Jimmy Buffett - Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes (Reissue) (1977)
Artist: Jimmy Buffett
Title: Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes
Year Of Release: 1977
Label: MCA Records
Genre: Country Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 41:48
Total Size: 111/266 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes
Year Of Release: 1977
Label: MCA Records
Genre: Country Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 41:48
Total Size: 111/266 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes
02. Wonder Why We Ever Go Home
03. Banana Republics
04. Tampico Trauma
05. Lovely Cruise
06. Margaritaville
07. In the Shelter
08. Miss You So Badly
09. Biloxi
10. Landfall
In four hundred words or less, this is what happened form early adolescence until now: I broke out of the grip of Catholicism and made it through adolescence without killing myself in a car. I flunked out of college. I learned to play the guitar, lived on the beach, lived in the French Quarter, finally got laid, and didn't go to Viet Nam. I got back into school, started a band, got a job on Bourbon Street, graduated from college, flunked my draft physical, broke up my band, and went out on the road solo. I signed a record deal, got married, moved to Nashville, had my guitars stolen, bought a Mercedes, worked at Billboard Magazine, put out my first album, went broke, wrecked the Mercedes, got divorced, and moved to Key West. I sang and worked on a fishing boat, went totally crazy, did a lot of dope, met the right girl, made another record, had a hit, bought a boat, and sailed away to the Carribean. I started another band, worked the road, had my second and last hit, bought a house in Aspen, started spending summers in New England, got married, broke my leg three times in one year, had a baby girl, made more records, bought a bigger boat, and sailed away to St. Barts. I got seperated from the right girl, sold the boat, sold the house in Aspen, moved back to Key West, worked the road, and made more records. I rented an apartment in Paris, went to Brazil for Carnival, learned to fly, went into therapy, quit doing dope, bought my first seaplane, flew all over the Carribean, almost got a second divorce, moved to Malibu for more therapy, and got back with the right girl. I worked the road, moved back to Nashville, took off in an F-14 from an aircraft carrier, bought a summer home on Long Island, had another baby girl. I found the perfect seaplane and moved back to Florida. Cameron Marley joined me in the house of women. I built a home on Long Island, crashed the perfect seaplane, lived through it thanks to Navy training, tried to slow down a little, woke up one morning and I was looking at fifty, trying to figure what comes next. You have to take the best from whatever the situation is and go on. That's the whole point of the music to me. All through American history populist singers and humorists have served as the nation's tickle spot, people like Will Rogers and Mark Twain. I see myself in that vein and fulfilling that sort of responsibility. I give people a few shots. It's as much a satirical pinprick as anything else. You just have to remind people of the day-to-day funny things. When I write songs, I look for interesting little innuendoes or pieces of situations everybody has experienced.