Song Lyric Sunday – Margaritaville

Songs with a drink in the title is the prompt for this week’s Song Lyric Sunday, suggested by Di from Pensitivity101. I have picked Margaritaville in memory of Jimmy Buffett who passed away last year of Merkel-Cell Carcinoma, one of the most dangerous types of skin cancer. He was 76.

This is a song I hear played frequently in Florida. Key West being where Jimmy’s laid back music style took off. Folllowing his death, the State announced that August 30th. each year would be dedicated as “Jimmy Buffett Day”. He created a lifestyle around his relaxed, beachy songs, Florida shirts, shorts, flip flops and resorts making millions from it. Cheers Jimmy!

The Song

Jimmy Buffett wrote “Margaritaville” in Key West, Florida, after he finished a tour with his group, the Coral Reefer Band. They had just toured Texas, and Buffett spent some time drinking margaritas in a Mexican restaurant with a friend before going back to Key West. When he got there, he sat at the Old Anchor Inn watching gridlock on the roads, and used it as inspiration as he composed the song.

Buffett recorded this song at Criteria Studios in Miami with producer Norbert Putnam. Buffett and Putnam met in Nashville, which is where each did most of their work. When Buffett asked Putnam to work on an album of songs about a carefree lifestyle by the water, Putnam told him that he needed to be near the water when recording it if he was going to pull it off, so Miami it was. Putnam said in Sound On Sound: “One day in the studio, he comes in and starts telling me about a day he had in Key West. He was coming home from a bar and he lost one of his flip-flops and he stepped on a beer can top and he couldn’t find the salt for his Margarita. He says he’s writing lyrics to it and I say ‘That’s a terrible idea for a song.’ He comes back in a few days later with ‘Wasted Away Again In Margaritaville’ and plays it and right then everyone knows it’s a hit song. Hell, it wasn’t a song – it was a movie.”

Regarding the success of this song, Buffett said: “I was lucky enough to get my thumb on the pulse beat of what people perceived the tropics to be.”

“Margaritaville” has come to symbolize a carefree Caribbean lifestyle – what some in Key West call “Keys disease.” For many, the only time they experience this way of living is on vacations or at Jimmy Buffett concerts. Buffett has a lot of fans who work very hard, make a lot of money, and use his music as an escape.

Buffett was born in Mississippi and raised in Alabama. He didn’t come to Key West, Florida, until 1971, when he was 24 years old. As a transplant, he had a perspective on the area that natives don’t, which helped him capture the ethos in this song.

Buffett has always loved sailing, and when this song became a hit, he was thrilled because he could buy his own boat. He has said that even if he was a one-hit wonder, he would have been happy with his boat sailing around the islands.

When Buffett sings about how he “stepped on a pop-top” and cut his heel, requiring a cruise back home to enjoy a margarita, he’s referring to pull-off tops from soda and beer cans that caused a litany of minor injuries as they were often thrown on the ground and then stepped on by poor souls who blew out their flip-flops. In the late ’70s, the pop-tops were replaced with much safer non-removable round “pop-down/pop-in” tabs.

Buffett launched a number of Margaritaville stores, with locations in Key West, New Orleans, Jamaica, Charleston, and Orlando. They sell clothing and other items inspired by the song.

Former Van Halen vocalist Sammy Hagar covered this for his 2013 Sammy Hagar & Friends album. His version is a duet with Toby Keith. He told Rolling Stone that it took him a long time to figure out that the country star would be a good fit for his version. “He’s like my closest friend,” said Hagar, “in country, for sure, and one of the most typical Cabo Wabo heads. We’ve sat in Cabo Wabo and played ‘Margaritaville’ there 35 times, if not more. And to not realize until after I cut ‘Margaritaville’ that I should get Toby to do the duet on it?”

This cover is also included as a bonus track on the Deluxe version of Toby Keith’s Drinks After Work album.

Prior to this Top 10 hit, Buffett’s highest-charting single on the Hot 100 was “Come Monday,” which peaked at in 1974. “Margaritaville” also landed at on the Country tally.

In 2016, this was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

This is referenced in Blake Shelton’s 2004 hit “Some Beach,” which finds Shelton “Singing ‘Margaritaville’ and minding my own.”

In 1999, Buffett joined Alan Jackson in a recording of this for Jackson’s album Under The Influence. In Buffett’s original version, he knows wasting away in Margaritaville is his own fault, but in Jackson’s version the singers blame each other before they finally admit “it’s our own damn fault.”

The Lyrics

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 beginnin' to boil

Wastin' away again in Margaritaville
Searchin' for my long lost shaker of salt
Some people claim that there's a woman to blame
But I know it's nobody's fault

Don't know the reason
Stayed here all season
Nothing to show but this brand new tattoo
But it's a real beauty
A Mexican cutie
How it got here I haven't a clue

Wastin' away again in Margaritaville
Searchin' for my lost shaker of salt
Some people claim that there's a woman to blame
Now I think hell it could be my fault

I blew out my flip flop
Stepped on a pop top
Cut my heel had to cruise on back home
But there's booze in the blender
And soon it will render
That frozen concoction that helps me hang on

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 my own damn fault
Yes and some people claim that there's a woman to blame
And I know it's my own damn fault
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Courtesy of Songfacts

I couldn’t resist including an old sea shanty ‘What Shall We Do With The Drunken Sailor” by The Irish Rovers. Just last week Clive, from Take it Easy, and I were chatting about the Fishermen’s Friends movies about a group of Fisherman who use to sing sea shanties after hauling fish and had such a great sound they were discovered by a recording label and made the big time. Two fun movies to watch if you’re interested.

Published by Christine Bolton

I have been writing poetry since I was a child and it has helped in the good times and bad times. I am always looking within to find the answers to life's problems and to write thought-provoking poetry and prose. Thanks for checking it out. Christine

19 thoughts on “Song Lyric Sunday – Margaritaville

  1. I came oh so close to using this same song and I was halfway through writing the post when I thought that other people would definitely be featuring “Margaritaville,” so I went with something else. I’m so glad you didn’t make a liar out of me.

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    1. LOL. Yes! I couldn’t let this go by without honoring him and acknowledging his passing. He created a more carefree, laid-back Florida lifestyle. Before him the look was ancient dressed in white polyester pants and white shoes. 🤣

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    1. Thank you Willow ☺️💕 Do you remember singing What Shall We Do With The Drunken Sailor in school when were about 6 years old? We used to sing Sea Shanties. I can’t believe the words we were singing 😳

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  2. I don’t know much of Jimmy Buffett – I knew him from his later collaboration with Caroline Jones – but this is a great song. And thank you for the mention – there’s a good clip on YouTube of the Fishermen’s Friends singing that song with cast members of the second movie, which is a lot of fun.

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  3. Yes! This is a must have drinking song. Love Jimmy Buffett’s songs. We have a box set of CDs we’ve practically worn out. And the Sea Shanty song, I remember singing that one too. I really like those kind. I’m sure you’ve probably heard the Wellerman by Nathan Evans? It’s a favorite of mine, too. 🙂

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