There isn't a second of Bruce Hornsby & the Range's The Way It Is 
that suggests it's a debut album. On the contrary, the record sounds 
like the culmination of a band's efforts over many years. The group has a
 distinct sound of its own, often led by Hornsby's bright piano chords 
and elastic tenor, with cohesive and evocative arrangements; there is 
new age music here, as well as jazz and country, and the mixture is 
presented naturally by musicians who seem to have been playing with each
 other for some time. Similarly, the songwriting has its own flavor. 
Hornsby wrote seven of the nine songs with his brother John Hornsby,
 and they create their own world, a working-class environment of longing
 and loneliness set against the background of the Virginia Tidewater 
area. (The album cover displays a sepia-toned photograph of the band set
 over another photograph of the long Chesapeake Bay Bridge.) The lyrics 
are lightly poetic and restrained, for the most part. The exception is 
the title song (written by Bruce Hornsby alone), a brave if somewhat 
clumsily written attack on the heartless right-wing politics of the 
mid-'80s, as the U.S. suffered through a second Reagan
 administration determined to roll back civil rights gains. The boldness
 of the statement and the lovely piano theme more than compensate for 
the awkward writing, however, making the song one of the album's most 
memorable. And that's saying a lot when the competition includes the 
engaging "Mandolin Rain" and the appealingly romantic "Every Little 
Kiss" (Hornsby's other sole writing credit). Perhaps it shouldn't be a 
surprise that the music is so accomplished. Hornsby was no teenage 
neophyte when he made it, having kicked around the music business and 
gotten into his thirties, and the band includes such veterans as David Mansfield, who may be remembered as a member of Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder troupe and the Alpha Band,
 as well as being a film composer. Sometimes a debut album just happens 
to be the first music most people get to hear by a mature talent, and 
that's the case here on the debut album of the year. (Bruce Hornsby 
& the Range went on to win the 1986 Grammy Award for Best New 
Artist.) 
 

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