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Not What You Meant?  There are 33 definitions for Margarita.

Margaritaville

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"Margaritaville"
"Margaritaville" cover
Cover of the West German 7 " single[1]
Single by Jimmy Buffett
from the album Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes
B-side "Miss You So Badly"
Released January 1977
Format 7"
Recorded 1976
Genre Gulf and western
Length 03:20[2]
Label ABC
ABC-12254 (U.S., 7")
ABC-17781AT (West Germany, 7")
ABC-22039 (Italy, 7")
ABC-021254/2 (Spain, 7")
Writer Jimmy Buffett
Producer Norbert Putnam
Jimmy Buffett singles chronology
"Woman Goin' Crazy on Caroline Street" "Margaritaville" "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes"
Audio sample
Image:JIMMY BUFFETT -- Margaritaville.oggInfo (help·info)

"Margaritaville" is a 1977 song by American popular music singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett from the album Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes. He wrote it in Key West, Florida after touring Texas with his group, the Coral Reefer Band. The song was a chart hit in the United States when it was released and contemporary popular culture references and remakes attest to its continuing popularity. It reached #8 on Billboard Hot 100 chart, topped the Easy Listening (Adult Contemporary) chart at #1, and peaked at #13 on the Hot Country Songs chart. It remains Buffett's highest charting solo single.

A margarita cocktail: the inspiration for "Margaritaville"
A margarita cocktail: the inspiration for "Margaritaville"

Named for a cocktail, the margarita, and with lyrics reflecting a laid-back lifestyle in a tropical climate, "Margaritaville" has come to define Buffett's music and career. The relative importance of the song to Buffett's career is referred to obliquely in a parenthetical plural in the title of a Buffett greatest hits compilation album, Songs You Know By Heart: Jimmy Buffett's Greatest Hit(s). The name has been used in the title of other Buffett compilation albums such as Meet Me In Margaritaville: The Ultimate Collection and is also the name of several commercial products licensed by Buffett (see below).

Contents

Song narrative

The song is a narrative overview of the singer's life for the previous season. He sings about laid-back living in a drunken haze in a beach community. "Margaritaville" is the mental state in which he exists during this period, induced—presumably—from the perpetual imbibing of margaritas. This is best illustrated in the last verse, when the singer goes for a walk, cuts his heel and returns home to ease his pain with the eponymous alcoholic beverage. The singer says that some friends surmise that he is reeling from a failed romance. The singer concludes at the end of the song, however, that he is not a victim of lost love, but rather of his own design and dissolution. The song's opening gives a vivid descriptive of the singer's lifestyle in the beach town of Key West:

Nibblin' on sponge cake,
Watchin' the sun bake
All of those tourists covered with oil.
Strummin' my six-string
On my front porch swing,
Smell those shrimp; they're beginning to boil.

The song's chorus summarizes the theme of the song:

Wastin' away again in Margaritaville,
Searchin' for my lost shaker of salt.
Some people claim that there's a woman to blame,
But I know (it's nobody's fault); (Hell, it could be my fault); (It's my own damn fault);

Lost verse

There is also a "lost verse" to this song, as described by Buffett, which he often adds when performing in concert, which was reputedly edited out before the record was released in order to make the song more airplay-friendly.

Old men in tank tops,
Cruisin' the gift shops,
Checkin' out chiquitas, down by the shore
They dream about weight loss,
Wish they could be their own boss
Those three-day vacations can be such a bore

Other versions

Radio edit

A radio edit was released in 1977, timing at 3:20. The abridged version omits:

  • The interlude between the second chorus and third verse.
  • The section during the third chorus and final refrain "…woman to blame but I know, it's my own damn fault. Yes and, some people claim that there's a…" This makes the song structure riff-verse-chorus-verse-chorus-verse-chorus-riff, oppose to riff-verse-chorus-verse-chorus-interlude-verse-chorus-refrain-riff.
  • The track itself was sped up a half-step. The original recording of the key of D would be E-flat.

Cover versions

American country singer Alan Jackson covered the song on his 1999 Under the Influence album. The cover featured Buffett singing along on the last verse; it also peaked at #63 after receiving play as an album cut. Professional wrestlers Stone Cold Steve Austin and The Rock sang the song together on the November 12, 2001 episode of RAW.

Parodies

Comedian Mark Eddie and Barenaked Ladies have both parodied this song as "marijuanaville": Eddie on his 1995 album Rock-N-Roll Comedy Cuts (MP3) and BNL while live on tour. Soldiers in Iraq recorded a song titled Mortaritaville (Baghdad Blues). [1]

Cultural references and significance

Camp Anaconda/Balad Air Base, an American military base in Iraq, has been dubbed "Mortaritaville" (a portmanteau of mortar and Margaritaville) due to the large numbers of mortar attacks it receives from Iraqi insurgents.[3]

The Swarthmore College chapter of the Delta Upsilon social fraternity holds an annual all campus party in honor of Margaritaville with emphasis on the carefree and laid back attitude that has made the song famous.[4] In the Broken Lizard film Club Dread, a main character insists that Margaritaville was an illicit imitation of his own song "Pina Coladaburg." The password on for Internet access on the TV show CSI: Crime Scene Investigation is Margaritaville.

Merchandising

As Buffett's best-known song, "Margaritaville" has been used in a number of commercial ventures and product licensing tie-ins including:

Notes

  1. ^ The U.S. single did not have a picture cover but was issued with a standard ABC Records cover.
  2. ^ Song length time given is for the single version. Album version is 04:09.
  3. ^ "Balad Airbase" at GlobalSecurity.org. Accessed on 1 April 2007.
  4. ^ Alisa Giardinelli. The Drinking Dilemma: Swarthmore re-examines its alcohol policy. March 2000. Accessed on 1 May 2007.

External links

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Margaritaville from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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