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Songs From St. Somewhere

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Download links and information about Songs From St. Somewhere by Jimmy Buffett. This album was released in 2013 and it belongs to Rock, Country, Pop genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:05:27 minutes.

Artist: Jimmy Buffett
Release date: 2013
Genre: Rock, Country, Pop
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:05:27
Buy on iTunes $10.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Somethin' 'Bout a Boat 2:44
2. Einstein Was a Surfer 4:41
3. Earl's Dead - Cadillac For Sale 5:41
4. Too Drunk To Karaoke (featuring Toby Keith) 4:02
5. Serpentine 4:43
6. Useless But Important Information 4:12
7. I Want To Go Back To Cartagena 3:15
8. Soulfully 3:16
9. Rue de la Guitare 3:23
10. I'm No Russian 6:40
11. Tides 4:12
12. The Rocket That Grandpa Rode 4:02
13. I Wave Bye Bye 3:19
14. Colour of the Sun 3:48
15. Oldest Surfer On the Beach 4:17
16. I Want To Go Back To Cartagena (Bonus Track) [with Fanny Lu] [Spanish Version] 3:12

Details

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Jimmy Buffett never fails to give the Parrotheads what they want, varying his sound just enough to keep things interesting for him without making his fans scurry away. In the new millennium, this often meant that Buffett catered to the country crowd that came his way after Alan Jackson brought him in to sing "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" — Kenny Chesney co-opted Jimmy's breezy Caribbean country-rock not much later — but on his albums of the 2000s, he often pursued a songwriterly direction, either covering other skilled writers (as he did on the charming 2006 set Take the Weather with You) or writing his own tunes (the relatively lean 2009 LP Buffet Hotel). In the grand scheme of things, these albums were subtle affairs. That's not the case with 2013's Songs from St. Somewhere. Shamelessly silly and boisterously boozy, Songs from St. Somewhere flirts with self-parody and sometimes slips into pure tackiness. Surely, some of the bad taste is intentional — he brought in Toby Keith to sing "Too Drunk to Karaoke" for a reason and he winkingly rhymes "Twitter" with a vulgarity on "Useless But Important Information" — but when he makes a jocular offhand reference to Pussy Riot's incarceration on "I'm No Russian," his crassness grates. A good portion of Songs from St. Somewhere is amiably aimless — Buffett is better off when he's mellow, picking out odes to boats, beach, surfers, and sun — with the only thing threatening to spoil the mood being the decidedly silly songs.