"A Pirate Looks at Forty" | ||||
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Single by Jimmy Buffett | ||||
from the album A1A | ||||
A-side | "A Pirate Looks at Forty" | |||
B-side | "Presents to Send You" | |||
Released | February 1975 | |||
Studio | Woodland (Nashville, Tennessee)[1] | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:57 | |||
Label | Dunhill D-15029 (US, 7") | |||
Songwriter(s) | Jimmy Buffett | |||
Producer(s) | Don Gant | |||
Jimmy Buffett singles chronology | ||||
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Audio sample | ||||
Audio | ||||
"A Pirate Looks at Forty" by Jimmy Buffett on YouTube | ||||
"A Pirate Looks at Forty" (live, 1978) by Jimmy Buffett on YouTube |
"A Pirate Looks at Forty" is a song written and performed by American singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett. It was first released on his 1974 album A1A and "Presents to Send You" is the B-side of the single.
Buffett wrote the song about Phillip Clark, at the Chart Room where Buffett first performed after his move to Key West, Florida.[3] The song contains the bittersweet confession of a modern-day, washed-up drug smuggler as he looks back on the first 40 years of his life, expresses lament that his preferred vocation of piracy on the high seas was long gone by the time he was born, and ponders his future.
For radio play, the song was shortened by deleting the fourth verse for the single release. Cash Box said the song has "an almost reggae progression, fine guitar playing and lead solo, [and] moving lyrics".[4] Record World said that "This limitless piece of demographic dauntlessness should ship him out of port under more steam than anything since 'Come Monday.'"[5] The song is one of Buffett's more popular, and is part of "The Big 8" that he played at almost all of his concerts, and always during the second set.[6]