America's most underrated musical genius | Bruce Hornsby

Bruce Hornsby with The Grateful Dead performing at Soldier Field on July 4, 2015 in Chicago. Jay Blakesberg/Invision for the Grateful Dead/AP Images

I’m not going to go into a long, winding diatribe about how and why and when Bruce became a humble god living among us mortals. He’d just deny it. Instead, I’ll show you.

Hell, this is from 1999. There’s another 20 years of new stuff to take in from there, and he’s still going. Not now, of course. Pandemic, anyone?

You certainly know him from the title track from his debut album, The Way It Is, but that was back in 1986. What did he do from 1986 to 1999? Hmm…

  • The Way It Is (1986)
  • Scenes From The Southside (1988)
  • A Night On The Town (1990)
  • Harbor Lights (1993)
  • Hot House (1995, a personal favorite… fantastic album)
  • Spirit Trail (1998)

Not to mention countless live shows, playing with the Grateful Dead (a lot.)

So, after this show, what more can you expect to find? Take a look…

  • Here Come The Noisemakes (2000, a collection of live recordings from 1998 to 2000 as the Noisemakers would become his new band)
  • Big Swing Face (2002)
  • Halcyon Days (2004)
  • Intersections (2006, an essential box-set of loads of unreleased material, live and studio)
  • Ricky Skaggs & Bruce Hornsby (2007, some freaking amazing bluegrass)
  • Camp Meeting (2007, an album of jazz tracks!, very lovely)
  • Levitate (2009)
  • Bride of The Noisemakers (2011, another live collection I can listen to all day long)
  • Rehab Reunion (2016, where Bruce spends more time playing the dulcimer, and it’s amazing)
  • Absolute Zero (2019)

For a more complete listing of almost everything Bruce has done, check out his discography on Wikipedia.

Bruce is a freaking space wizard. He’s a master at two-handed piano, and incorporates that skill into many tracks, like Spider Fingers from the Hot House album, and he loves to improvise when playing live, as you can see here…

Here’s the album version. See if you can pick out how each hand is playing…

Then, there’s all those times Bruce played with The Grateful Dead, and The Dead were always great with bootlegging, so here’s a show from 1990… with Bruce on the keys…

All in all, Bruce makes fantastic music and I think you’ll love it all as much as I do, considering there’s tons to choose from. And if you love live shows as much as I do, then check out Nugs.net where you can purchase official “bootlegs” that are simply wonderful. There are numerous free shows to pick from, and they offer a lot of FLAC versions for most shows, all recorded from the board and sounding FABULOUS!!

If, when you look up from a five hour binging session are surprised that so much time has passed, I’ll happily take the blame ;)