Since
Jimmy Buffett never leaves his comfort zone, it’s hard to call 2009’s
Buffet Hotel a return to roots but, in a way, it is. Discounting the mock rap on “Turn Up the Heat and Chill the Rosé,” this album doesn’t even have the lingering country and reggae flavors that seasoned 2006’s Take the Weather with You, with all of the songs riding a cool, mellow country-rock wave, the kind that has been his stock-in-trade since the ‘70s. There’s a difference between being part of a tradition and being stuck in the past and
Buffett is surely in the former, not shying away from the new millennial mess, admitting that we all have “A Lot to Drink About” and never flinching from his advancing years, most movingly on a cover of
Bruce Cockburn’s “Life’s Short Call Now.”
Cockburn’s song is paired with another expertly chosen cover,
Jesse Winchester’s “Rhumba Man” (he covered
Winchester’s “Nothin’ But a Breeze” the album before), but this has the highest percentage of original
Buffett compositions since 1999’s Beach House on the Moon, which is a good indication that
Jimmy is in good form. While a handful are collaborations with his longtime colleague
Mac McAnally, many of these are co-written with
Will Kimbrough, who helps liven up
Buffett and sharpen his pen, resulting in one of
Jimmy’s strongest albums in recent memory. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine