Jimmy Buffett
(Read all about Jimmy Buffett after the video)
James William "Jimmy" Buffett (born December 25,
1946) is an American musician, songwriter, author, actor, and
businessman. He is best known for his music, which often portrays an
"island escapism" lifestyle. Together with his Coral Reefer Band, Buffett has recorded hit songs including "Margaritaville" (ranked 234th on the Recording Industry Association of America's list of "Songs of the Century") and "Come Monday". He has a devoted base of fans known as "Parrotheads".
Aside from his career in music, Buffett is also a best-selling writer
and is involved in two restaurant chains named after two of his
best-known songs, "Cheeseburger in Paradise" and "Margaritaville". He owns the Margaritaville Cafe restaurant chain and co-developed the Cheeseburger in Paradise restaurant chain.
Personal life
Buffett was born on December 25, 1946, in Pascagoula, Mississippi, and spent part of his childhood in Mobile, Alabama. He is the son of Mary Lorraine (née Peets) and James Delaney Buffett, Jr.[1][2]
In grade school years, he attended St. Ignatius School, where he played
the trombone in the school band. Buffett's grandfather was a sailor,
therefore he was exposed to sailing as a child which had an early effect
on his life and later in his music. He later lived in Fairhope, Alabama. He graduated from McGill Institute for Boys in 1964. He began playing guitar during his first year at Auburn University before continuing his college years at Pearl River Community College and the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where he received a bachelor's degree in history in 1969. He was initiated into the fraternity Kappa Sigma at the University of Southern Mississippi. After graduating from college, Buffett worked as a correspondent for Billboard magazine in Nashville, breaking the news of the separation of Flatt and Scruggs.
Buffett married Margie Washichek in 1969; they divorced in 1972.
Buffett spent years working as the First Mate on the yacht of
industrialist Foster Talge on the Petticoat III in Key West while
perfecting the "Caribbean Rock n' Roll" genre. Buffett and his second
wife, Jane (née Slagsvol) have two daughters, Savannah Jane and Sarah
Delaney, and an adopted son, Cameron Marley, and reside in Sag Harbor, New York. They separated in the early 1980s but reconciled in 1991. Buffett also owns a home in St Barts,
a Caribbean island where he lived on and off in the early 1980s while
he was part-owner of the Autour de Rocher hotel and restaurant. He
spends part of the summer traveling about the East Coast on his
sailboat. An avid pilot, Buffett owns a Dassault Falcon 900 that he often uses while on concert tour and traveling worldwide. He has also owned a Boeing Stearman, Lake Amphibian and Grumman Albatross.[3]
His father died May 1, 2003 at the age of 83. His mother died a few months after her husband, on September 25, 2003.
In 2015, Jimmy Buffett spoke at the University of Miami's graduation
ceremony and received an honorary doctorate in music. Wearing flip flops
and aviator sunglasses he told graduates, "It's time to see the world,
time to kiss a girl, and time to cross that wide meridian." (A quote
from his song "The Pascagoula Run")[4]
Music
Music career
Buffett began his musical career in Nashville, Tennessee, during the late 1960s as a country artist and recorded his first album, the folk rock Down to Earth, in 1970. During this time, Buffett could be frequently found busking for tourists in New Orleans. Country music singer Jerry Jeff Walker took him to Key West on a busking expedition in November 1971.[5]
Buffett then moved to Key West and began establishing the easy-going
beach-bum persona for which he is known. He started out playing for
drinks at the Chart Room Bar in the Pier House Motel.[6]
Following this move, Buffett combined country, folk, rock, and pop
music with coastal as well as tropical lyrical themes for a sound
sometimes called "gulf and western". Today, he is a regular visitor to the Caribbean island of Saint Barts and other islands where he gets inspiration for many of his songs and some of the characters in his books.
Buffett's third album was the 1973 A White Sport Coat and a Pink Crustacean. Albums Living & Dying in 3/4 Time and A1A both followed in 1974, Havana Daydreamin' appeared in 1976, and Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes, followed in 1977 and featured the breakthrough hit song "Margaritaville".
With the untimely death of friend and mentor Jim Croce
in September 1973, ABC/Dunhill Records tapped Buffett to fill his
space. Earlier, Buffett had visited Croce's farm in Pennsylvania and met
with Croce in Florida.[7][8]
During the 1980s, Buffett made far more money from his tours than his
albums and became known as a popular concert draw. He released a series
of albums during the following twenty years, primarily to his devoted
audience, and also branched into writing and merchandising. In 1985,
Buffett opened a "Margaritaville" retail store in Key West, and in 1987,
he opened the Margaritaville Cafe. During the 1980s, Buffett played at
the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. He briefly changed the name of the band from the "Coral Reefers Band"
to the "Coral Reef Band" to honor the HLS&R's request; they thought
"Reefers" was a drug-related reference. HLS&R is a charity event
that provides student grants to children and young adults who compete in
agriculture contests (FFA).
Two of the more out-of-character albums are Christmas Island, a collection of Christmas songs, and Parakeets, a collection of Buffett songs sung by children and containing "cleaned-up" lyrics (like "a cold root beer" instead of "a cold draught beer").
In 1997, Buffett collaborated with novelist Herman Wouk to create a short-lived musical based on Wouk's novel, Don't Stop the Carnival. Broadway showed little interest in the play (following the failure of Paul Simon's The Capeman), and it ran only for six weeks in Miami. He released an album of songs from the musical in 1998.
In August 2000, Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band played on the White House lawn for then President Bill Clinton.
In 2003, he partnered in a partial duet with Alan Jackson for the song "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere", a number-one hit on the country charts. This song won the 2003 Country Music Association Award for Vocal Event of the Year.[9] This was Buffett's first award of any kind in his 30-year career.
Buffett's album, License to Chill, released on July 13, 2004, sold 238,600 copies in its first week of release according to Nielsen Soundscan. With this, Buffett topped the U.S. pop albums chart for the first time in his three-decade career.
Buffett continues to tour throughout the year although he has shifted
recently to a more relaxed schedule of around 20–30 dates, with
infrequent back-to-back nights, preferring to play only on Tuesdays,
Thursdays, and Saturdays. The title of his 1999 live album reflects
this: Buffett Live: Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays. Purchasing tickets is difficult, with most of his concerts selling out in minutes.
In the summer of 2005 Buffett teamed up with Sirius radio and introduced Radio Margaritaville, and as of November 2008 is also on XM radio channel 24.[10]
Until this point Radio Margaritaville was solely an online channel. The
channel broadcasts from the Margaritaville restaurant at Universal CityWalk in Orlando, Florida.
In August 2006, he released the album Take The Weather With You. The song "Breathe In, Breathe Out, Move On" on this album refers to 2005's Hurricane Katrina. Also on the album he pays tribute to Merle Haggard with his rendition of "Silver Wings" and covers, with Mark Knopfler playing on the track, "Whoop De Doo." On August 30, 2007, he received his star on the Mohegan Sun Walk of Fame.[11][12]
On December 8, 2009, Jimmy Buffett released his 28th studio album entitled Buffet Hotel.
On April 20, 2010, a double CD of performances recorded during the 2008 and 2009 tours called Encores was released exclusively at Walmart, Walmart.com and Margaritaville.com.
Buffett partnered in a duet with the Zac Brown Band on the song "Knee Deep": released on Brown's 2010 album You Get What You Give, it became a hit country and pop single in 2011. Also in 2011, Buffett voiced Huckleberry Finn on Mark Twain: Words & Music, which was released on Mailboat Records. The project is a benefit for the Mark Twain Boyhood Home & Museum and includes Clint Eastwood as Mark Twain, Garrison Keillor as the narrator, and songs by Brad Paisley, Sheryl Crow, Ricky Skaggs, Vince Gill, Emmylou Harris, and others.
Of the over 30 albums Jimmy Buffett has released, as of October 2007, 8 are Gold Albums and 9 Platinum or Multi Platinum.[13]
In 2003 Buffett won his first ever Country Music Award (CMA) for his
song "It's 5 O'clock Somewhere" with Alan Jackson, and was nominated
again in 2007 for the CMA Event of the Year Award for his song "Hey Good
Lookin" which featured Alan Jackson and George Strait.
Buffett released his latest album, Songs From St. Somewhere, on August 20, 2013.
Buffett has performed at the Xfinity Center amphitheatre (formerly
known as Great Woods) in Mansfield, MA 58 times, the most of any city or
venue in his career.[14] Buffett has called the Mansfield, Great Woods tailgating the best in the world of any place he has ever played.
Musical style
Jimmy began calling his music "drunken Caribbean rock 'n' roll" as he says on his 1978 live album You Had To Be There. Later, Buffett himself and others have used the term "gulf and western" to describe his musical style and that of other similar-sounding performers.[15][16][17][18][19] The name derives from elements in Buffett's early music including musical influence from country and western, along with folk rock and lyrical themes from the Gulf of Mexico
coast. A music critic described Buffett's music as a combination of
"tropical languor with country funkiness into what some [have] called
the Key West sound, or Gulf-and-western."[20] The term is a play on the form of "Country & Western" and the name of the former conglomerate Gulf+Western.
Other performers identified as gulf and western are often deliberately derivative of Buffett's musical style and some are tribute bands or, in the case of Greg "Fingers" Taylor, a former member of Jimmy Buffett's Coral Reefer Band.[21] They can be heard on Buffett's online Radio Margaritaville and on the compilation album series Thongs in the Key of Life. Gulf and western performers include Norman "the Caribbean Cowboy" Lee, Jim Bowley,[22] Kenny Chesney,[23] and Jim Morris.[21][24][25]
Writing
Buffett has written three No. 1 best sellers. Tales from Margaritaville and Where Is Joe Merchant?; both spent over seven months on The New York Times Best Seller fiction list. His book A Pirate Looks at Fifty, published in 1998, went straight to No. 1 on the New York Times
Best Seller nonfiction list, making him one of eight authors in that
list's history to have reached number one on both the fiction and
nonfiction lists.[26] The seven other authors who have accomplished this are Ernest Hemingway, John Steinbeck, William Styron, Irving Wallace, Dr. Seuss, Mitch Albom and Glenn Beck.
Buffett also co-wrote two children's books, The Jolly Mon and Trouble Dolls, with his eldest daughter, Savannah Jane Buffett. The original hard cover release of The Jolly Mon included a cassette tape recording of him and Savannah Jane reading the story accompanied by an original score written by Michael Utley.
Buffett's novel A Salty Piece of Land,
was released on November 30, 2004, and the first edition of the book
included a CD single of the song "A Salty Piece of Land", which was
recorded for License to Chill. The book was a New York Times best seller soon after its release.
Buffett's latest title, Swine Not?, was released on May 13, 2008.
Buffett is one of several popular "philosophers" whose quotations appear on the road signs of Project HIMANK in the Ladakh region of Northern India.
Film and television
Buffett wrote the soundtrack for, and co-produced and played a role in, the 2006 film Hoot, directed by Wil Shriner and based on the book by Carl Hiaasen,
which focused on issues important to Buffett, such as conservation. The
film was not a critical or commercial success. Among his other film
music credits are the theme song to the short-lived 1993 CBS television series Johnny Bago; "Turning Around" for the 1985 film Summer Rental starring John Candy; "I Don't Know (Spicoli's Theme)" for the film Fast Times at Ridgemont High; "Hello, Texas" for the 1980 John Travolta film Urban Cowboy; and "If I Have To Eat Someone (It Might As Well Be You)" for the animated film FernGully: The Last Rainforest, which was sung in the film by rap artist Tone Loc.
In addition, Buffett has made several cameo appearances, including in Repo Man, Hook, Cobb, Hoot, Congo, and From the Earth to the Moon. He also made cameo appearances as himself in Rancho Deluxe (for which he also wrote the music) and in FM.[27] He made a Guest appearance in the season two of Hawaii Five-0 on CBS in 2011. Buffett reportedly was offered a cameo role in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, but declined the offer.[28] In 1997, Buffett collaborated with novelist Herman Wouk on a musical production based on Wouk's 1965 novel Don't Stop the Carnival. In the South Park episode "Tonsil Trouble",
an animated version of Buffett (but not voiced by Buffett) was seen
singing "AIDSburger in Paradise" and "CureBurger in Paradise". Jimmy has
also appeared on the Sesame Street special, Elmopalooza, singing "Caribbean Amphibian" with the popular Muppet, Kermit the Frog. Buffett appeared in an episode of Hawaii Five-0 in November 2011. He played a helicopter pilot named Frank Bama, a character from his novel Where Is Joe Merchant?. Another character mentioned that he preferred "margaritas"; Buffett's character replied, "Can't argue with you there."
Most recently, Buffett made a cameo in the 2015 film Jurassic World, where he is seen holding two margaritas while the dinosaurs are set loose in the park.
Business ventures
Buffett
has taken advantage of his name and the fan following for his music to
launch several business ventures, usually with a tropical theme. He owns
or licenses the Margaritaville Cafe and Cheeseburger in Paradise restaurant chains. As a baseball fan, he was part-owner of two minor league teams: the Fort Myers Miracle and the Madison Black Wolf. Between his restaurants, album sales, and tours, he earns an estimated US$40.5 million a year.[29] He opened the Margaritaville store in Key West, Florida, in 1985.
In 1993, he launched Margaritaville Records, with distribution
through MCA Records. His MCA record deal ended with the release of
1996's Christmas Island and he took Margaritaville Records over to Chris Blackwell's Island Records for a two-record deal, 1998's Don't Stop The Carnival and 1999's Beach House on the Moon.
In the fall of 1999, he started up Mailboat Records to release live
albums. He entered into a partnership with RCA Records for distribution
in 2005 and 2006 for the two studio albums License To Chill and Take The Weather With You.
In 2006, Buffett launched a cooperative project with the Anheuser-Busch brewing company to produce beer under the Margaritaville Brewing label called Land Shark Lager.[30]
Another Margaritaville Casino opened in Atlantic City, New Jersey in May 2013. Buffett has also licensed Margaritaville Tequila, Margaritaville Footwear and a Margaritaville Foods including Chips, Salsa, Guacamole, Shrimp, Chicken and more.
From May 8, 2009, through January 5, 2010, Sun Life Stadium (formerly Dolphin Stadium) in Miami, the home of the Miami Dolphins, was named Landshark Stadium pursuant to an eight-month naming rights deal.[31][32] Buffett also wrote new lyrics for the team to his 1979 song "Fins", which is played during Dolphins home games.[33] Despite Buffett's partnership with the Dolphins, Buffett is a diehard New Orleans Saints fan, having attended the team's first game at Tulane Stadium in 1967 and later had Saints head coach Sean Payton served as an honorary member of the Coral Reefer Band at a concert in New Orleans on April 1, 2012, in protest of Payton's suspension by the NFL as a result of the Saints' bounty scandal.[34]
In May 2011, Buffett announced that he had entered into a partnership with game makers THQ to make a Margaritaville game for Facebook and iOS devices. The game opened in closed beta to what's being referred to as the Buffett Beta Club. The game, which requires users to download Unity Engine for use on the Facebook API, is expected to release on Facebook in December 2011 and to iOS devices by the end of January 2012.[35]
While on stage in August 2012 at a concert in Cincinnati, Buffett
announced that a new Margaritaville café would be one of the new tenants
at the Cincinnati Horseshoe casino opening in Spring 2013.
Latitude Margaritaville is a $1 billion retirement village planned in Daytona Beach, Florida.[37]
Charity work
Buffett has been involved in many charity efforts. In 1981 the Save the Manatee Club was founded by Buffett and former Florida governor Bob Graham.[38] It is the world's leading manatee protection organization.[39] West Indian Manatee In 1989, legislation was passed in Florida that introduced the "Save the Manatee" license plate, and earmarked funding for the Save the Manatee Club. One of the two manatees trained to interact with researchers at Mote Marine Laboratory is named Buffett after the singer.[citation needed] Buffett is also a longtime supporter of and major donor to the Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory.[40]
On November 23, 2004, Buffett raised funds with his "Surviving the
Storm" Hurricane Relief Concert in Orlando, Florida to provide relief
for hurricane victims in Florida, Alabama and the Caribbean affected by
the four major hurricanes that year.[41]
Buffett performed in Hong Kong on January 18, 2008 for a concert that
raised US$63,000 for the Foreign Correspondents' Club Charity Fund.
This was his first concert in Hong Kong and it sold out within weeks.
Not only did Buffett perform for the groundlings for free, but he also
paid for the concertgoers' tequila and beer.[42]
On July 11, 2010, Buffett, a Gulf Coast native, put on a free concert on the beach in Gulf Shores, Alabama. The concert was Buffett's response to the BP oil disaster in the Gulf. The concert was aired on CMT
television. The 35,000 free tickets were given away within minutes to
help draw people back to Alabama's beaches. Buffett played several
popular songs including "Fins", "Son of a Son of a Sailor", "A Pirate
Looks at Forty" and modified versions of "Margaritaville" (where the
lyrics were changed in the chorus to "now I know, it's all BP's fault")
and "When the Coast is Clear" (the lyrics in the chorus also referencing
the Deepwater Horizon disaster: "That's when it always happens / When
greed and crude collide"). The concert featured Jesse Winchester and Allen Toussaint.
Controversy
The earliest controversy with Buffett was his recording of "God's Own Drunk" on the album Living and Dying in 3/4 Time. In 1983 the son of the late entertainer Lord Buckley sued Buffett for $11 million for copyright infringement claiming that Buffett took parts of the monologue from Buckley's A Tribute to Buckley
and claimed it as his own work in "God's Own Drunk". The suit also
alleged that Buffett's "blasphemous" rendition presented to the public a
distorted impression of Lord Buckley.[43]
A court injunction against Buffett prevented him from performing the
song until the lawsuit was settled or resolved, so starting in 1983
Buffett would get to the part of his show where he would normally
perform "God's Own Drunk," he would say that he wasn't allowed to play
it because of the lawsuit and instead played a song he wrote called "The
Lawyer and the Asshole" in which he accuses Buckley's son and lawyers
as being greedy and tells them to "kiss his ass."
In January 1996 Buffett's Grumman HU-16 airplane nicknamed "Hemisphere Dancer"
was shot at by Jamaican police who believed the craft to be smuggling
marijuana. The aircraft sustained minimal damage. The plane had
previously been carrying Buffett as well as U2's Bono, and Island Records producer Chris Blackwell, and co-pilot Bill Dindy,
but they were not on board at the time. The Jamaican government
acknowledged the mistake and apologized to Buffett who penned the song
"Jamaica Mistaica" for his Banana Wind album based on the experience. The plane from the incident is now at Orlando City Walk's Margaritaville.[44][45]
On February 4, 2001, he was ejected from the American Airlines Arena in Miami during a Miami Heat/New York Knicks
basketball game for cursing. After the game, referee Joe Forte said
that he ordered him moved during the fourth quarter because "there was a
little boy sitting next to him and a lady sitting by him. He used some
words he knows he shouldn't have used." Forte apparently didn't know who
Buffett was, and censured Heat coach Pat Riley
because he thought Riley—who was trying to explain to him who Buffett
was—was insulting him by asking if he'd ever been a "Parrothead", the
nickname for Buffett fans.[46] Buffett didn't comment immediately after the incident, but discussed it with Matt Lauer on The Today Show three days later.[citation needed]
On October 6, 2006, it was reported that Buffett had been detained by French custom officials in Saint Tropez for allegedly carrying over 100 pills of ecstasy.[47][48][49] Buffett’s luggage was searched after his Dassault Falcon 900 private jet landed at Toulon-Hyères International Airport. He paid a fine of $300 and was released. A spokesperson for Buffett stated the pills in question were prescription drugs,
but declined to name the drug or the health problem for which he was
being treated. Buffett released a statement that the "ecstasy" was in
fact, a B-vitamin supplement known as Foltx.[50]
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