"[1] Coe replied by writing the insulting "Jimmy Buffett", which appeared on Nothing Sacred,[1] an album of explicit material released by mail order in 1978 through the back pages of the biker magazine Easyriders.
[2] Spectrum VII contained a note stating "Jimmy Buffett doesn't live in Key West anymore," a lyric from the song.
[1] A more affable shout out went to Meat Loaf, to whom Coe dedicated the hard rocking “Sudden Death” for “believing in rock and roll and Ohio boys.” The ever prolific Coe wrote all ten tracks on the album, with the only co-write being the pleading “Fall in Love with You,” which he composed with Leon Petty and includes an opening vocal part reminiscent of Simon and Garfunkel’s “Mrs.
Robinson.” “On My Feet Again’ contains the lines “I left my stomach in Houston on some surgeon’s knife but I slept through it all…” which alludes to complications from a recent burst appendix.
"Ocean Side" collects four sunny marine-themed songs, including the nautical epic "Seven Mile Bridge," which stretches to over seven minutes.