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- Q5910037 subject Q6844008.
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- Q5910037 abstract "Hot House is a 1995 album by American musician Bruce Hornsby. It is Hornsby's second solo-credited album and his fifth overall release. "Walk in the Sun" and "Cruise Control" were released to radio as singles.The album's cover art, featuring an imagined jam session between bluegrass legend Bill Monroe and jazz legend Charlie Parker, served as an apt metaphor for the rich fusion of musical styles Hornsby was developing and expanding. The album found Hornsby expanding upon the foray into jazz sound from Harbor Lights, this time reintroducing elements of bluegrass from A Night On The Town and his earlier collaborations. Much like the socially conscious lyrics of his earlier work, the underlying messages behind the catchy tunes are often very dark, such as on "Country Doctor", "Hot House Ball" and "White Wheeled Limousine", where story-telling lyrics build around spousal murder, nuclear disaster, and wedding-day adultery, respectively.The album featured many of Harbor Lights' guests, such as Pat Metheny and Jimmy Haslip. Béla Fleck also collaborates again on banjo. The album's closing track, "Cruise Control," is the last Hornsby song on which Jerry Garcia played guitar; at a concert he performed in Buffalo, New York, in August 2008 on the anniversary of Garcia's death, Hornsby said Garcia had wanted to play on "Country Doctor", but was given an easier tune to play because of his poor health."White Wheeled Limousine" had debuted five years earlier as an encore to Branford Marsalis's opening act for the Grateful Dead's New Year's Concert on December 31, 1990, when Marsalis and Rob Wasserman joined Hornsby in the performance. The Hot House version of "White Wheeled Limousine" pairs Pat Metheny's guitar with Béla Fleck's banjo for a blisteringly intricate call-and-response alongside Hornsby's piano runs. Hot House also makes an homage to Hornsby's years with the Dead via his recasting of the chorus/bridge of the Dead's song "Estimated Prophet" as the newly lyricized Hornsby tune "Tango King." The album also boasts a more prominent role for Harbor Lights alum John D'earth on trumpet and introduces Bobby Read on woodwinds and J. V. Collier on bass. Read and Collier continue to perform with Hornsby.".
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- Q5910037 recordLabel Q202585.
- Q5910037 recordedIn Q108117.
- Q5910037 recordedIn Q1370.
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- Q5910037 releaseDate "1995-07-18".
- Q5910037 runtime "3551.0".
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- Q5910037 artist Q918502.
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- Q5910037 label Q202585.
- Q5910037 lastAlbum "Harbor Lights".
- Q5910037 length "3551.0".
- Q5910037 name "Hot House".
- Q5910037 nextAlbum "Spirit Trail".
- Q5910037 producer "Bruce Hornsby".
- Q5910037 recorded "Bruce Hornsby's House (Virginia), Club Front (Marin County, California), Soundmasters (Los Angeles, California)".
- Q5910037 released "1995-07-18".
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- Q5910037 comment "Hot House is a 1995 album by American musician Bruce Hornsby. It is Hornsby's second solo-credited album and his fifth overall release. "Walk in the Sun" and "Cruise Control" were released to radio as singles.The album's cover art, featuring an imagined jam session between bluegrass legend Bill Monroe and jazz legend Charlie Parker, served as an apt metaphor for the rich fusion of musical styles Hornsby was developing and expanding.".
- Q5910037 label "Hot House (Bruce Hornsby album)".
- Q5910037 name "Hot House".