One Particular Harbour Explained

One Particular Harbour
Type:album
Artist:Jimmy Buffett
Cover:One Particular Harbour.jpg
Released:September 1983
Length:39:58
Label:MCA
MCA-5447 (US, 12")
Producer:Jimmy Buffett, Michael Utley
Prev Title:Somewhere over China
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:Riddles in the Sand
Next Year:1984

One Particular Harbour[1] is the twelfth studio album by American popular music singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett. It was released in September 1983 as MCA 5447 and was produced by Buffett and Michael Utley. It was Buffett's first involvement producing an album. "Stars on the Water" was a minor hit for its original writer, country music songsmith Rodney Crowell and was later covered by Texan country music singer George Strait on his 2001 album, The Road Less Traveled.

Songs

In addition to songs written or co-written by Buffett (including one with J.D. Souther and Josh Leo), the album includes four cover songs: "Stars on the Water" by country songwriter Rodney Crowell, "California Promises" by Steve Goodman, "Brown Eyed Girl" by Van Morrison, and "Why You Wanna Hurt My Heart?" written by the Neville Brothers' Art Neville. Buffett's version of "Stars on the Water" also appeared on the soundtrack to the 1993 movie The Firm.

Chart performance

One Particular Harbour reached No. 59 on the Billboard 200 album chart and No. 35 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. The song "One Particular Harbour" hit No. 22 Adult Contemporary and "Brown Eyed Girl" made it to No. 13 Adult Contemporary.

Chart (1983)Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums35
U.S. Billboard 20059

Critical reception

Allmusic reviewer William Ruhlmann says One Particular Harbour was something like a comeback, with Buffett's best batch of songs since Son of a Son of a Sailor in 1978"[2] and the title single, "One Particular Harbour," is a fan favorite, and is sometimes considered part of "The Big 8" that Buffett has played at almost all of his concerts.

Personnel

The Coral Reefer Band

Singles

Notes and References

  1. The album title is spelled with the British spelling harbour even in U.S. releases.
  2. William Ruhlmann. [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r2931|pure_url=yes}} Review of ''One Particular Harbour'']. Allmusic. Accessed on 15 October 2007.