Ocean Front Property

Album: Ocean Front Property (1986)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "...and if you believe that, I've got a bridge to sell you."

    That's an expression said to someone gullible to set them straight. It's based on an actual con by a guy named George C. Parker, who would convince people to buy the Brooklyn Bridge from him. In "Ocean Front Property," George Strait modifies the phrase, telling his girl he's got some ocean front property in Arizona to sell her if she thinks he'll be alright with her leaving him. Arizona, of course, is landlocked, so there's no ocean front property.
  • George Strait was on quite a run when he released "Ocean Front Property" as the title track to his seventh album. By this time, he had nine #1 Country hits, and "Ocean Front Property" gave him his 10th. His next single, "All My Ex's Live In Texas," made it 11.
  • This song was written by Royce Porter, Dean Dillon and Hank Cochran. Dillon and Cochran had written a song for George Straight called "The Chair" and had worked with Porter on some other songs for Strait. When they got together to write "Ocean Front Property," most of it was written by the time Dillon came to it. He worked on the bridge and the last verse, and made a change to a line Porter had written, taking out the word "bridge" from the line, "If you'll buy that, I'll throw the Golden Gate Bridge in free."

    Dillon convinced them that the line sounded better with that word removed, and that listeners would know that the Golden Gate is a bridge.
  • This song was released as a single before the album came out, which built lot of anticipation. The Ocean Front Property album ended up debuting at #1 on the Country chart, the first to do so.
  • The song's co-writer Dean Dillion worked on a lot of George Strait songs ("Marina del Rey," "Honky Tonk Crazy," "The Breath You Take"...), and he told Songfacts that "Ocean Front Property" is his least favorite.

    "I thought it was horrible," he said. "I didn't like to write funny songs. That didn't do anything for me. If anything, I tend to delve in the dark side of life more than I did the funny side of it. Even after we were done with it, I thought, man, this is junk. I thought it was hokey and I didn't know if people'd get it or not. And I think about four months later it came into chart. That whole album came in the charts at #1. Sold a million records the first week it was out, that album did. And that song was one of the fastest selling rising chart records that he ever had. That shows you what I know."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Stand By Me: The Perfect Song-Movie Combination

Stand By Me: The Perfect Song-Movie CombinationSong Writing

In 1986, a Stephen King novella was made into a movie, with a classic song serving as title, soundtrack and tone.

Modern A Cappella with Peder Karlsson of The Real Group

Modern A Cappella with Peder Karlsson of The Real GroupSong Writing

The leader of the Modern A Cappella movement talks about the genre.

Jeff Trott

Jeff TrottSongwriter Interviews

Sheryl Crow's longtime songwriting partner/guitarist Jeff Trott reveals the stories behind many of the singer's hits, and what its like to be a producer for Leighton Meester and Max Gomez.

Michael Schenker

Michael SchenkerSongwriter Interviews

The Scorpions and UFO guitarist is also a very prolific songwriter - he explains how he writes with his various groups, and why he was so keen to get out of Germany and into England.

Loudon Wainwright III

Loudon Wainwright IIISongwriter Interviews

"Dead Skunk" became a stinker for Loudon when he felt pressure to make another hit - his latest songs deal with mortality, his son Rufus, and picking up poop.

Little Big Town

Little Big TownSongwriter Interviews

"When seeds that you sow grow by the wicked moon/Be sure your sins will find you out/Your past will hunt you down and turn to tell on you."