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Bob Hillman : If You Lived Here, You'd Be Home
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Literate, tuneful folk rock
Genre: Rock: Americana
Release Date: 2006
If You Lived Here, You'd Be Home Record Label: Authentic Records
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
  • Buy CD - $12.97
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
My Satanic Friends 2:59 $0.99
Have You Heard the One About the Rabbi and the Priest? 3:34 $0.99
Another Country 3:05 $0.99
Something You Said 2:18 $0.99
Celebrating Nothing 2:45 $0.99
The Red Light District of Iowa City 2:58 $0.99
If You Lived Here, You'd Be Home 2:47 $0.99
Secret Handshake 2:29 $0.99
Light Hearted Years 3:11 $0.99
Long Live the Revolution 3:22 $0.99
List of Things To Do 2:55 $0.99
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Album Notes

In a music world increasingly compartmentalized into tiny musical pigeonholes, Bob Hillman's songs live in several neighborhoods at once. Hillman's third album, IF YOU LIVED HERE YOU'D BE HOME, bears the melodic hooks and infectious feel of power-pop, the rootsy, organic vibe of Americana rock, and the conceptual heft and lyrical insight of the singer/songwriter. With sharp social satire that harkens back to vintage Kinks and a literary bent as book-smart as the Decemberists but as heartfelt as Elliott Smith, Hillman delivers concise, punchy tunes short on pretense and long on wit and wisdom.

Originally from Los Angeles, Hillman came to New York City in the '90s to pursue songwriting with a vengeance. He quickly insinuated himself into the local scene and it wasn't long before he was opening shows worldwide for everyone from Suzanne Vega to Dave Alvin, stealing audiences' hearts with a mix of spontaneous humor and perspicacious songcraft, and stealing the show everywhere from the Fillmore Auditorium to the Newport Folk Festival. A move to the midwest found Hillman in the heart of the Iowa City songwriters' scene that spawned storied troubadour Greg Brown. Far from the lights of New York, Hillman put together a band of crack local musicians and made IF YOU LIVED HERE YOU'D BE HOME, a homegrown record that matches his worldly observations with small-town heart and musical muscle.

Hillman will be touring throughout 2006 in support of his third batch of expertly crafted, hard-hitting songs, demonstrating the commanding skills that have won him numerous songwriting awards and placed him on hand-picked compilation albums alongside the likes of Vega, Aimee Mann, and Bruce Springsteen (all of whom have been mentioned by the press as reference points to triangulate Hillman's broad-ranging style). As one reviewer put it, "he may be one indie-movie soundtrack away from bigger things." Whether or not the silver screen becomes Hillman's entrée to the mainstream, IF YOU LIVED HERE YOU'D BE HOME makes an even bigger mark on the musical map this formidable songsmith has already tacked up on the windshield.

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REVIEWS

author: Bangar
I'm still listening to this album. This is an artist worth listening to.
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A timely, complex album
author: Jason A. Thomas
Bob Hillman's tertiary album--to use a little Hillman-esque vocabulary--sums up the times very well. "Celebrating Nothing," presumably a song about 2005, captures the shallowness of American society in this era. "Have You Heard...Priest" has a Bob Dylan feel to it, with stinging, dark references to a wide variety of subjects, including business, religion, and greed. "Secret Handshake" may resonnate with people who feel like outsiders in the 21st Century economy and power-structure, which often rewards "who you know" rather than "what you know." "Light-Hearted Years" is touching and sad, but with a positive message about someone avoiding despair. The title song "If You Lived Here..." is a song of yearning for the down-to-earth and sincere nature of life away from showbiz and the simple-minded glamor of southern California. (Not long ago, my brother experienced a similar journey after moving from the San Diego area to the cultural city of Asheville, North Carolina.) As with Hillman's other work, I highly recommend this CD.
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author: Bangar
Third Cd and still going strong. Intelligent and different lyrics. Not as an instant liking for as his earlier CDs but it just gets better and better with each listen.
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