1 Std. 7 Min.

Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes Bad Music Hertz

    • Musikrezensionen

Support the Official Release

You can listen to Jimmy Buffett’s Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes on:



Apple Music
Spotify


Or purchase Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes on:



Amazon Music


Links


Michael’s writeup on Jimmy Buffett’s A1A mentioned during the show.
Kenny Chesney, the other artist that was on heavy rotation during family vacations while growing up.
Only you can stop ruining songs by mindlessly repeating them:

“Don’t Stop Believin’” by Journey, among the heaviest played Journey tracks and one which Michael famously detests as a result.
“Yesterday” by The Beatles, among the heaviest played Beatles tracks and one which Marc famously detests as a result.


Steve Goodman’s “Banana Republics”
Jimmy Buffett’s autobiography A Pirate Looks at Fifty, which Michael references throughout the episode.
“Johnathan Baham, songwriter of Lovely Cruise”, the BuffettNews.com forum discussion of the mysterious songwriter mentioned on the show.
“In the Shelter”’s many appearances

1971’s High Cumberland Jubilee
1977’s Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes
2003’s Meet Me in Margaritaville


Jesse Winchester’s “Biloxi”
The Toledo Blade front-page interview with Fingers Taylor on his departure from the band.


References


“Key West is like an old dirty carpet; you shake it out and everything falls to the bottom. Everybody from the whole East Coast wound up at the end of the road in Key West at one point or another.”

Jimmy Buffett quoting friend P.J. O’Rourke in the Delaney “I Have Found Me A Home” video interviews




“The pavement runs out at the little village of Tambor, and we stop for cold drinks. Where the pavement ends and the dust begins is also the place where the time warp takes over. It has been only two days since we were opening Christmas presents in Palm Beach, but now we are bouncing along a dirt road in another world. When you are traveling on a trip like this in the right frame of mind, time and space will change. Things that seemed absolutely necessary two days ago slip from your mind. You find yourself looking out the window of the plane, boat, or car and daydreaming about going native. Time becomes something to be used, not saved. Many years ago, when I first experienced this feeling, I wrote a song about it called ‘Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes.’ It worked then, and it’s working now, as we drive west to the ocean in the land of pura vida.”

Jimmy Buffett’s autobiography, A Pirate Looks at Fifty




“As we drive to the airport the next morning [in Guadeloupe], we talk about the sentimentality we both seem to hold about the places we came from. Kino is a world traveler, but he is still attached to his roots in Guadeloupe. That kind of connection to the land is also a very Southern trait. I too move around the globe in an almost constant state of motion, but when I think of home, I think about Pascagoula and the eastern shore of Mobile Bay, not Long Island or Florida. Home is where you come from. It is not where you live at the present time, and though I doubt I will ever live in Alabama again, I will always think of it as home.”

Jimmy Buffett’s autobiography, A Pirate Looks at Fifty




Taylor is proud of the musical achievements of Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band, particularly the first three albums, but he feels that somewhere along the line their leader became more interested in making money and using gimmicks onstage than in making quality music.


“We had a lot of fun, but we were always negotiating for more money and of course he’s never been one to let go of that stuff,” Taylor said. “I had some issues with him over money and a retirement fund, which we never had, although he did put a little something together for us eventually.”


The concerts began to lose their appeal for Taylor.


“It

Support the Official Release

You can listen to Jimmy Buffett’s Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes on:



Apple Music
Spotify


Or purchase Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes on:



Amazon Music


Links


Michael’s writeup on Jimmy Buffett’s A1A mentioned during the show.
Kenny Chesney, the other artist that was on heavy rotation during family vacations while growing up.
Only you can stop ruining songs by mindlessly repeating them:

“Don’t Stop Believin’” by Journey, among the heaviest played Journey tracks and one which Michael famously detests as a result.
“Yesterday” by The Beatles, among the heaviest played Beatles tracks and one which Marc famously detests as a result.


Steve Goodman’s “Banana Republics”
Jimmy Buffett’s autobiography A Pirate Looks at Fifty, which Michael references throughout the episode.
“Johnathan Baham, songwriter of Lovely Cruise”, the BuffettNews.com forum discussion of the mysterious songwriter mentioned on the show.
“In the Shelter”’s many appearances

1971’s High Cumberland Jubilee
1977’s Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes
2003’s Meet Me in Margaritaville


Jesse Winchester’s “Biloxi”
The Toledo Blade front-page interview with Fingers Taylor on his departure from the band.


References


“Key West is like an old dirty carpet; you shake it out and everything falls to the bottom. Everybody from the whole East Coast wound up at the end of the road in Key West at one point or another.”

Jimmy Buffett quoting friend P.J. O’Rourke in the Delaney “I Have Found Me A Home” video interviews




“The pavement runs out at the little village of Tambor, and we stop for cold drinks. Where the pavement ends and the dust begins is also the place where the time warp takes over. It has been only two days since we were opening Christmas presents in Palm Beach, but now we are bouncing along a dirt road in another world. When you are traveling on a trip like this in the right frame of mind, time and space will change. Things that seemed absolutely necessary two days ago slip from your mind. You find yourself looking out the window of the plane, boat, or car and daydreaming about going native. Time becomes something to be used, not saved. Many years ago, when I first experienced this feeling, I wrote a song about it called ‘Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes.’ It worked then, and it’s working now, as we drive west to the ocean in the land of pura vida.”

Jimmy Buffett’s autobiography, A Pirate Looks at Fifty




“As we drive to the airport the next morning [in Guadeloupe], we talk about the sentimentality we both seem to hold about the places we came from. Kino is a world traveler, but he is still attached to his roots in Guadeloupe. That kind of connection to the land is also a very Southern trait. I too move around the globe in an almost constant state of motion, but when I think of home, I think about Pascagoula and the eastern shore of Mobile Bay, not Long Island or Florida. Home is where you come from. It is not where you live at the present time, and though I doubt I will ever live in Alabama again, I will always think of it as home.”

Jimmy Buffett’s autobiography, A Pirate Looks at Fifty




Taylor is proud of the musical achievements of Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band, particularly the first three albums, but he feels that somewhere along the line their leader became more interested in making money and using gimmicks onstage than in making quality music.


“We had a lot of fun, but we were always negotiating for more money and of course he’s never been one to let go of that stuff,” Taylor said. “I had some issues with him over money and a retirement fund, which we never had, although he did put a little something together for us eventually.”


The concerts began to lose their appeal for Taylor.


“It

1 Std. 7 Min.