One Particular Harbour (song)

"One Particular Harbour"
Single by Jimmy Buffett
from the album One Particular Harbour
A-side "One Particular Harbour"
B-side "Distantly In Love"
Released October 1983
Format 7"
Recorded 1983
Genre Rock/Gulf and western
Label MCA
MCA 52298 (U.S., 7")
Writer(s) Jimmy Buffett, Bobby Holcomb
Producer(s) Jimmy Buffett, Michael Utley
Jimmy Buffett singles chronology
"I Don't Know (Spicoli's Theme)"
(1982)
"One Particular Harbour"
(1983)
"Brown Eyed Girl"
(1983)
Audio sample
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"One Particular Harbour"[1] is a song performed by American popular music singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett. It was written by Jimmy Buffett and Hawaiian-born Tahitian musician Bobby Holcomb and released as a single (b/w "Distantly In Love") on MCA 52298 in October 1983.

It was first released on his 1983 album One Particular Harbour and reached #22 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.

The song begins with lyrics in Tahitian:

Ia ora te natura
E mea arofa teie ao nei

The translation given is:

"Nature lives (life to nature)
Have pity for the Earth (Love the Earth)"

It concludes with the same verse plus:

Ua pau te maitai no te fenua
Re zai noa ra te ora o te mitie

This is translated as:

"Bounty of the land is exhausted
But there's still abundance on the sea."

Buffett has said in radio interviews about the song that he wrote it while travelling the islands and that he was moved to write it one afternoon during his journeys, as he sat on the balcony of his hotel room watching the local children (memorialized in the lyric "Where children play on the shore each day").

"One Particular Harbour" is one of Buffett's more popular songs with fans, and is played at almost all of his concerts. Recorded live versions of the song appear on Feeding Frenzy, Buffett Live: Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, and the video Live by the Bay. Two recordings are included on the 2007 release Live in Anguilla: once in full concert mode at the Dune Preserve beach bar and another the day before in an impromptu "unplugged" concert on the beach.

It is often performed with extensive steel drum played by the Coral Reefer Band's pannist Robert Greenidge.

Chart performance

Chart (1983) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks 22
Canadian RPM Adult Contemporary Tracks 4

See also

Notes

  1. The song title is spelled with the British spelling harbour even in U.S. releases.

External links

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