Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jane Slagsvol supported Jimmy Buffett's music career. In 1978, Slagsvol appeared in her hubby's music video "Come Monday." In the song, Buffett sings about missing his lover while he heads to San ...
Jimmy Buffett‘s widow, Jane Slagsvol, is breaking her silence after the musician’s death at age 76. “As Jimmy said a few months ago, ‘growing old is not for sissies,'” Slagsvol began in ...
Jimmy Buffett's wife Jane Slagsvol honored her husband's legacy in a poignant letter she shared with fans a week after the "Margaritaville" singer-songwriter's death. In it, she opened up about ...
Jimmy Buffett's wife Jane Slagsvol revealed that he spent time in hospice before dying. And his sister recently said that his last words to her were 'Have fun.'
Buffett was born on December 25, 1946, in Pascagoula, Mississippi, [23] and he spent part of his childhood in Mobile and Fairhope, Alabama.He was the son of Mary Lorraine (née Peets) (died September 25, 2003) [24] and James Delaney Buffett, Jr. (died May 1, 2003), who worked for the United States Army Corps of Engineers.
The song was inspired by a real life event attended by Buffett, his wife Jane Slagsvol, Paul McCartney, and his wife Nancy Shevell. [11] Buffett was concerned about Shevell at a dinner party, and her response to his question about her well-being was simply the title of the song. [9]
Jimmy Buffett’s wife Jane Slagsvol is paying tribute to the late singer, remembering his sense of humor and describing as him as her “heart.”
"Something So Feminine About a Mandolin" (Buffett, Jane Slagsvol) – 3:36 - originally recorded on Havaña Daydreamin' "Love in the Library" (Buffett, McAnally) – 4:32 - originally recorded on Fruitcakes "Chanson Pour les Petits Enfants" – 3:58 - originally recorded on 1979's Volcano