Search - Bruce Hornsby :: Intersections 1985-2005 (W/Dvd) (Spkg)

Intersections 1985-2005 (W/Dvd) (Spkg)
Bruce Hornsby
Intersections 1985-2005 (W/Dvd) (Spkg)
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (19) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #4


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Bruce Hornsby
Title: Intersections 1985-2005 (W/Dvd) (Spkg)
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Legacy
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 7/25/2006
Album Type: Box set
Genres: Pop, Rock
Styles: Adult Contemporary, Adult Alternative
Number of Discs: 5
SwapaCD Credits: 5
UPC: 828767893921

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Member CD Reviews

Jeffrey M. from OAKLAND PARK, FL
Reviewed on 10/28/2009...
Love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Must hear.

CD Reviews

The Artist At His Zenith
D. Sean Brickell | gorgeous Virginia Beach, VA United States | 07/25/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Fair disclosure: I've known Bruce Hornsby for 30 years but have never allowed that cloud my critical judgement of his work.



Saying such, let me be the first to state his box set is amongst the most articulate and honest career retrospective compendia in the history of music. Mr. Hornsby has never been one to play it safe and stay predictable. The familiar favorites -- and there are many! -- have been retooled and served freshly anew. This collection is filled with gems.



Millions of listeners prefer the comfort of knowing their music note-for-note. That's why the likes of Eagles, Paul Simon and Chicago continue to do so well; they're the same show-after-show, year-after-year. But for those of us who appreciate the high-wire challenges presented by Mr. Hornsby, the artistic rewards are breathtaking.



We all know what syncopation does for a song. And while it's true that Mr. Hornsby is masterful at shifting accents within a tune, it's also true that he's pulled off the remarkable feat of syncopating his entire body of work in this overview.



It's my judgement that only Van Morrison and Miles Davis have so continuously evolved their music whilst carrying the loyal to newer heights each time.



Asking me to pick a favorite cut, or CD for that matter, from the box set is sort of like picking your favorite child. Simply impossible. The level of performance and song selection never drops below excellence. Many times, these qualities are staggering. Not once will you hear a single note played for the sake of purely being clever, however. Mr. Hornsby is comfortable with his wide scope of aptitude, unconcerned about unnecessary emphasis, and always tasty in his delivery.



It all coheres.



The last CD that brought me this much joy was Randy Newman's "Songbook, Vol. 1," which was my selection for 2003 CD Of The Year. Mr. Newman rebooted standards in his earlier catalogue, then reintroduced the songs more fully realized to his fan base who also had matured. That's precisely the platform upon which Mr. Hornsby has so ably built his box set.



So here's my recommendation. Buy this for the plentiful rewards. Your appreciation for the songs herein will expand exponentially.



In short, you'll experience an artist at his zenith."
A treasure trove!
spiral_mind | Pennsylvania | 08/01/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I didn't think anything could beat Richard Thompson's Life & Music for Greatest Box Set Of 2006 - but now we've got this small goldmine showing the depth of Bruce Hornsby's ever-fruitful career. Does the world really deserve such riches?



Hyperbole aside, I'm perfectly serious when I say this is very likely the box-set release of the decade. As Sean Brickell says below: it's his eternal restlessness that makes Bruce such a fascinating figure (not to mention a playful genre-be-damned attitude toward all music and a tremendous piano virtuosity that never once succumbs to flash). For anyone not yet familiar, all I can offer is a hopelessly inadequate description - upbeat jazz-pop-rock tinged with anything from R&B/funk to bluegrass and the odd classical quote, conveyed with an infectious warmth & humor and a coherence that belies such eclectic elements. Now go buy Spirit Trail ASAP.



In addition to compiling a small heap of tunes from scattered soundtracks and tribute albums ("Big Stick"! "Shadowland"!), Intersections has 23 previously unreleased live tracks. As usual for Bruce, of course none of these are presented quite the same as on record. "Valley Road" alone appears three times - once as a thumping slow-groove piece, once as a yee-haw bluegrass tune and once in a bouncing Grateful Dead blues performance - none of which sound anything like the original. Some live tracks are new solo versions. Some are reinventions. Some get combined with an oddball cover or two from the likes of Johnny Cash or Bud Powell or Sam Cooke or Pink Floyd. Recycled material? Pfah. A few tracks do appear from the original records, but superb mastering makes them sound better than ever.



And that's not to mention the DVD which has even more great tunage. The music videos are OK (are those Muppets we see in "Swing Street"?), but the additional rare/unreleased material is even better. Check "The Mighty Quinn" with BB King just for starters.



This collection manages to compile many disparate diamonds from an already-great catalogue, make it all work together and stand as a complete listening experience on its own. Even if you've got everything the man's officially put out, you've got less than half of this. It's worth every penny. Box set of the decade, anyone?"