Jimmy Buffett's classic chill-out anthem "Margaritaville" spent 22 weeks on the Billboard chart, and helped launch his decades-long music career and a business empire. AFP File Photo
Jimmy Buffett, best known for his 1977 hit
"Margaritaville," has died at age 76, a statement on his website
said.
"Jimmy passed away peacefully on the night of September
1st surrounded by his family, friends, music and dogs," the statement
said.
"He lived his life like a song till the very last
breath and will be missed beyond measure by so many."
The statement did not provide a cause of death.
Buffett's classic chill-out anthem
"Margaritaville," about beachfront living with a drink in hand, spent
22 weeks on the Billboard chart, and helped launch his decades-long music
career and a business empire.
Known as the "Mayor of Margaritaville," he
released nearly 30 studio albums of country, folk and tropical tunes, and also
launched a line of resorts, restaurants and retail stores that capitalized on
his laid-back, escapist image.
Born December 25, 1946, in the US state of Mississippi and
raised in Alabama, Buffett began playing guitar in college and later started
performing on the streets and in the clubs of New Orleans, according to his
website.
He released his first record, "Down to Earth," in
1970, and a year later traveled to Key West, Florida, a place that became
synonymous with Buffett's paradise-themed music and laid-back lifestyle brands.
Buffett also penned bestselling books, appeared in movies
and on television, and had a brief Broadway run with his musical "Escape
to Margaritaville."
But his signature song – and its refrain: "Wastin' away
again in Margaritaville, searchin' for my lost shaker of salt" – is what
his legions of fans and beach holidaymakers remember most.
"There are people out there looking for a good time for
a few days a year," Buffett told Rolling Stone magazine in 1996, referring
to his fans, known as "Parrotheads."
"We come to town and we're the carnival or the Mardi
Gras. People blow off steam and then go back and become basically law-abiding
citizens," he said.
President Joe Biden hailed Buffett as a "poet of
paradise" and said he had gotten to know the performer over the years.
"Jimmy reminded us how much the simple things in life
matter – the people we love, the places we’re from, the hopes we have on the
horizon," Biden said in a statement.
Tributes also poured in from musician giants such as Elton
John, Sammy Hagar and the Oak Ridge Boys.
"Rest in power @jimmybuffett," rapper LL Cool J
wrote Saturday on social media platform X.
"I'm glad we had time to vibe. You were and always will
be a Truly inspiring human."
Former US senator from Alabama Doug Jones said he was sad to
hear of Buffett's death.
"He lived life to the fullest and the world will miss
him," Jones posted on X.
The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson also paid tribute, posting a
photo of Buffett's 1976 album "Havana Daydreamin'."
"Love and Mercy, Jimmy Buffett," Wilson wrote.
Buffett was preparing to release a new record this year,
according to his website.
/KN/
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