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List of Bruce Hornsby albums

Bruce Hornsby Album - Scenes from the Southside

Bruce Hornsby Album - Scenes from the Southside (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (29 ratings)
Release Date:1990-10-25
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Adult Alternative Pop/Rock, Adult Contemporary, Heartland Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock, Pop/Rock Music, Popular Music, Rock, Rock/Pop, Soft Rock
Label:RCA
UPC:078635668629
Approx. Price:$11.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Look Out Any Window
2 . Valley Road
3 . I Will Walk With You
4 . Road Not Taken
5 . Show Goes On
6 . Old Playground
7 . Defenders of the Flag
8 . Jacob's Ladder
9 . Till the Dreaming's Done
Customer review - 2002-09-18
- Scenes From the Southside is still an 80's winner!
Well it's hard to compare this album with "The Way It Is" Hornsby's first great album, but I will try my best. The first release off of this album was "The Valley Road" and it was just a breath of fresh air when it came out in June of 1988. I had just graduated high school in Oklahoma and it was nice and hot and so was this song. Hornsby does his best to stay up with a lot of one hit wonders that were pumping out pop music at that time of year. "The Valley Road" reminds me of a road trip to Louisiana to visit my Grandmother and my Mom. The radio stations from Oklahoma all the way to Louisiana had this song on a big rotation and I heard it a lot. Needless to say the cd has the right title "Scenes From the Southside" reminds me a lot of the South that year of 1988. Also not to be overshadowed was another great song that came off the same album in late August and early September of 88 and that was "Look Out Any Window". It reminds me of moving into the dorms at college. But most of all the words have great meaning when you hear Bruce sing, "And you see the color of the fields turning"..... Bruce Hornsby gives you vivid detail in his words of music, so that you can really empathize with the people in his songs. I actually can visualize the fall setting in on a town and the farmers trying to get their crops in before winter. There are a few other good songs on this album as well such as "Jacobs Ladder", Bruce did a pretty good job on this tune, but I still prefer Huey Lewis's version better. I know that Hornsby actually wrote the song for Lewis, but Huey still has the upper hand when it comes to the pipes. I highly recomend this cd! Brings back a lot of great memories from the late 80's.
Customer review - 2005-01-23
- 1988's Best Album of the Year - An All-Time Classic
Bruce Hornsby and the Range burst onto the music scene at the end of 1986 with the #1 smash "The Way It Is". Hornsby "the other Bruce" immediately became a recognized name on the music scene. Two trademarks of the Hornsby sound was the incredible piano work and what would soon become known as the "Virginia sound". By mid 1988, Hornsby's second album was released. This album, "Scenes From the Southside" does not disappoint. It capitalizes on those two trademarks, but with a much stronger set of sounds - good enough to win my award for 1988 Album of the Year.

You will hear great piano work on this album and you will hear the "Virginia Sound". The best way I can describe this sound is a mixture of a lot of different genres of music: Jazz, Classical, Bluegrass, Rock, Country, and Pop. Don't forget about "The Range" on this album. Hornsby's background band is superb on this album. Joe Puerta and George Marinelli provide some outstanding background vocals on many of the songs. Bruce Hornsby and John Hornsby provide the lyrics to what is some very strong songwriting. This another case of conventional radio turning their back on something really good because this should have had plenty of airplay.

The album opens with "Look Out Any Window". In this song Hornsby discusses how the key influencers in the world turn their back and ignore some of the every day problems. The last part of this song is really the best part. It is one of the best wrap ups to a song. It's highlighted by the lyrics in which each verse starts with the Range going "Look Out" and then Hornsby singing "Look out for....". I'm shocked that the music industry didn't put this up for record of the year because this is as good as it gets.

The Top 10 hit on the album was "The Valley Road". A very good song in its own right. One thing to listen to is The Range's great background vocals in the chorus. The Range provides great background vocals throughout.

"I Will Walk with You" has some nice piano work in this song. The Piano work complements some great instrumentation perfecty. In this song, Hornsby discusses how "Everybody wants a little more", but also says that things simply "You can pick me up when I fall". It's interesting to hear whether Bruce is talking about a friend or a lover as the person (the 'you') he sings about, but that's what makes the song so good.

"The Road Not Taken" is a seven minute masterpiece. Great piano work, great lyrics. I really felt that we are taken to the deep corners of Virginia when he opens "Down in the southwest town of Richlands, I fell in love with an Applachian girl...". The lyrics and music have a delightfully haunting touch to it as Hornsby paints a story of his relationship with a girl from Applachia. On the chorus, the background vocals are never better as you hear the Range back him perfectly in "Every time I see face". About 3 minutes into the song, there is a beautiful piano interlude before Hornsby goes into the third verse in which he talks about his return to the area after many years. The last minute of the song has a nice piano/guitar jam that wraps up the story nicely. My best description of the song is its a 7 minute movie on a CD and the jam is what you'll hear on the closing credits.

"The Show Goes On" was always one of my favorites. When this song was used in the movie "Backdraft", I got a whole new perspective on this. It was used to show how the firefighters in Chicago keep "going on". Perhaps the lines "But you never noticed, just the same tired flames burn" might have been the influence that Ron Howard used to put this into the movie. A quiet piano solo opens the song and then a great introduction to the song as the rest of the instrumentation comes into play. Then the mellow drum followed by strong piano make for the best one minute lead in to a song I ever heard.

In an interview I heard with Hornsby, "The Old Playground" was "Hornsby's ticket to the NBA". This song was used in NBA Basketball commercials. This is a great tribute to all the games played in the schoolyard playground and intermixes the story of the older one coming to play with the young ones. The beat of the song gives a nice "basketball" feel to the song. Very catchy song.

"Defenders of the Flag" features Huey Lewis playing Harp. Somehow I think this Hornsby's message to the Jim Bakker's of the world as he refers to the preacher. Then he belts out some great lines "If these guys are the good ones, I don't want to hear the bad". This song catches on you as you hear it.

"Jacob's Ladder" was a #1 hit by Huey Lewis and the News about a year before this album was released. Huey and Hornsby have a history together as Huey sang a duet with Bruce on "Down the Road Tonight" on "The Way it Is" album. If you liked the Huey version, you'll love this version.

The album wraps up with "Till the Dreaming's Done". It's a nice mellow end to the album. It's probably the weakest song of the album, but don't look at that as a negative - this album is just so strong and this song would stand on its own.

I'm shocked that this album didn't exceed "The Way It Is" in commercial sales. This had a much stronger set of songs. After this album, Hornsby never reached the plateaus that he hit with this album as he began to search for a new niche for his career. This album is a must buy for Hornsby and non-Hornsby fans alike.
Customer review - 1999-12-10
- One for the road...
As much as I loved their debut album "The Way It Is", this one is even better!

There are few pleasures sweeter for me than heading out onto the open road and cranking this CD up in the car...Look Out Any Window, The Valley Road, and I Will Walk With You all evoke an indescribable nostalgia for crisp autumn days growing up in eastern Canada, the nippy hickory-scented air scattering the brightly coloured leaves throughout the countryside.

Few piano lullabies are as beautiful as The Show Goes On, and Till the Dreaming's Done is pure romance.

This is Bruce Hornsby at his best before the Range mutated and Bruce went his own merry way.

Customer review - 1998-03-21
- One of the Best Albums Ever
It takes a lot to be strong all the way through an album. Here, Bruce Hornsby stays strong and powerful not only with his socially oriented lyrics, but this album also shows his beautiful piano playing at it's best. Look Out Any Window is a phenomonal opener about what happens when you fall into the trap of believing too long. The Valley Road is the most impressive track on the album and also the hardest to interpret. I still can't quite figure out the meaning behind the lyrics. A girl gets pregnant and the father doesn't like it, though. This is another showing of Hornsby's brilliant social conscience. Other highlights include the gorgeous heart rendering lost-love songs, "Road Not Taken" and "Til The Dreaming's Done". "Defenders Of the Flag" is an almost frightening statement of who our American society views as our leaders and why they shouldn't be our heroes. "Jacob's Ladder" is warmly done here, before Huey Lewis's smash version. Overall, Hornsby hit his masterpiece, grand slam, in this, his Sophomore effort. END
Customer review - 2002-07-12
- The Near-Classic Followup to "The Way It Is"
This album could easily be titled "The Way It Is, Part II." Bruce again uses his chiming keyboard technique and Appalachian soundscapes to create a welcome alternative to the overly synthesized sounds on '80s radio. And, while "Look Out Any Window" and "The Valley Road" were major hits, the real heart of this album is in the next three tracks. "I Will Walk With You," "The Road Not Taken," and "The Show Goes On," with their richly layered bluegrass instrumentation, are simply three of the most beautiful rock songs of their era. Elsewhere, Bruce tends to let his social commentary get in the way of the music ("The Old Playground," "Defenders of the Flag"), but this still ranks as an essential Bruce Hornsby recording.
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