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               ``Harbor Lights'' (RCA) _ Bruce Hornsby
   
              ``Harbor Lights'' signifies the rebirth of Bruce Hornsby as an
   improviser and team player. It suggests an interesting new
   direction for his flagging career.
              The pianist has risen from three years of touring with the
   Grateful Dead with a looser, jazzier style and a bigger bag of
   rhythms including funk and soul.
              On this first album without the Range, the band that used to
   provide the background for his grandiose midtempo ballads, Hornsby
   challenges himself to keep up with guest artists Pat Metheny,
   Branford Marsalis, Phil Collins, Bonnie Raitt and Jerry Garcia, and
   he does.
              The early cuts ``Harbor Lights'' and ``Talk of the Town'' are
   the best, featuring lively interplay among the musicians.
              ``Fields of Gray,'' influenced by the hits of the Drifters and
   Sam Cooke, is engaging and radio-ready, and Raitt's sassy vocals
   brighten the lively shuffle, ``Rainbow's Cadillac.''
              Hornsby's own limited vocal range and frequently trite lyrics
   are a drag but the instrumental work is so good that the project
   flies and occasionally soars.
              _ By David Dishneau, Associated Press Writer.
   
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              ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ Bruce Hornsby, who gave himself 10 years to
   make it in Los Angeles and hit paydirt in six, now preaches the
   virtues of recording back home in Williamsburg, Va.
              ``I don't think I could ever go back,'' the 38-year-old pianist
   said. ``I'm a walking endorsement for home recording.''
              Hornsby's fourth album, ``Harbor Lights,'' was recorded in a
   studio he built with profits from his first three successful
   records.
              But it is not the solitary musical experience that many
   stay-at-home projects tend to be.
              Despite a three-year break between albums, Hornsby has been one
   of the music business' busiest networkers. The self-described ``gun
   for hire'' played on about 40 other albums and filled in on
   keyboards for the Grateful Dead.
              Hornsby invited such friends as Jerry Garcia, Bonnie Raitt,
   Branford Marsalis, Phil Collins and Pat Metheny to augment his
   basic trio. Many of his fellow musicians made it a working vacation
   by staying at Hornsby's house near the Virginia coast.
              During the break from his own music, Hornsby played in sessions
   with Bob Dylan and wrote a song with ex-Band member Robbie
   Robertson, recording it in New Orleans with the Meters.
              Another highlight was recording a version of his ``Valley Road''
   song with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.
              ``My horizons were broadened and I was able to get a glimpse
   into other people's worlds,'' he said. ``It was inspiring to see
   how other people worked.''
              There was time, too, to move from California to Williamsburg and
   to have twin boys with his wife. Hornsby named his new sons Russell
   and Keith, after two of his piano-playing heroes, Leon Russell and
   Keith Jarrett.
              Hornsby, who played Grateful Dead songs as a member of his older
   brother's rock band while growing up, got to experience the real
   thing when the band needed a keyboardist after Brent Myland died in
   1990.
              ``Where else can you get to play one song for an hour?'' he
   quipped.
              Actually, his tenure in the Grateful Dead is reflected in the
   more improvisational feel of his new album.
              ``We've always been improvisational in concert, we had less of a
   set list than the Dead,'' he said. ``That's always been part of the
   process, it just never came out as much on the records. It sounds
   looser and more spontaneous. It's sort of what I always wanted,
   frankly, but I just didn't get it.''
              ``Harbor Lights'' marked other changes for Hornsby. His backing
   band, the Range, is abandoned and Hornsby explores more fully the
   jazz styles hinted at during his piano solo for his signature song,
   ``The Way It Is.''
              ``This record is obviously more influenced by the jazz idiom,
   harmonically especially, and also rhythmically,'' he said. ``A lot
   of it is very swing-oriented. My guys in the band, they don't know
   that. That's not their strength at all.''
              Hornsby worked with two old friends, bass player Jimmy Haslip of
   the Yellowjackets and former Range drummer John Molo.
              Beyond those two, Hornsby said he wanted to ``cast the record
   the way a director would.''
              The director's casting choices include Phil Collins on bongos on
   the song, ``Talk of the Town.''
              That song, with a video directed by Spike Lee, hearkens back to
   the racial themes Hornsby first explored on ``The Way It Is.'' But
   the new song's swing-oriented piano and dance-style percussion make
   the song sound miles away musically.
              It's a story about the first interracial couple in his hometown
   more than 20 years ago.
              He doesn't remember their names anymore. But Hornsby said others
   will be checking; there's a certain segment of Williamsburg that
   always combs his lyrics for references to people and places they
   know.
              ``All of our records have been another version of `Our Town,'''
   he said. ``I've always wanted the songs to have collectively a
   sense of place, like it was all coming from one area _ sort of like
   Southern fiction.''
              The album's cover art, Edward Hopper's ``Rooms by the Sea,'' and
   title reflect Hornsby's ancestry among the watermen of the Virginia
   coast.
              Through liner notes, Hornsby explains the genesis of his songs
   in more detail than most musicians, even noting when he's been
   inspired by other songs.
              He said he's not worried about Top 40 success.
              ``I'm just trying to do good work and do it better,'' he said.
   ``I don't have control over this other thing. To live and die by
   the charts is really a bad thing. It's unhealthy. Obviously, if you
   listen to this new record, you know I'm not doing that.''
   
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   11/10 - Host Resort - Lancaster, PA
   11/11 - Symphony Hall - Allentown, PA
   11/26 - Valley Forge Music - Devon, PA
   11/27 - Palumbo Center - Pittsburgh, PA
   11/28 - Shea Theatre - Buffalo, NY      :-)
   11/30 - Landmark Theatre - Syracuse, NY :-)
   12/1  - Landmark Theatre - Vermont
   12/3,4 - Orpheum Theatre - Boston, MA
   12/5 - Mullins Center - Amherst, MA (U. Mass)
   12/7,8 - Paramount Theatre - NYC
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