rising, he'll probably find a note upon the door" #GimmeAllYouGot"
  • Rabbi Meyer from Central WisconsinLove the song and its images. I had a weekly commute of about 6 1/2 hours (one way) - every Sunday I'd leave the family and travel to work for the week, coming back on Friday - and I'd play the "By the time..." game - when I was in Milwaukee, what was the wife doing? The kids? How about as I went through Chicago? or into eastern Indiana? while only temporary, it was bittersweet to think of their "ordinary activities" carrying on while I was gone a week at a time.

    And thanks to you folks who speculated that the driver never really left, that he was just playing his departure out in his head. I'd never thought of the song in that way, but it works.
  • Rick E from New JerseyAs someone who loves road trips and loves to plan them, I also had to research what this trip looks like on a map, and if the trip described was feasible in the given time-frame. After reading up on the song, both of the statements by the writer, Jimi Webb, and of the very thoughtful writers on this page, it makes perfect sense that the singer has only left on this journey in his mind, likely over and over again, and had not actually departed. However, to look at a trip that heads east through Phoenix, Albuquerque and into Oklahoma, it does seem feasible given the times of day as described by the woman’s routine. I agree with someone who wrote that it might be more feasible now with the modern and completed interstates than in the mid-60’s when many sections of the interstate system were still under construction. I would agree with other writers that the trip probably starts in LA or the LA area at around midnight. From there the singer would take I-10 to Phoenix, then I-40 to Albuquerque, then across the Texas panhandle to the Oklahoma state line. I-40 continues to Oklahoma City, so that would be the next likely big city that would be reached. But from there, where is the singer going, at least in his mind? I suppose there are a few places he could be going, especially if he is in the music industry. Those being Kansas City, St. Louis, Memphis, Nashville or even Chicago, all with music ties. Possibly he’s going all the way to the east coast, pretty much as far away as he can go, to the bright lights of New York City, as the character Joe Buck does, by bus, in Midnight Cowboy. Or perhaps it’s just a 160 mile trip north from Oklahoma City to Wichita Kansas, to be a lineman for the county?
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn this day in 1968 {January 7th} Glen Campbell's "By The Time I Get To Phoenix"* peaked at #2 {for 2 weeks} on Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart, the two records that kept it out of the top spot were "For Loving You" by Bill Anderson & Jan Howard and "Sing Me Back Home" by Merle Haggard...
    The rest of the Top 10 on January 7th, 1968:
    At #3. "Sing Me Back Home" by Merle Haggard
    #4. "Here Comes Heaven" by Eddy Arnold
    #5. "It Takes People Like You (To Make People Like Me)" by Buck Owens
    #6. "What Locks The Door" by Jack Greene
    #7. "Love's Gonna Happen To Me" by Wynn Stewart
    #8. "Burning A Hole In My Mind" by Connie Smith
    #9. "Skip A Rope" by Henson Cargill
    #10. "Promises,Promises" by Lynn Anderson
    Glen Travis Campbell passed away at the age of 81 on August 8th, 2017...
    May he R.I.P.
    * The week ""By The Time I Get To Phoenix" peaked at #2 on the Hot Country Singles chart, he had two albums on Billboard's Hot Country LP's chart, '"By The Time I Get To Phoenix" was at #6 and 'Gentle On My Mind" was at position #12...
  • Manman from The ZooThe criticisms about the timeline in the song have never made sense to me. A drive from LA->Phoenix->Albuquerque->Oklahoma City, OK would take about 20 hours (according to Google Maps), and that's assuming you don't speed. The lyrics imply that he has already left when she wakes up, so he could easily have left at, say, 1 am. 6 hrs later, 7 am, "She'll be risin." 6-1/2 hours later, around 1:30 PM, he's in Albuquerque. The lyrics say "she'll probably stop at lunch" to call him, but it doesn't say he'll be in Albuquerque by then. He's in Oklahoma City by 9 PM. Let's allow a couple of hours to stop for rest, food, etc, okay 11 PM. And by then, "she'll be sleeping"

    I don't know, nerdy though it may be, if you think this through, it does work.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn August 16th 1969, Isaac Hayes performed "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" on the ABC-TV program 'American Bandstand'...
    One week & one day later on August 24th it entered Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart at position #88; and on October 12th, 1969 it peaked at #37 {for 1 week} and spent 8 weeks on the Top 100...
    It also reached #37 on Billboard's R&B Singles chart...
    On the same 'Bandstand' show he also performed the record's A-side, "Walk On By", and it peaked at #30 on the Top 100...
    Between 1969 and 1979 he had thirteen songs enter the Top 100 chart; with one making the Top 10 and it reached #1, "Theme from 'Shaft'" for 2 weeks on November 14th, 1971...
    R.I.P. Isaac Lee Hayes, Jr. {1942 - 2008} and may God bless & watch over Mr. Campbell.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn December 9th 1967, Glen Campbell performed "By The Time I Get To Phoenix" on the late Dick Clark's 'American Bandstand'...
    Two months earlier on October 28th it entered Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart; eventually it peaked at #26 and spent 11 weeks on the Top 100...
    It reached #2 on Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart...
    Was originally recorded by Johnny Rivers, and its a track on his 1966 LP "Changes"...
    May God bless and watch over Mr. Campbell.
  • Terry from Valliant, OkWho said he was driving? He could have just as easily been in an airplane. It's roughly 1300 miles 'twixt LA and OKC, at 200mph that's just 6.5 hours. Fuel stops at Phoenix and Albuquerque, he crosses the Texas Panhandle into OK in about 8 hours.
  • Jim from Pleasant Hill, CaAssuming she had day job and the start-time/lunch scenario was flexible, the supposedly impossible timeline of this song WOULD work if he left L.A. (apparent starting point) six hours before she rose (L.A. to Phoenix = 6 hours), she woke up 2 hours before going to work and took lunch 5 hours into it (Phoenix to Albuquerque = 7 hours), then got home about 5 hours later and went to sleep early (Albuquerque to Oklahoma border = 5 hours). All times are approximate per Google Maps, and this assumes equivalent roads existed when the song was written.
  • David from Edinburgh, United KingdomI realise it is impossible to complete the journey in the timeframe Jimmy Webb suggests as the song is not about geographical but emotional distance. But IF it were possible to do those miles then the problem is - where does the songwriter begin the journey? You only know the places through which he travels - so where is the girl he is leaving and therefore where he starts? Without that information the possibility of achieving the journey if only in my head is impossible!
  • Michael De Patria from Paterson Nj, NjIn this song Jim Webb shows us once again how the simpleist lyric can produce the most intricate emotions. "By the time I get to Phoenix" in my opinion is about the first day of closure to dysfunctional and tedious relationship. This person finally realizes that getting out of this relationship will save his life, becuse they both have exhausted all of the possibilities to salvage it. The only option is a total break. He must have left early in the morning and mentally goes through the scenario of what his love would be doing and realizing at differnt points of her day and how much further he will be from her, where he can't go back. How many of us have played this tape over and over in our minds but never acted on it? When you know a relationship is trulely over but you are stuck due to fear, insecurities,etc.As humans to"stick with the familiar is very common". That is where,again, Mr. Webb is truly brilliant. He can take a simple story (like this song) but make it a canvas for someone to color in their own personal experiences. Where they wish the were this man goine to oklahoma,etc. We endure much pain and severe suffering as humans do to the courage not to change.That is the premise of this lyric when love is so worn out one must change. This song is a masterpiece.
  • Michael De Patria from Paterson Nj, NjThis song to me is another masterwork by Jim Webb. He is the grand storyteller. This particularv song goes through the first day of a perminant
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyIn 1991 Public Enemy released "By the Time I Get to Arizona", it was not a heartbreaking song like 'Phoenix' but very political!!! {The song deals with former Arizona governor Evan Mecham, who faced harsh criticism during his time in office after he refused to recognize Martin Luther King's birthday as a national holiday}
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyGreat song! For me it's a toss up between Glen Campbell or Johnny Rivers version. In 1971 Glen did a remake of this song with Anne Murray, it peaked at No. 81...
  • Rj from Pittsburgh, PaOne of my favorite songs, ever since I first heard Glen Campbell's version. It puts everyone who hears it right into the picture, which is what most great songs do. As much as I like it, however, I've come to enjoy Wichita Lineman even more. It has an ethereal quality and a little mystery. The line "And I need you more than want you, and I want you for all time" is one of the greatest ever.
  • Carol from Nashville, TnLast night (9/24/09) my husband and I heard Glen Campbell sing "By the Time I get to Phoenix", live, with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra and accompanied by the song's writer Jimmy Webb. It doesn't get any better than that! I used to think of this song as sad, especially because the couple was evidently still in love with each other. Then it struck me that the man had probably not even left the house yet. Might not even have written the note and put it on her door. The lyrics might be his fantasy. I was then sure that he would not really leave her, once he started thinking of things from her point of view, imagining her in a loving way. The whole situation could be gently humorous, as in the song, "What do you get when you fall in love?"
  • Joel from Wheeling, WvI really like this song despite the theme of it
  • Edward Pearce from Ashford, Kent, EnglandTony, the Wikipedia entry for this song (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/By_The_Time_I_Get_To_Phoenix), has a section on the possible journey from LA to Phoenix and it concludes that the song's time frame is unfeasible.
  • Tony from Cincinnati, OhEvery time I hear this song, I try to imagine the trip. Has anyone else tried to determine: When did he leave? What route did he take? Where did he leave from? etc.
  • Richard from Brighton, United KingdomGlen Campbell does not sing the line "By the time I get to Oklahoma" but sings "By the time I hit Oklahoma"
  • Steve from Milpitas, Ca steve from calif. in the song "by the time i get to phoenix," suppose to be "she'll turn softly and call my name out low." on the "view lyrics" for the song "by the time i get to phoenix" it has "she'll turn softly and call my name out loud."
  • Fred from Laurel, MdMark (Sydney), and Bobodobo (LA): I'm with you there. Another (semi-?)obscure JW song that I really dig is 'Montage' from an obscure movie, 'How Sweet It Is' (1968), which I never saw, but was named on the record (45 & LP) by The Love Generation, whose rendition is used in that movie. I think only JW could get away with a refrain that goes, "And I knew that you knew that I knew that you knew that I knew that you knew"! I have found that many of his songs have a delightfully silly aspect to them--viz., MacArthur Park (a cake melting in the rain???), and Montage ("...I didn't feel like Batman any more / I hit my funny elbow on the door..."). Sometimes he seems like Weird Al Yankovich delivered with a completely straight face. There was a movie, Vertical Limit (2000), that opens with a middle-aged father and his two young adult kids, rock-climbing on a vertical face (in Utah?) -- he's reciting the words to MacArthur Park, and the kids are absolutely convinced he's joshing them, going something like, 'C'mon, Dad, there was never a song with words like that! Let alone a hit song!!'
  • Walter from Antwerp, BelgiumThe original was done on Imperial LP 'Changes' very late 1966 (not 1965) by Johnny Rivers, who also produced Jimmy Webb's first hit 'Up Up And Away' by Fifth Dimension for his own label Soul City.
  • Ivan from Dallas, TxThis is absolutely my all-time favorite. I was about 10 years old and I saw the primitive MTV on Hong Kong's TVB station. The orchestral background is just amazing, esp. the very high strings. There's a Chinese saying "Flowing waters and flying clouds"- best to describe this song's strings background. I also like Galveston and Wichita Lineman.
  • Garrett from Nashville, TnJimmy Webb's first hit was "Up Up and Away" by the Fifth Dimension. It won several Grammies, including Song of the Year.

  • Amy from Smalltown, KsTo Jerry, in Brooklyn, NY
    The original was done by Jody Miller. You might GOOGLE her to get the lyrics.
  • Bobodobo from Los Angeles, CaTo Mark from Sydney: No, it's not just you. Jimmy Webb's songs have an amazing feel to them. Plus the unforgetable images - the phone ringing off the wall, the sound the lineman hears in the wires, the cake melting in the rain, the balloon floating away. But I have to disagree, MacArthur Park and Up, Up and Away are every bit as good as the Campbell hits penned by Webb. I can't figure out why someone as gifted as Webb didn't write more hits. He's every bit as talented as Burt Bacharach but didn't have the productivity. In fact, maybe Webb is more talented considering he writes the lyrics too and produced some of his hits.
  • Kerouac's Ghost from The Void, Tx"Manhatten Kansas" was not written by Jimmy Webb. It was written by Joe Allen. Campbell charted with it in 1972. Campbell's version is available on "The Glen Campbell Collection", a double CD set that is easily available.
  • Jerry from Brooklyn, NyThere's another, much more obscure Jimmy Webb song that Campbell once recorded called "Manhattan Kansas" I only heard it once or twice. It's about a girl in a small town who has to leave because she is unmarried and pregnant. It starts out "Manhattan Kansas ain't no place to have a baby when you've got no man to give it a last name." Anybody else remember it or have the rest of the words?
  • Mark from Sydney, AustraliaIs it just me, or does Jimmy Webb write songs that have an elusive, wistful, far-away feel that no other songs have?

    His big three imho we're all sung by Glen Campbell; By the time I get to Phoenix, Wichita Lineman and Galveston.
  • Maarten from Den Bosch, Netherlandsnick cave covered this on the album kicking against the pricks
  • Dierk from Hamburg, GermanyIt was also covered by The Mad Lads 1969 - likely the version Isaac Hayes got it from; they were all at Stax then.
  • Gene from Hammond, InGlen Campbell played the guitar lines on "Tequila" recorded by "The Champs". Also playing saxophone on the same song is Jimmy Seals later of "Seals & Croft".
  • Giovanni from Cremona, ItalyA 19 minutes-long cover of this song is contained in Isaac Hayes' 1969 album "Hot Buttered Soul".
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