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Victor
ParticipantA few more tidbits from Bruce’s official-site guestbook: the Noisemakers have been in the studio to cut 10 tracks for the new album. And the album will include some new songs that have been played at recent solo concerts.
Does that include the “Broadway” stuff? — do “Don of Dons” and “In the Low Country” suit anyone? Or would you rather hear something else on a new album? I love those songs, but if that is the case, I personally worry about the album fitting together as a cohesive, independent offering. The “Newmanesque” songs like “Heir Gordon” kind of pulled me out “Halcyon Days.” I think Bruce should do either an all-Newman-style album or all-Broadway-style album or all-Bruceian-album. Just like he did all-Bluegrass and all-Jazz. Just my two cents.
What else from the solo shows might make the new album?
Vic
Victor
ParticipantI am rather obviously a fan of the Big Swing Face record, though I jumped off the bandwagon when I first heard clips from the album. Now, I’m trying to make up for my earlier lack of vision by recommending BSF at any opportunity. By the way, I heard Camp Meeting on the radio today — a local talk radio guy was using it as his “bumper” music (or whatever you call it) as he went into or came out of a break. Very cool to hear the jazz album on the radio.
Since this thread has taken a political turn, go to this Web site and see which presidential candidate you most match:
http://www.wqad.com/Global/link.asp?L=259460
My top match: John Edwards; Score: 34. I’m staying in the Obama camp, though.
Victor
ParticipantWon’t be able to make it, unfortunately, Will, but — (shameless plug) — I do hope to make it to Merle Fest, one of the nation’s best music festivals, on April 24-28, 2008, in Wilkesboro, NC. I’ve actually never been, but I keep hearing about what a great event it is… Bruce and Ricky will be there with a ton of other great musicians.
Vic
Victor
ParticipantI’ll offer a David-Dayian double-post to boost my own thread:
What would you guys and gals like to see thematically and musically from Bruce’s next album?
Victor
ParticipantDear Mr. David Day,
The Big Orange nation is still large and in-charge — and really looking forward to BASKETBALL season!
Take it easy on us this weekend, OK?
Victor
ParticipantI like The Band’s “Acadian Driftwood.” Seems like it would be a natural for Bruce. How about “Both Sides Now”? He’s a Joni Mitchell fan, isn’t he?
I’d also like to get Bruce to do some of the rarities he’s done in the past, again: Girl From the North Country, Imagine, etc.
Even though I wasn’t into The Grateful Dead, I’d love to hear Bruce put together an album of all-Dead covers since I always seem to like his take on the Dead material.
Victor
ParticipantDavid,
I don’t think the writer meant anything by that headline. I think it was written kind of tongue-in-cheek; Bruce really isn’t a beginner, is he? The story is very positive overall.
But the thing I noticed most, of course, was the attention the photographer paid to Bruce’s shoes. Those size 13s appear to be some sort of Converse All-Star hybrid. Interesting. I hadn’t noticed that. But the article made me want to bring back the CBS — Committee for Bruce’s Shoes! 😆
Vic
Victor
ParticipantCreepily ironic, Trent. That’s exactly the advice I gave David:
I said, “Why bother Bruce in a restaurant when you can go home to your computer and stare down onto his Williamsburg home via the giant, godlike eye of a satellite circling the heavens?”
I’m not even going to ask how you knew where to find that.
Nice spread, though. Where’s the basketball court?
Victor
ParticipantNot enough!
Victor
ParticipantHere’s a nice Q&A from The Associated Press:
The ever eclectic Bruce Hornsby talks about his first jazz CD and life after pop stardom
By CHARLES J. GANS
Associated Press Writer
NEWPORT, R.I. — Drummer Jack DeJohnette had some fun with his jazz musician friends by asking them to guess who’s playing piano with him on a fast-paced version of John Coltrane’s “Giant Steps.”
“I had people saying Cedar Walton, Kenny Barron. … They would keep trying to guess and I’d say ‘No,”’ DeJohnette laughed backstage at the recent Newport Jazz Festival. “They were quite surprised when I told them — Bruce Hornsby.”
But anyone who has closely followed the 52-year-old Hornsby’s career wouldn’t be too surprised to find he has finally released his first full-length jazz instrumental album. “Camp Meeting,” a trio recording with DeJohnette and bassist Christian McBride, offers new versions of jazz standards by Miles Davis, Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk as well as several Hornsby originals.
Hornsby graduated from the University of Miami with a degree in jazz before deciding songwriting was more to his liking. His 1980s pop hits “The Way It Is” and “The Valley Road” had jazz-influenced piano solos. He later collaborated on recordings with such jazz stars as guitarist Pat Metheny (“Harbor Lights”) and saxophonist Wayne Shorter (“The End of the Innocence,” written with Don Henley).
Hornsby sat down for an interview with the AP after performing on the main stage at the Newport festival.
AP: Earlier this year you released a bluegrass album with Ricky Skaggs and now you’ve got your first jazz CD. What’s the connection?
Hornsby: I’ve always had a lot of interest in jazz and bluegrass. Most people would say, “Wow, they don’t have anything in common!” But to me … they’re both about virtuosity on the instrument. If you’ve heard Ricky Skaggs’ band, they’re incredible players. I’m interested in writing songs and singing them well, but I’m also interested in the instrument.
AP: What encouraged you to record “Camp Meeting”?
Hornsby: Pat Metheny really prodded me to do it. He was playing a concert with the University of Virginia jazz orchestra about five years ago. I went up there because we’re good friends and he asked me to sit in. We did (Miles Davis’) “Solar,” and he said, “You have your own way of doing this, you should make this record.” Then I ran into Jack in 2005 at the Keith Jarrett trio date at Carnegie Hall. He said what he always says to me: “Hey, when are we doing to do something?” And Christian has always said that through the years.
AP: What did you do to get ready to record the CD?
Hornsby: What’s become my standard analogy is imagine you took six years of French … and you could speak it pretty well. But then you didn’t speak it for years, so you lose it. And then you get hired to be the French translator at the U.N. … You’re going to have to hit the woodshed pretty hard and that’s what I’ve been trying to do.
AP: What was it like playing alongside two jazz heavyweights?
Hornsby: It was very stressful because these guys are giants of the music and together they’ve played with most every great jazz musician that you’ve heard of. That’s a daunting situation. You have to prove yourself every step along the way and if you can’t stand that heat get the hell out of the boiler room. I think they started being more impressed with what I was doing playing-wise and liked the conception of the different tunes.
AP: How did you choose jazz standards like Thelonious Monk’s “Straight, No Chaser” or Bud Powell’s “Celia” for the CD?
Hornsby: I only recorded something that I thought I could find an interesting take on that was my own. … that gave it a reason for being played again. I remember Jack and Christian saying, “Do we really have to play ‘Straight, No Chaser’?” I understand why they said that — it’s sort of a club date jazz tune, so overdone, it’s sort of like the “Proud Mary” of the jazz canon. But I said, “Look, I have an odd way of playing it. If you like it we’ll play it, if you don’t we won’t.” I played it for them. … it was sort of a pointillistic version, and they went, “Oh, very fresh.”
AP: Could you talk about some of the compositions you wrote for the session?
Hornsby: The first tune I did today (at Newport) was “Charlie, Woody and You.” Dave Brubeck loved it. He came up to me and said, “What was that Charles Ives thing — that’s right up my alley. It’s the most out blues I’ve ever heard.” There’s this Ives piece that I’ve played called “Study No. 22” and there’s this real thorny, knotty, chromatic dissonant bit that I love. I used the harmonic language of the Ives bit as my musical material to solo with. Part of the melody of “Stacked Mary Possum” is from an old fiddle tune “Black Berry Blossom.”
AP: How do you feel about the reaction to “Camp Meeting”?
Hornsby: Overall … the reaction has been shock and surprise on lots of levels. I would think that anybody who hears this would know that … that I’ve certainly spent some time with this music on a deep level. I’ve had a couple of writers liken this to when Rod Stewart made his standards records. That’s a very clueless statement because this is the opposite of that. That’s a commercial ploy a lot of people have used in the past several years. … It’s sort of modern day Muzak that goes down real easy for the old yuppie audience. I start off with an (Ornette Coleman) tune that’s so angular. “Death and the Flower” is a pretty obscure Keith Jarrett tune. … Why would they liken that to someone’s pop standards record?
AP: Do you miss pop stardom at all?
Hornsby: I was always a pretty bad celebrity. My thing is personally pretty boring. I’ve been married to the same woman for almost 24 years and I have twin boys. I’m just an old family guy. The best part about those pop stardom years was the respect that I got and all the subsequent calls I got from all these great musicians because they were fans of what I did. It opened me up and broadened my horizons and to this day it continues.Victor
ParticipantThe Ricky+Bruce album is nominated for an award from the IBMA — International Bluegrass Music Association. This is significant since these are the Bluegrass diehards who DON’T normally accept piano with their bluegrass. The category is “Recorded Event.” Ricky and his band are up for seven awards in all, mostly for their “Instrumentals” album.
http://www.ibma.org/ibma.awards/current … eslist.asp
Vic
Victor
ParticipantTouché, Megan. Not taking sides here, either. The love flows all around!
Vic
Victor
ParticipantElyce, I love you — you’re a special ed teacher, so you’re a giving person — and judging by your Pen Pic, you’ve survived a broken neck(!) But I have to place myself in the position of Defender of Ricky Skaggs again.
I feel it’s unfair to categorize the Skaggs/Thunder shows as “the same schtick every time,” and I sincerely doubt Bruce thinks so, or else he wouldn’t have scheduled so many of those gigs. Bluegrass is as improvisational as jazz any day of the week, and Skagg’s band is a top-notch group of musicians.
Just because it doesn’t suit your tastes is no need to diminish its artistry. I wouldn’t do that with the jazz stuff.
That is all.
Vic
Victor
ParticipantOh, yeah … showing my ignorance again. I’m not a huge fan of “Jacob’s Ladder,” especially bluegrass style. I usually skip it!
Victor
ParticipantThanks Will, thanks Amy. Hmmmm… Newport … anyone I know attend?
Carey? Si?
Vic
Victor
ParticipantInteresting! I’d have never figured it out. Do you have a Blackberry Blossom dose for comparison, Si?
Victor
ParticipantQuote:Interesting note on “Stacked Mary Possum”… but in David Day-esque tradition I’ll turn it into a question!
Which existing piece in Bruce’s repertoire is this based on? The clue is in the title… think of Bruce’s aversion to pretentious song names…I’m still wondering about Si’s question … something musically in “End of the Innocence” made me want to say that is the answer, but lyrically, the title is close to “Long Tall Cool One,” right (?).
Vic
Victor
ParticipantGot mine on Friday and listened to it as much as possible over the weekend. The bluegrass stuff was more my cup of tea, but this is undeniably cool. I feel like I’m growing more “hip” the more I listen to it. The songs that are credited to Bruce — including Charlie, Woody & You and Camp Meeting — are my favorites. I suppose it’s because they are most similar to his usual style? I like the slower-paced stuff, too, like Death and the Flower.
Thanks to Dana for the links to the professional reviews. I’d agree with the one who criticised the “tinny” drum sound; It seemed a little jarring at first. But kudos for reaching for something beyond the expected. Also thanks to DavidR for the Keith Jarrett recommendations.
I’d say this is good enough, along with the Ricky Skaggs record, to significantly improve Bruce’s batting average at next year’s Grammys. Unfortunately, neither category is likely to be televised.
Vic
Victor
ParticipantS’mores is good eatin’.
Victor
ParticipantDavid, I should be able to give my answer, so long as I don’t ruin your story!
I would have harrassed Bruce at every opportunity, truly earning that “stalker” label. If I’d run into him before the Boone show, I would have invited him to come sit around the campfire at the Honey Bear Campground and enjoy himself a “s’more” after the show.
Vic
Victor
ParticipantI think “Camp Meeting,” the title track, is my favorite upon first listen…
Victor
ParticipantJust pre-ordered mine via the link from Si’s front page. Here’s the complete track listing from Amazon (I don’t think we’ve listed this here in the forum before):
CAMP MEETING
1. Questions and Answers
2. Charlie, Woody and You/Study #22
3. Solar
4. Death and the Flower
5. Camp Meeting
6. Giant Steps
7. Celia
8. We’ll Be Together Again
9. Stacked Mary Possum
10. Straight, No Chaser
11. Un Poco Loco/Chant Song/Un Poco Loco/Chant SongAmazon also lists “Bruce Hornsby’s List of Music You Should Hear” on a related link. I never knew Bruce was inspired to write “Sticks and Stones” by listening to Radiohead’s “Everything in Its Right Place” from the album, “Kid A.” Some other nice recommendations from Bruce there as well.
—Vic
Victor
ParticipantIn Boone, Bruce sang “Talk of the Town,” inserting “the William & Mary Board of Visitors” in place of “cousins and uncles” who “are having fits” and “”predicting doom.” I took this to be a slight comical dig at the Board, which may be composed of a bunch of stuffed shirts quite unlike Mrs. Hornsby.
She’s probably one of the few females they’ve had on the Board.
Victor
ParticipantCool, David! So I take it you enjoyed Boone more than Greensboro? Obviously my absense made a big difference.
Victor
ParticipantAlways appreciate seeing these, Bryan! It’s almost become Bruce’s trademark now.
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