Wait—this is the famous Don Henley song. Why is it on a Bruce Hornsby album? Because Hornsby wrote the piano and chord structure . The 1988 recording here is a solo piano demo. The RAR 2021 pressing illuminates the harmonic complexity of this demo. You hear the squeak of the piano stool. You hear Hornsby humming the melody before he sings it. It’s a ghost track that explains the birth of a standard.
The nine-minute suite. On CD, it felt long. On the 2021 RAR, it feels architectural . The improvisational midsection where the piano quotes "Stars and Stripes Forever" has a satirical bite that the 80s production softened. The run-out groove on Side B is etched with the phrase: "Virginia is for lovers... of ragtime." The Hidden Treasure: The 2021 Digital Rarities While the vinyl is the star, the "RAR 2021" keyword also dredges up a digital exclusive: For the first time, the B-sides from the 1988 singles were uploaded to HD streaming services (Tidal, Qobuz) in 2021. Wait—this is the famous Don Henley song
In the sprawling landscape of late-80s rock and roll, few debuts were as instantly timeless—yet quietly revolutionary—as Bruce Hornsby and the Range’s Scenes from the Southside . Released in 1988 as the follow-up to the diamond-certified The Way It Is , the album often finds itself in the shadow of its predecessor’s title track. However, for die-hard fans, Scenes from the Southside represents the moment Hornsby stopped trying to repeat a formula and started weaving his distinct Virginia-DNA into a quilt of jazz voicings, bluegrass sensibility, and literate, melancholic storytelling. The 1988 recording here is a solo piano demo