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Show C-2 B The Park Record K AC O N M AR KE Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, August 11-14, 2018 Hornsby continues musical quest T A S U PRICE REDUCED $10 0,0 0 0 BE AUTIFU LLY BUILT PARK M E ADOWS HOM E –3 1 4 0 C R E S T L I N E D R I V E– 4 Bedrooms | 4.5 Bath | 4,280 Square Feet | 3-Car Garage | $2,490,000 Don’t miss your chance to own this beautiful home. If you’re looking for low maintenance this is the one for you. Very large en-suite bedrooms with a main level master. Features include a home office, open floor plan with high ceilings, four fireplaces, central AC, central vac, brick courtyard with a gas fire pit, three-car heated garage, and much more. Call to view soon. Scott Kelly REALTOR PHOTO BY MEGAN HOLMES Bruce Hornsby continues to seek new musical expressions. The Grammy Award-winning pianist, who has performed with the Grateful Dead, Ricky Skaggs and Christian McBride, will play a St. Regis Big Stars, Bright Nights concert on Thursday at City Park. ® 435.640.4340 | scott.kelly@sothebysrealty.com Grammy winner will play Thursday at City Park This material is based upon information that we consider reliable, but because it has been supplied by third parties, we cannot represent that it is accurate or complete, including price, or withdrawal without notice; square footage is an estimate only. ©MMXVIII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a licensed trademark to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. An Equal Opportunity Company. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. Copyright© Summit Sotheby’s International Realty 2018. SCOTT IWASAKI The Park Record Multi Grammy Award-winning pianist Bruce Hornsby is a musical chameleon. He is known for his pop radio hits “The Way It Is” and “Mandolin Rain,” and he has collaborated with singer-songwriter Bonnie Raitt, the Eagles’ Don Henley, bluegrass musician and producer Ricky Skaggs, the Grateful Dead and jazz greats Pat Metheny and Branford Marsalis. He’s also worked with filmmaker Spike Lee on the score for the film “Clockers” and collaborated with singer Chaka Khan on a song for Lee’s film “She’s Gotta Have It.” “I’m a lifetime music student, always looking for new inspiration and trying to improve, grow and broaden my abilities and range, and I feel that I owe my audience what I’m most passionate about at the time,” Hornsby said in an email. “That said, I try to also be kind to “soft-core” fans, those who come to hear six songs from 1986-90. I generally play anywhere from three to six of those songs every night in some shape or form.” Park City will get a chance to see Hornsby in action when he plays on Thursday, Aug. 16, at City Park. The Park Record caught up with Hornsby via email a couple of weeks ago. The text of the conversation follows: Dear Editor, Park Record: Will the Park City show display different facets of your career with present-day arrangements on older songs? Bruce Hornsby: I “re-invent my classics” all the time. I’m in a very fertile, creative place with For more details please visit our website. www.parkrecord.com/writealetter regards to new music and musical areas to explore. I’m an improviser, and am not really interested in replicating old records or repeating old ideas. Locals can expect a loose, spontaneous concert that involves an attempt at deep musicianship, with a few laughs thrown in for emotional balance. P.R: When you do rearrange a song like “Mandolin Rain,” what types of things do you latch onto to make it more interesting for you to play? B.H.: I never set out to intentionally reinvent an old song; the reinventions usually occur spontaneously, in the live moment, and the best ones stay around through the years. I’m in a very fertile, creative place with regards to new music and musical areas to explore...” Bruce Hornsby, multi-Grammy Award-winning musician and bandleader P.R.: Instead of just dabbling in different musical styles and genres, you are known to go in full force. How does that type of commitment satisfy your artistic self? B.H.: With respect to the two major styles that I’ve dealt with apart from my singer-songwriter efforts (and those styles are bluegrass and jazz), I took a deep dive after many years of dabbling in those musical areas. I studied jazz music in college intensely, and had several brief forays into the bluegrass world through the years starting with my collaboration with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Jerry Douglas, Mark O’Connor, Bernie Leadon and Roy Huskey Jr. on the “Will The Circle Be Unbroken Vol. II” record. Fans badgered me for years to make a jazz record and a bluegrass record, and I finally got around to both of them around the same time, with both records released in 2007. I’m referring to the first “Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby” record and the trio record (“Camp Meeting”) with Christian McBride and Jack DeJohnette; two records of which I’m very proud. P.R.: What type of musical exploration led you to the Appalachian dulcimer and recording of your most recent album, “Rehab Reunion?” B.H.: This record was made for a very natural reason. I had been playing the dulcimer more and more, on our live shows where for the last seven years we’ve featured a stripped-down acoustic dulcimer-based section in our shows, one that has become increasingly popular. I started writing more songs on the instrument, we were playing them live to great response, and it became clear that this record needed to be made. Certainly on an ability level this record could have been made at any time; I’ve always been terrible at playing the dulcimer, and I still am. P.R.: When you work with guest artists, in this album’s case Mavis Staples and Justin Vernon, how do those types of collaborations influence your music writing? B.H.: In those two instances the songs were written before I asked these two amazing people to guest on them. I just played with Mavis at the Kennedy Center in (Washington) D.C., and we performed “Celestial Railroad” together for the first time — what a great time. And I’ve been hooking up with Justin here and there for the past year; I played CoachPlease see Hornsby, C-4 STEM CELL THERAPY FOR PAIN PRESENTED BY: JOHN LAWRENCE M.D. Join us for Our Seminars Held at our Park City Office August 7th @ 12:00pm August 14th @ 12:00pm August 21st @ 12:00pm August 28th @ 12:00pm DO YOU SUFFER FROM… REGAN ARCHIBALD, LAC, DIPL OM Board Certified Physicians specializing in Regenerative and Functional Medicine • Tendonitis • Dementia • Autoimmunity • Chronic Pain • Thyroid Issues • Lung Issues • Nerve Damage • Inflammation Call Today 435-640-1353 Find out if Surgery-Free, stem cell treatments can help relieve your joint pain and get your life back! • Back Pain • Knee Pain • Shoulder Pain • Hip Pain • Osteoarthritis • Neuropathy • Plantar Fasciitis East West Health 1790 Sun Peak Dr., #A-102 Park City, UT 84098 |