paroles de chanson The Mobile Days (narration) - Jimmy Buffett
Buried
Treasure,
The
Mobile
Days
Hi
this
is
Jimmy
and
welcome
to
Buried
Treasure
There's
a
reason
why
we're
calling
this
Collection
of
songs
and
stories
Buried
Treasure
Because
they
were
literally
buried
in
a
closet
In
a
recording
studio
in
Nashville
for
decades
They
were
discovered
by
an
old
friend
Travis
Turk
Who
actually
recorded
these
tracks
in
Moblle,
Alabama
in
1969
And
more
in
Nashville
in
the
years
following
When
we
both
wound
up
moving
there
Travis
eventually
recorded
the
first
two
albums
I
recorded
In
Nashville
as
well
The
actual
buried
treasure
was
discovered
in
Buzz
Cason's
Creative
Workshop
studio
about
ten
years
ago
Buzz
is
a
legendary
producer
in
Nashville
and
was
The
first
person
to
sign
me
to
a
recording
contract
Well
the
universe
must
have
been
working
Because
as
fate
would
have
it,
Travis
had
been
hired
By
Buzz
as
the
sound
engineer
and
in-house
producer
When
Buzz
sold
Creative
Workshop
to
John
and
Martina
McBride
There
was
some
cleaning
up
to
do
and
Buzz
asked
Travis
to
Go
through
the
storage
room
and
see
if
anything
was
Worth
saving
before
he
ordered
the
dumpster
bin
That's
when
I
got
a
call
from
Travis
that
he
had
found
A
sizeable
collection
of
quarter
inch
tapes
that
were
The
demos
of
songs
that
I
had
written
and
recorded
For
Buzz
when
I
was
writing
for
his
publishing
company
It
turned
out
that
there
were
over
125
songs
in
that
pile
Of
tape
boxes
Also
discovered
were
the
original
first
recordings
Travis
Had
engineered
in
Mobile
And
that
is
where
the
whole
story
of
Buried
Treasure
starts
It
was
in
1969
when
I
returned
to
Mobile
from
my
Coming-of-age
years,
living
in
the
French
Quarter
In
New
Orleans
As
a
20-year-old
and
playing
in
a
band
in
Bourbon
Street
Driving
East
on
Highway
90,
the
first
song,
light
of
my
life
In
my
1963
Ford
Falcon,
WTIX
the
mighty
690
Was
playing
the
soundtrack
of
my
exodus
from
New
Orleans
Elvis
was
caught
in
a
trap,
the
Beatles
were
coming
together
Sly
was
having
a
hot
time
in
the
summertime
and
Paul
Simon
was
in
a
clear
ring
with
a
boxer
I
sang
along,
I
knew
all
these
songs
by
heart
Hell
we'd
play
them
every
night
at
our
gig
on
Bourbon
Street
That
long
hot
summer
when
the
showbiz
bug
bit
me
For
the
first
time
And
I
never
recovered
I
knew
that
the
stage
was
where
I
belonged
But
staying
beneath
the
brightly
coloured
lights
Proved
harder
than
I
thought
More
about
this
later
but
the
simple
fact
was
that
Jobs
in
my
newly
chosen
profession
had
become
scare
that
fall
In
one
of
the
most
musical
places
on
earth
The
only
work
i
could
find
was
playing
drums,
Something
I
hadn't
done
since
I
was
in
the
St,
Catherine's
school
Marching
band,
when
I
was
12
It
did
not
take
that
club
manager
long
to
figure
out
that
he
had
Not
hired
the
next
Ringo
Starr
It
was
the
first
and
only
job
ever
was
fired
from
and
he
Was
right
Trying
to
sort
out
my
future,
I
looked
to
the
past
I
headed
back
to
Eastern
shore
to
try
to
sort
things
out
Yep,
the
prodigal
son
was
going
home
Before
I
knew
it
was
back
at
the
shipyard
working
days
as
an
Electrician
helper
And
looking
for
gigs
in
the
waterfront
bars
around
Royal
Street
At
night
Then
one
morning
I
spot
an
ad
in
the
Press
Register
announcing
Bob
Cooke
at
the
Admiral
Corner
bar
at
the
Admiral
Sims
hotel
Bob
had
been
the
leader
of
a
great
group
in
New
Orleans
He
was
a
one-of-a-kind
frontman
I
studied
him
from
far
early
that
summer
and
then
we
became
friends
When
we
wound
up
on
the
same
bill
at
the
Bayou
Room
I
was
the
sorcerer's
apprentice
observing
him
from
a
barstool
Doing
his
magic
He
more
than
anyone,
taught
me
how
to
work
a
crowd
I
popped
in
on
his
show
one
night,
At
the
Admiral's
Corner
and
we
caught
up
on
his
break
He
had
left
the
group
and
was
doing
solo
gigs
now
And
happy
to
be
a
one-man
show
again
He
invited
me
up
that
night
to
sit-in
The
hometown
boy
was
finally
performing
in
his
hometown
I
became
a
regular
guest
performer
and
when
the
cocktail
hour
Piano
player
moved
on,
the
manager
at
the
hotel
Offered
me
that
spot
When
Bob's
month
was
up,
I
got
an
offer
to
headline
It
could
not
have
come
at
a
better
time
The
backdrop
to
all
this
was
the
grim
shadow
To
the
Vietnam
War,
If
you're
interested
you
can
Read
about
those
days
in
a
story
entitled
Vietnam,
Mississippi
In
my
first
book
As
it
turned
out
I
graduated
from
college
along
with
solo'ing
An
airplane
for
the
first
time
If
I
was
going
to
Vietnam,
I
sure
as
hell
was
gonna
see
it
from
a
plane
As
it
worked
out,
the
war
passed
me
by
but
The
student
loans
coming
due,
did
not
I
was
happy
to
have
a
steady
job
and
steady
income
Even
if
I
was
still
in
Mobile,
It
took
a
while
but
I
became
a
bit
of
a
local
attraction
Packing
the
animals
corner
to
fire
marshall
capacity
at
weekends
75
people
max
Of
course
with
that
kind
of
a
following,
I
started
dreaming
of
the
big
time
Again
and
hearing
myself
on
the
radio
Only
thing
was,
You
have
to
have
a
record
in
order
to
get
played
on
the
radio
Well
there
were
no
major
talent
scouts
Hanging
around
the
Animal's
Corner
in
those
days
so
If
I
wanted
to
make
a
record
to
sell
At
the
gig
and
try
to
get
on
local
radio,
I
had
to
find
a
studio
and
of
course
pay
For
the
recording
session
myself
So
way
back
then
before
Social
Media
Had
sent
us
to
space
and
back
for
instant
information,
I
let
my
fingers
do
the
walking
through
the
yellow
pages
Until
I
came
across
an
ad
for
Production
Sound
Studio's
Sounded
pretty
professional
to
me.
I
called
the
studio
asked
About
the
rates
and
times
and
booked
myself
a
session
To
make
a
two-sided,
45
rpm
record,
I've
always
thought
that
Being
born
on
Christmas
entitled
me
to
a
few
lucky
breaks
and
Travis
Turk
that
day
in
the
studio
sure
seemed
to
be
one
of
those
Travis
was
a
DJ
on
the
local
country
station
and
an
engineer
It
was
there
that
Travis
introduced
me
to
Milton
Brown
Who
owned
a
studio
and
supposedly
had
Nashville
connections
It
turned
out
that
indeed
he
did
and
it
was
MIlton
Who
gave
me
my
first
real
break
Looking
back
it's
funny
the
way
things
turned
out
Going
back
home
was
one
of
the
best
And
luckiest
moves
I
ever
made
My
luck
didn't
stop
there
though,
Travis
moved
to
Nashville,
where
he
recorded
song
demos
And
produced
my
first
album
But
i'm
getting
a
little
ahead
of
myself
Speeding
down
the
road
to
success
here,
Which
certainly
was
not
how
it
all
came
about
So
we'll
just
stick
to
the
Mobile
recording's
for
now
A
lot
of
the
tape
boxes
Travis
found,
contained
a
good
Number
of
songs
I
remember
recording
But
also
quite
a
few
that
had
slipped
my
memory
But
these
first
two
songs
I
could
never
forget
Don't
bring
me
candy
and
Abandoned
on
Tuesday
Were
the
first
two
songs
I
wrote
and
recorded,
My
first
time
in
a
real
studio
Damn
I
sound
young
That's
because
I
was,
needless
to
say
Hearing
these
songs
for
the
first
time
in
40
years
Was
a
trip
It's
amazing
how
they
immediately
conjured
up
memories
Of
that
first
experience,
of
where
and
how
the
songs
were
written
Who
played
on
the
sessions,
who
was
just
hanging
around
the
studio
What
was
going
on
in
the
music
world
beyond
Mobile
and
how
in
the
hell
can
we
get
there
I
think
that's
why
it's
so
easy
to
Compare
this
collection
with
a
hidden
treasure
But
the
value
of
this
discovery
would
be
determined
more
by
listeners
Than
by
treasure
hunters
The
example
that
comes
to
mind
for
me
Is
Ry
Cooder's
classic
Buena
Vista
Social
Club
album
It
was
never
supposed
to
happen
The
original
idea
of
having
great
musicians
from
Mali
Travel
to
Cuba
and
validate
the
Afro
Cuban
roots
of
Carribean
music
Turned
into
a
tropical
trainwreck,
it
is
all
wonderfully
documented
In
the
film
by
the
same
name
When
It
was
finished
and
had
reached
amazing
critical
and
financial
Success
Ry
says
in
the
opening
segment
of
the
film,
Quote,
you
never
know
what
the
public
is
gonna
buy
I
certainly
din't
even
know
if
the
public
would
ever
hear
anything
That
came
out
of
Project
Sound
Well
thanks
to
a
lot
of
luck,
we
have
dug
it
up,
dusted
it
off
and
are
About
to
find
out
So
as
the
story
goes,
I
made
and
paid
for
my
record
It
came
out
on
the
AudioMobile
label
That
first
record
did
not
get
me
through
any
doors
Of
any
radio
stations
in
my
old
hometown
But,
it
definitely
was
a
career
move
Though
I
didn't
know
it
at
the
time.
Milton
provided
The
launchpad
from
which
my
rocket
blasted
off
To
where
no
Mobilean
had
ever
gone
before
So
as
they
say
in
nautical
terms
Product
Sound
Studio
was
the
port
from
which
I
embarked
On
this
musical
journey
Which
has
been
a
wonderful,
amazing
and
lucky
voyage
that
Continues
to
this
day
So
to
the
crew,
That
great
first
crew
that
helped
me
cast
off
the
lines,
From
the
Port
of
Mobile
back
in
1969,
To
Travis,
to
Milton,
Nick,
Johnny
and
Ricky
and
I'm
sure
people
I've
forgotten,
Thank
You
For
sending
me
on
this
lovely
cruise
And
this
is
the
song
that
started
the
Whole
thing,
it's
called
Don't
Bring
me
Flowers

1 The Mobile Days (narration)
2 Don't Bring Me Candy
3 Lightfoot (narration)
4 The Circle Is Small
5 Clunker Chord (narration)
6 Abandoned On Tuesday
7 Technology (narration)
8 I Can't Be Your Hero Today
9 Blame It On New Orleans (narration)
10 Rickety Lane
11 Sgt. Pepper In the Gumbo Pot (narration)
12 The Wino Has Something to Say
13 Going Where the Wind Takes You (narration)
14 California Dreamin'
15 Nashville Here We Come (narration)
16 The Gypsy
17 Hopelessly Gone (narration)
18 Hopelessly Gone
19 Simple Pleasures (narration)
20 Simple Pleasures
21 Close the World at Five (narration)
22 Close The World at Five
23 Thank You's (narration)
Attention! N'hésitez pas à laisser des commentaires.