THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “The music world remembers and celebrates Jimmy Buffett — beloved singer-songwriter, performer, entrepreneur, best-selling author, and Mayor of Margaritaville. Buffett instructed us to “keep the party going,” and that’s just what we’ll do with the help of his final studio album Equal Strain On All Parts.
The title is inspired by Buffett’s grandfather’s description of a good nap. The record, co-produced by longtime Coral Reefers Michael Utley and Mac McAnally, features well-known friends, including Paul McCartney, Emmylou Harris, Lennie Gallant, Angelique Kidjo and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. Recorded this year, the 14-song album brims with Buffett’s characteristically playful songs, but it also brings a thoughtful side.
Balmy and playfully irreverent, Like My Dog is an ode to Buffett’s favorite furry friends replete with signature steel drum melodies. Buffett has featured pups on album covers, in videos, and enjoyed the companionship of his devoted pack of dogs — Lola, Kingston, Pepper, Rosie, Ajax and Kody — in his final days. Scotty Emerick played this song (co-written with Harley Allen) when he opened up for Buffett and he just couldn’t resist recording it.
The hilarious rocker My Gummie Just Kicked In came from an unforgettable dinner party with Buffett, his wife Jane, and Paul McCartney, along with his wife Nancy. As the story goes, Nancy stumbled on her way to the dinner table, and when a worried Buffett asked her if she was OK, she responded: “Oh, no — I’m fine. My gummie just kicked in!” The guys laughed and joked that they were going to write a song called My Gummie Just Kicked In. And Buffett did just exactly that, Paul played bass on it, and recounted the experience in his Twitter tribute to his friend: “I was very happy to have played on one of his latest songs called My Gummie Just Kicked In. We had a real fun session and he played me some of his new songs.”
McCartney continues, explaining his love for Bubbles Up. “I told him that not only was the song great but the vocal was probably the best I’ve heard him sing ever,” McCartney writes. “He turned a diving phrase that is used to train people underwater into a metaphor for life when you’re confused and don’t know where you are just follow the bubbles — they’ll take you up to the surface and straighten you out right away.”
The poignant Bubbles Up was written by Buffett and “honorary Coral Reefer” Will Kimbrough, and serves as a message of hope and inspiration that characterizes the tender side of Equal Strain On All Parts. “Just know that you are loved, there is light up above, and joy, there’s always enough,” Buffett sings.”