Music Matters
Turning point: Jimmy Buffett planned a country career before he found"Margaritaville"
All you parrotheads out there in Margaritaville think you know Jimmy Buffet? You think you know all there is about eating Cheeseburgers in Paradise, drinking beach side booze in a blender and shouting, "Let's get drunk and screw?"
Well, did you know that, before Buffett was the captain of his own industry, he was merely an aspiring country artist who traveled to Nashville to seek fame? And did you know that the two artists who had a great deal of influence on his early career in the late-60's were Jerry Jeff Walker and the late Jim Croce?
It's all true. In fact, before Buffett got a much-needed change of scenery by moving to Key West in the early '70's, his original plan was to be as country as Hank Williams. Or at least Hank Williams Jr.
Of course, everything changed beginning with his third album, A White Sport Coat and a Pink Crustacean, a vital album because it was the test balloon to see if country stars could still be sort-of country and beach bums all at the same time.
By the time 1977's Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes album came out, introducing what would become Buffet's signature anthem, "Margaritaville," the jury had returned with a unanimous thumbs-up for surf side country.
And for the last 35 years Buffett has been a cliche that rakes in more money each year than just about any other country or former country artist on the circuit.
So enjoy Buffett's show at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Thursday night. Just don't believe your Parrothead isn't an invitation to big business as well as music.
If country-by-the -beach weren't highly lucrative, why else would Kenny Chesney be following in Buffett's footsteps?
Jimmy Buffett & The Coral Reefer Band, 8:00 p.m. at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion