Showing posts with label Jimmy Buffett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimmy Buffett. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2012

GREAT DRINKING SONG FOR THIS WEEKEND



Well, I'm no longer posting Jimmy Buffett everyday, but I do not want my fans to go without, so I'm going to try to post a favorite on Thursdays anyway.

"A Lot to Drink About" from Buffett Hotel  is an absolutely great song for the Cinco de Mayo weekend and the video is a great one of Jimmy and Mac MacAnaly doing an impromptu concert at the Margaritaville Cafe in Key West.  Why doesn't that happen when I walk into a Margaritaville Cafe????

So, listen, enjoy and I know you'll know all the words by the time you need a good drinking song. This one hits on everything that's happening now and just a bit more.  Thanks, Jimmy.  I need some RUM!!!

Friday, April 27, 2012

X is for X RATED



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.

Well, it is probably more PG 13 rated now, although it was a little wilder when it first came out in 1973.  From the weirdly named and great CD  A White Sports Coat and a Pink Crustacean, we have the infamous drinking etc. song, "Why Don't We Get Drunk and Screw".

Naturally this has become a concert favorite and listen hard, the words pretty much say it all.  Not my favorite Jimmy song, but one of the songs that will live on forever and ever and ever.

So have another drink, find your partner and follow Jimmy's advice.

Monday, April 23, 2012

T is THE WEATHER IS HERE I WISH YOU WERE BEAUTIFUL



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


"The Weather is Here I Wish You Were Beautiful" (1980) from the Coconut Telegraph CD has been one of my favorite songs for two reasons.

The first one is that of course, it has all the Jimmy Buffett elements, love of the palm tress, escaping a bitchy girlfriend, finding new love and finally deciding to kick it all over and move to the islands.  In the song, I am assuming he is from NYC and not sure where the flight attendant is from (Jimmy used the politically incorrect "Stewardess" in the song).

The other thing I love about this song is that at the time he recorded it Jimmy was a big "All My Children" fan; that's right the soap opera.  I watched it off and on when I was home with kids, but my friend called one day and said "Jimmy Buffett is going to be on 'All My Children' today!"  and he was.  He walked into a bar sat down, I don't remember if he had any lines, but the juke box was playing one of his songs.

THIS song comes into this all (ah, you were waiting for a point, right) because of the line "Billy Clyde wasn't insane".  Billy Clyde Tuggle was a "All My Children"  character, so I've always gotten a kick out of that and remember Jimmy's brief soap opera cameo every time I hear this song. .


Saturday, April 21, 2012

S is for SON OF A SON OF A SAILOR




This song is the title song of one of my favorite Jimmy Buffett albums Son of a Son of a Sailor (1978).  As we know from following Jimmy's other songs, he actually is the son of a son of a sailor in that his grandfather was a sailing ship captain.

This song celebrates sailing and being on the water.  As Jimmy says, :The sea's in my veins, my tradition remains, I'm just glad I don't live in a trailer".  He has never been fond of the trailer parks scattered over Florida and especially hates them in the Keys.

This song more than many others speaks to how this guy became such a hit with many people.  He dreams the same dream, sings about them in song and then goes out and lives the dream, but shares it all with his fans like he's their best friend.  I have to admit that there are times in my life his songs have been my best friend.

Hey, this weekend go down to the ocean and listen to some Buffett!!!


Wednesday, April 18, 2012

P is for PEANUT BUTTER CONSPRACY



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


"Peanut Butter Conspiracy" (1973) is a really quirky song from the equally quirky album A White Sport Coat and a Pink Crustacean, which also includes another of my favorite of Jimmy's crime songs "The Great Filling Station Holdup".

In "Peanut Butter Conspiracy", Jimmy takes us back to his "hard luck days" when apparently (probably fictionally) he and some co-conspirators would go into a mini-mart and shoplift.  So that we'll all know that he is not really bad, he vows to pay the mini-mart back when he hits the big time.

Interestingly, Jimmy was involved in investing in an underwater treasure hunt and they actually found some valuable items, I'm not sure when this was.  The news media at the time quoted this song and asked if now   was when he would "pay the mini-mart back"!

O is for ONE PARTICULAR HARBOR



"One Particular Harbor" (1983) is from the album of the same name and is Mr. Buffett's ode to Tahiti.  He sings the first and last verses in Tahitian which obviously many of his fans have learned,  because they try anyway to sing it along with him at concerts.

This lovely song is about a beautiful place in Pacific (not Jimmy's usual stomping ground) and is soothing to listen to.  The CMT video that I've included is from a concert Jimmy did in Antuilla, not Tahiti.

The translation of the first Tahitian verse (according to Wikipedia) is:

"Nature lives (life to nature), Have pity for the Earth, (Love the Earth)"

And the translation of the final Tahitian verse is that plus:

 "Bounty of the land is exhausted, But there is still abundance on the sea"

Sounds like Jimmy for sure!


Monday, April 16, 2012

N is for NO PLANE ON SUNDAY



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


Continuing down the alphabet, I find Jimmy has very few "N" songs, but this one is a song I've always liked and actually remember singing to myself when stuck in McCarren Airport in Vegas overnight one night.  "No Plane on Sunday" (1986) is from the Floridays CD.

The story is very simple and we've all been there, although I know I didn't do it Jimmy style.  They're planning on flying out of the islands (since he says "we're on island time") and the flight has been cancelled because of "something with  the landing gear" which seems like a fine reason to me.  Well, most of us would sit around the airport like the disgruntled people in the video, but Jimmy envisions a different plan.

In his plan, you meet a handsome guy (or beautiful woman) and even though you both have someone back home you spend the night dining, walking on the beach and very  much together.  Then comes Monday and it's back to real life.  It sure beats playing the slots and sleeping on the floor at McCarren.  Jimmy always seems to have a better plan.



Saturday, April 14, 2012

M is for MARGARITAVILLE (what else!)



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation


There was really no question what "M" would be, but for those new to Mr. Buffett, "Margaritaville" (1977) was the BIG hit for Jimmy and the one that led many of us to the rest of his music.  This song first appeared on the Changes in Lattitudes, Changes in Attitudes CD,

I first heard the song on the radio in 1977 when I was living on Fort Carson in Colorado Springs, CO, with my husband and  one year old daughter.  (see "Little Miss Magic").  I don't know why I remember this so well, but we lived in the shadow of Cheyenne Mountain and Pikes Peak and I swear I was looking at those mountains and was thinking how far away I was from my Atlantic Ocean roots and Jimmy brought me back there.  When did you first hear this?

I've posted the lyrics version this time in case this was your first time and in case you've been singing the words wrong for years and years.  A simple song that led to complex feelings for me and thousands of others, and that's what Jimmy's songs are all about.

Friday, April 13, 2012

L is for LITTLE MISS MAGIC



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


While Jimmy does have a lot of  "L"s, this little song has always been close to my heart.  Once again he is writing about his daughter, the older one this time, as "Little Miss Magic" is on the much older Coconut Telegraph CD.

This You Tube videographer put the lyrics up in this version which I think is great because I'm sure it's not a song that a lot of people know.  I always felt it was about my daughter, or a least what my husband would write about our daughter if he were in fact a songwriter.  Now, I totally believe it describes our beautiful granddaughter who will be 5 months old tomorrow.

I'll bet a lot of you have some "miss magics" in your lives, and love them just as much as Jimmy Buffett loves his.  Enjoy!!!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

K is for KICK IT IN SECOND WIND



Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


Oddly there are very few "K" songs in Jimmy's repertoire.  "Kick it In Second Wind" (1976) is from the Havana Daydreamin'  CD.

I only found one video for this song and oddly enough the lyrics are somewhat changed on this version.  The lyrics that I am familiar with use the refrain "losing anymore hope of scoring any more coke, and we still have to do another show".  If you look at the printed lyrics online this is also what you get.  Perhaps there was this drug free version recorded for some reason that I am not aware of.  (seems odd for Jimmy though).  I couldn't find any history on it.

It's not his best or worst song, just telling the story of performing late nite at the clubs and all the things that go wrong, "somebody locked in the bathroom" ,  "bassman  takes a great fall".  It's fun enough and it is a "K" so on with the challenge.

I guess all of us "older" fans are getting to our "Second Wind" about now!!!

Monday, April 9, 2012

H is for HE WENT TO PARIS




Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


"He Went to Paris" (1973) is not a really well known song of Jimmy Buffett's, but it is one of his most poetic and tells a great story.  The album this is from is the intriguingly named A White Sport Coat and  a Pink Crustacean.  


The story is of a man going to Paris "looking for answers" and of the ups, downs, loves and sadness of his life.  He enjoys great love with his wife and family and then loses them all to war and circumstances.  It has been said that Jimmy is writing about a man who was a Spanish Civil War veteran that he met in his travels.  Another interesting aspect to this song is that Jimmy never put it on his concert play lists until at one point he heard that Bob Dylan liked the song, then he start including it more frequently.

The great line in this song for me is "Some of it's magic and some of it's tragic, but I had a good life anyway".



Saturday, April 7, 2012

G is for GROWING OLDER BUT NOT UP

Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


This song almost says it all in the title "Growing Older But Not Up" (1981) which is on the Coconut Telegraph CD. 


I know that I personally do not feel my age, especially since I've gotten a little fitter and Jimmy feels the same way as he's out playing baseball and breaks his leg realizing that perhaps his body has gotten a little older than he feels he is.

I know my comments are short on this one, but Jimmy delivers it best with the wonderful line "I'd rather die while I'm living than live while I'm dead".  Me too.

Happy Easter and see you as the challenge continues on Monday.



Friday, April 6, 2012

F is for FINS

Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


"FINS" (1979) was originally a rather innocuous song about a cute woman down in the islands who has guys (sharks) "schooling" around her.  (Not a really bad problem if you ask me.) It is on the Volcano CD.  

However, as you can see from the video (from a concert in Australia), "Fins" has become the quintessential concert song and Jimmy cannot do a concert without it.  If you've been to a concert you  know that there will be a time that you will put your hands together over your head and sway to the left and then to the right and that EVERYONE else there will be doing the exact same thing.  It is is part of what makes Jimmy Buffett concerts some of the most popular in the world.

If you have done the concert correctly and arrived several hours beforehand for the the tailgating, you will have seen people with shark hats, cars with shark fins on them and cars that actually are dressed up in total as sharks.  As a Patriot fan I hate to add this last bit, but in 2009 Jimmy wrote new lyrics for this song to be used by the Miami Dolphins when they get a touchdown, if that ever happens.  So FINS UP!!!!!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

E is for EVERYBODY'S GOT A COUSIN IN MIAMI

Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


This is another lively song from the vibrant Fruitcakes CD of 1994.

"Everybody's Got a Cousin in Miami" is Buffett's anthem to the fact that everyone in Miami and actually the whole country has come from somewhere else.  As he says, it's hard to remember that Miami was once a trading post "home to the Seminole, pirate and pioneer"

The two stories that he relates are in the beginning of the song: one about people coming from Cuba, 90 miles away, customs allowed them to land as their kinfolk were here.  The other is about a drummer from a third world country, not named, and his mom sends him to his relations in Miami where he sees his name on a "cardboard sign" and he begins to live the dream.

Of course, with the exception of the Seminole and other tribes, Jimmy reminds us that we are all from somewhere else and always about his connections to the "temperate zone", the love for parties and of course, "everybody's got a cousin in Miami"!

.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

D is for DELANEY TALKS TO STATUES

Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


Jimmy Buffett seems to be at his song writing best when he is writing about his children and, as he says in the video, this one is for his daughter, Sara Delaney.  "Delaney Talks to Statues" (1994) is on the Fruitcakes CD.


I had some trouble finding a video for this song as so many people posted it with their children in it and, of course, restricted the video.  This one is of an acoustic concert that Jimmy did and it does have a certain intimacy and closeness with the crowd that is not seen in his larger concerts; although Jimmy is always good with a crowd.

I've always loved this song as it is such a nice anthem to a young girl just dancing around and living in her imagination.  She also gets to be in Rome which is certainly a bonus, but as any young kid will do, she talks to the statues and chases cats and enjoys her life as a little girl whose father loves her so very much.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

C is for COCONUT TELEGRAPH

Please note that the videos embedded with the songs were posted by some great Parrotheads on YouTube and not my creation.


I chose "Coconut Telegraph"(1980)  from a large selection of "C" Buffett songs because it signifies what so much of Jimmy's repertoire is, JUST PLAIN FUN! It is from the CD of the same name, Coconut Telegraph.  

Here the story is about a bunch of party folk, who all live near each other on the same (knowing Jimmy) island in the Caribbean.  Every weekend there is a major party and from Sunday until possibly Wednesday there is much discussion among these friends about who did what crazy thing at that party on the "Coconut Telegraph".

When Friday rolls around again and everyone gets paid, they are ready to forget all that craziness and jump into it all again as so many of us did in our younger years, or may be even in these years.  Enjoy!!!


Thursday, May 26, 2011

INTRO TO BLOG

This blog will hopefully humorously deal with all of us that are aging without realizing it. My kids hate that I wear Ed Hardy sneakers (oh mom), too bad for them. I'm also in the GBE 2 with real writers so my first very tenuous post to that group is below.

I hope everyone stays along for the ride or even sail if we're lucky this summer. You will be kept on on Jimmy's (and we all know Jimmy who) activities and other great fun and thought filled items. I hope I was able to stand with the real writers read EXPECTATIONS AND SURPRISES and let me know.

Monday, May 16, 2011

NOTE TO JIMMY BUFFETT


Yes, Jimmy, I know I stole your song title a bit with this blog (although we know titles aren't copyrightable right?). Your original title "A Pirate Looks At Forty" was made quite a while ago and both you and I are looking past 60 now, with you being a year older, still touring, a lot richer, etc. Like all Parrotheads, I feel that I am a part of the band and knowing that you're still trucking makes me happy to be a "Boomer Parrothead".

For the uninitiated reading this post, Jimmy Buffett is an average singer, but an excellent lyricist. He's no Bob Dylan, but he struck right at the dreams of those of us leaving the 1960's and having to "grow up". Now many of our grandchildren are at his concerts. That Jimmy isn't a great singer was never more apparent than when he made an album with a group of country singers like Kenny Chesney and Alan Jackson, but his songs are full of lines that I live by. He's a writer actually and has published some books, the best of which is a group of short stories titled "Tales from Magaritaville".

What makes all the difference is that Jimmy knows how to throw a party and that's what his concerts (which are sold out every summer) are all about. It starts on the tailgates in the parking lot, perhaps a little medical marijuana in the surrounding woods and lots of Margaritas. He sings about living at ease, under palm trees, without a worry or a snowy day. See why he sells out in New England! The songs that became "hits", "Margaritaville" and "Changes in Latitudes" are hardly the best of his discography, but that's o.k. My personal favorite is "African Friend" which he rarely sings in concert is about a stopover in Haiti, a night of gambling and making an unlikely friend. Listen to it once, it's on the "Son of a Son of a Sailor" album, and you will understand why I say he is a writer, not just a songwriter.

To end my note, Jimmy, I know you won't mind me using the title and I know you will help me on my journey past 60. FINS UP!