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Jimmy Buffett

Jimmy Buffett Album: “Now Yer Squawkin'”

Jimmy Buffett Album: “Now Yer Squawkin'”
Customers Rating :
Average (2.5) :(4 votes)
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Album Information :
Title: Now Yer Squawkin'
UPC:636551454223
Format:CD
Type:Performer
Genre:Pop Vocal - Contemp. Pop Vocals
Artist:Jimmy Buffett
Label:Recall (UK)
Distributed:Koch (Distributor USA)
Release Date:2005/04/19
Original Release Year:2005
Discs:1
Recording:Digital
Mixing:Digital
Mastering:Digital
Mono / Stereo:Stereo
Studio / Live:Studio
P. Semenuk "reefrocket" (Detroit, MI USA) - August 31, 2005
37 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
- Nothing new here

Tis is a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy. I have four other supposed JB albums with the same music on it. Not worth buying if you have High Cumberland Jubilee. Not even worth one star.

David A. Bede (Singapore) - March 02, 2007
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
- All in one place at last!

The previous reviewers are correct: there is nothing new on this collection. But the collection itself is new, in that it's complete. There are literally at least half a dozen compilations out there featuring material from Jimmy Buffett's first two albums. For good measure, the two original albums, "Down to Earth" and "High Cumberland Jubilee," have both been in print on CD in their own right for several years now. Trouble is, all those earlier collections omitted at least one song (usually either "The Christian?" or "England"). If you wanted everything Buffett recorded for Barnaby Records in 1970-71, you had to buy the two CD reissues of the original albums.

As far as I know, this set is the first one to include every one of those songs in one place. So unless you're a stickler for the original cover art, this is the set to buy. I don't know how much of a cheap cash-in this set might be. (The title, for starters, is extremely misleading - the whole parrothead phenomenon was a decade in the future when these recordings were made.) But at least it presents the songs with more respect than the earlier compilations did, in the order in which they appeared on the original LPs, with suitable placement for the two "lost" tracks that weren't originally included.

And what about the songs? It can't be emphasized enough: this material is entirely from before he'd ever even been to Key West, and it sounds like it. That said, there are hints of what was to come if you know where to look for them. "Truckstop Salvation" is probably the earliest example of his sense of quirky humor about cultural divides (in this case, the divide is over a long-haired trucker who makes the mistake of stopping for gas in a small Southern town), with "The Hangout Gang" and "Death Valley Lives" close behind on the second disc. He was also writing "it ain't easy being a star" songs before he even was a star in his own right: "Richard Frost" and "Ain't He A Genius" may have been wishful thinking at that point, but they do sound great. There are also the usual story songs, notably "Turnabout" (about an unrequited crush that's about to be requited after all), character sketches ("Ace" and "Death Valley Lives" are as good as anything he has ever served up in that category), and the obligatory travelogue: the wonderfully catchy "A Mile High in Denver". Tucked inconspicuously into the first disc is the original version of "The Captain and the Kid," which manages to be ever so slightly more low-key and poignant than the better known recording.

But there are also songs that prove Buffett could have taken his career in a very different direction than he did. There is more direct confrontation against social injustice than in the rest of his catalog combined, with "The Christian?" eerily predicting the rise of the religious right while "Captain America" skewers then-Vice President Spirou Agnew (who is referred to by name in the song) brilliantly. "Rockefeller Square," "Bend a Little," and "The Missionary" address a variety of early-70s topics yet do not sound dated at all now. Perhaps most fascinating is "High Cumberland Dilemma," a first-person account of a young, pregnant hippie couple who are rapidly discovering that living off the land isn't all it's cracked up to be. (By the way, that song also bears the odd distinction of being a deleted track from a deleted album: High Cumberland Jubilee was "lost" for five years before its release, and when it finally appeared, "High Cumberland Dilemma" wasn't on it.)

The best way to put it to those who haven't heard these songs before is this: if your favorite Buffett songs are "Margaritaville," "Cheeseburger in Paradise" and so forth, you probably won't like what you find here. If you like his ballads and story-songs as well as the party anthems, you'll probably like these songs. If you like the ballads better than the party songs, welcome to your new favorite Buffett album.

Scott Phelps (Tampa, FL United States) - January 02, 2013
- Parrothead Alert! DO NOT buy without reading this info!

I am an absolute Buffett fan and as such I hope that Jimmy is not behind this album and so many more like it. It is a scam.

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A LITTLE HISTORY

Jimmy recorded two albums before heading to Key West in the early 70's. Those albums are Down to Earth and High Cumberland Jubilee. These albums are "interesting". I agree that a true fan would be fascinated with these albums, but be warned that they are very different. If you are looking for something along the line of Margaritaville, Five O'Clock Somewhere, or Come Monday, keep on looking.

The record label promptly fired Jimmy after the release of Down to Earth. High Cumberland had been recorded but was not released. Down to Earth went nowhere (which you might understand after listening to it) so their actions are understandable. However, they clearly regretted their decision years later and are trying to make some of the money they missed out on with this product. These songs have been repackaged again and again. Caveat emptor! If you want these songs (and many folks do not and will not) buy them only one time.

Good things about these two albums: original versions of The Captain and the Kid, In the Shelter, and Livingston's Gone to Texas. They are different and something I quite enjoy listening to. And I do know all the words to the other 21 songs as well, but I have to listen to them in private as I know no other human who can stand them (my dogs don't mind too much).

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BACK TO THIS PRODUCT

But buy Down to Earth and High Cumberland Jubilee, NOT this album. How can you spot the bad ones? First clue: this item is listed without a track list. What are they hiding? The fact that this same album is sold under many other names and isn't good enough to want to own multiple copies of. Second clue: when looking at an obscure Buffett album beware of the songs Ellis Dee (He Ain't Free), Captain America, A Mile High in Denver, Ace, High Cumberland Dilemma, and God Don't Own a Car.

In my not so humble opinion: you should only buy this product if you have an unhealthy need to own everything with the name Jimmy Buffett on it, but your money would be better spent on therapy (or bubble wrap).

PinetreeCC "Mark" (MA, USA) - January 09, 2007
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- Repeat, Repeat, Repeat

Jimmy does it again. He takes old songs from previous albums and groups them for a new one. I am a real Parrothead so I bought this CD. I had to have the CD to keep up my complete collection. Reality is starting to set in. I can mix my own CD's.

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