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Sad Farewell to the Beloved Jimmy Buffet - He Will Be Greatly Missed

Sad Farewell to the Beloved Jimmy Buffet - He Will Be Greatly Missed

This morning we woke up to the sad news of Jimmy Buffet's passing.  It is with great sadness we bid him a fond farewell - he was a real one-of-a-kind and will never be replaced.


Our good friend, Michael Corcoran sent out this incredible article and we wanted to share it with you.  We included a link where you can subscribe to more of his work if you'd like.

Jimmy Buffett at Liberty Lunch late ‘75. Photo Scott Newton.
Suzanne Cordeiro / Special To American-Statesman

Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band perform as part of Jimmy Buffett’s Life on the Flip Side Redux Tour 2022 at the Moody Center on June 11, 2022 in Austin, Texas.

Why are folks leaving shakers of salt at 6109 Shadow Valley Drive?

Austin is more than a footnote in the Jimmy Buffett story

MICHAELCORCORAN

SEP 2, 2023

Jimmy Buffett at Liberty Lunch late ‘75. Photo Scott Newton.

Jimmy Buffett at Liberty Lunch late ‘75. Photo Scott Newton.

Jimmy Buffett (1946- 2023) passed away last night surrounded by loved ones. He was 76. A nation of Parrotheads mourn.

 

Although he’s mainly affiliated with his Mobile, AL upbringing and his Key West ocean kingdom, Buffett had close ties to Austin, where his compadre Jerry Jeff Walker moved in 1971. Walker’s the one who introduced Buffett to the Florida Keys, where Jerry Jeff lived before Austin. Both songwriters got rich- Buffett richer- by creating an escapist lifestyle around their music.

 

Even more significantly, Austin was where Buffett had his first margarita- at Lung’s Cocina del Sur restaurant in the Village Center strip mall on Anderson Lane. Some people say there’s a woman to blame, and that’s interior designer Victoria Reed, who took Buffett to Lung’s. The year was 1976 and that whole boozy buccaneers in tropical shirts phenomenon hadn’t taken off yet, so Jimmy and his Coral Reefer Band would crash at Reed’s home at 6109 Shadow Valley Dr. when they had shows in town.

Lung’s Cocina opened on W. Anderson Lane in 1973 after a decade at 5517 Burnet Road. Though the margarita- tequila, triple sec, lime juice- has been around since the ’30s, the frozen margarita machine was invented in Dallas in 1971.

Lung’s Cocina opened on W. Anderson Lane in 1973 after a decade at 5517 Burnet Road. Though the margarita- tequila, triple sec, lime juice- has been around since the ’30s, the frozen margarita machine was invented in Dallas in 1971.

After Cocina del Sur, Reed recalls Buffett sitting on the deck of her house that night strumming a guitar and singing some now-familiar words about flip-flops, pop-tops and a lost shaker of salt. “Jimmy sometimes jokes that, ‘I guess I owe you some royalties,’ ” said Reed, who met Buffett in 1975 when she emceed a party the band performed at in San Antonio. You have to wonder what path his career might’ve taken if he’d ordered a beer that fateful night in ’76. “Wasted away again in Coronaville” just doesn’t have the same right ring.

Designer Victoria Reed with Buffett in 2015.

Designer Victoria Reed with Buffett in 2015.

In a 1982 interview with John T. Davis, Buffett said another one of his songs was, at least partly inspired by Austin: “I Heard I Was In Town.” He was a frequent visitor even when he didn’t have a gig.

 

Buffett’s first appearance in Austin was at Castle Creek (1411 Lavaca St.) in late ‘72. “One night Jerry Jeff asked me if a friend of his from Florida could play for five or 10 minutes and it turned out to be Jimmy Buffett,” co-owner Tim O’Connor recalled in 2010. “He came back and played many times and just loved the place.” In one of the earliest gigs there, only about 10 people showed up, and Buffett invited them all to dinner at the Capitol Oyster Bar next door between sets.

 

After he got too big to play clubs, Buffett mentioned Castle Creek from the stage whenever he played Austin. He also rented out the Travis County Expo Center for weeks at a time to rehearse for upcoming multimillion dollar tours.

 

The bane of every singer-songwriter at a bar, “Margaritaville” was a Top Ten hit in 1977. But it made much more money for Buffett as a restaurant chain, a clothing line and, in 2021, a $370 million Manhattan hotel, with attractions like the It’s Five O’Clock Somewhere Lounge and the Cheeseburgers In Paradise Grill.

But the “Margaritaville” legacy began in Austin at a six-bedroom Northwest Hills duplex you could’ve bought for $290,000 in 2000.

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These are random, unedited chapters of a book tentatively titled “Overserved: A Personal History of the Austin Music Scene.”