Man arrested after threatening an attack on a high-speed train in Germany

A man was arrested on Thursday after threatening an attack on a high-speed train in Germany, police said. Several people were slightly injured when firecrackers were set off.

Associated Press A policewoman stands on a platform at Siegburg station, where a Deutsche Bahn ICE train is parked, in Siegburg, Germany, early Friday, April 3, 2026, after a man was arrested on Thursday after threatening an attack on a high-speed train. (Roberto Pfeil/dpa via AP) A police officer stands on a platform at Siegburg station where a Deutsche Bahn ICE train is parked, in Siegburg, Germany, early Friday, April 3, 2026, after a man was arrested on Thursday after threatening an attack on a high-speed train. (Roberto Pfeil/dpa via AP) Police officers stand on a platform at Siegburg station, where a Deutsche Bahn ICE train is parked, in Siegburg, Germany, early Friday, April 3, 2026, after a man was arrested Thursday after threatening an attack on a high-speed train. (Roberto Pfeil/dpa via AP)

Germany Attack Threat

The train was en route from Cologne to Frankfurt on Thursday evening. It was evacuated in Siegburg, not far from Cologne, and federal police said the man was restrained and arrested, German news agency dpa reported. They said he had a knife in his backpack.

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The man had shut himself in a bathroom on the train, according to police. German newspaper Bild reported that the firecrackers were thrown into an aisle. Police said several people sustained superficial flesh wounds.

There was no immediate information on the suspect.

Man arrested after threatening an attack on a high-speed train in Germany

A man was arrested on Thursday after threatening an attack on a high-speed train in Germany, police said. Several peop...
Gulf kingdom of Bahrain cracks down on dissent as Iran war reignites internal unrest

A man detained in Bahrain last month as the island kingdom came undermissile attack from Iranvanished for days, until his family was called to retrieve his body from a military hospital.

Associated Press FILE - This image released by Bahrain's Interior Ministry shows firefighters extinguishing flames after an Iranian projectile struck an industrial area in Ma'ameer, Bahrain, March 9, 2026. (Bahrain Interior Ministry via AP, File) This photo provided by the family of Hussein Fatiil, shows Fatiil, a Bahraini activist, in Bani Jamra, Bahrain, 2026. (Family courtesy photo via AP) This is a locator map for the Gulf Cooperation Council member states: Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait and United Arab Emirates. (AP Photo)

Bahrain Crackdown

Relatives said Mohamed al-Mousawi, a Shiite Muslim who had previously been imprisoned, was saving money to start a business. His body was returned covered in slash marks and bruising, including on the soles of his feet.

His death has become a flashpoint in the Sunni-ruled, Shiite-majority country on the war's front lines, where critics say authorities have revived tactics used to suppressArab Spring protests in 2011.

Bahrain, a monarchy that hoststhe U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, has arrested dozens of people throughout the war for filming strikes and demonstrations, expressing support for Iran, and on suspicion of spying for it.

"They want to make sure nobody challenges the state's narrative and silence any voices not telling the story (of the war) how they want it to be told," said Sayed Ahmed AlWadaei of the London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy.

Bahrain's Interior Ministry said al-Mousawi was arrested on suspicion of spying for Iran, allegations denied by his family, and that images of his wounds were "inaccurate and misleading." Bahrain's government said in a statement that the country is defending its national security. It denied any sectarianism, saying authorities have acted lawfully and that independent bodies investigate allegations of abuse.

Signs of torture

Al-Mousawi served about 11 years of a 21-year prison sentence on charges including arson and belonging to a terrorist cell before being released in 2024 as part ofa royal amnesty.

A relative and a close family friend, who spoke to AP on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, said al-Mousawi disappeared on March 19 after attending prayers with two friends who also have not been seen since. Rights groups have long accused Bahrain of enforced disappearances.

On March 27, his family received a call to collect his body. The relative, who saw it at the morgue, said al-Mousawi appeared to have been whipped with cables. He said there were apparent electrocution burns, including behind his knees, and cigarette burns elsewhere on the body.

The AP separately reviewed images of al-Mousawi's body, which bore marks described by a total of five witnesses who saw it in person. All spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.

Bahrain's Interior Ministry said al-Mousawi had been held by the National Security Agency. As part of reforms following the 2011 protests, the domestic spy service was stripped of its powers to arrest over abuse allegations. But they were restored in 2017 as Bahrain deepened a long-running campaign to suppress dissent.

The Interior Ministry said images of "injuries sustained by the deceased are inaccurate and misleading and have been deliberately disseminated to mislead public opinion," without elaborating.

The death certificate from the military hospital said he died of a heart attack. His family said the 32-year-old had no preexisting conditions.

Ahmed Banasr, a forensic expert with the New York-based Physicians for Human Rights, said the wounds in the images were consistent with blunt force trauma. Wounds on the soles of his feet help rule out other explanations, such as a fight or fall.

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"The findings are highly consistent with alleged torture," he said.

War aggravates long-standing grievances

Al-Mousawi was among dozens of Bahraini Shiites ensnared in a crackdown that critics say has escalated since Israel and the U.S. launched the war against Iran on Feb. 28.

Rights groups see the arrests and al-Mousawi's death as a new phase in Bahrain's long-running campaign of repression that reached a peak in 2011 as pro-democracy uprisings swept the region. That year, the ruling Al Khalifa family crushed mass demonstrations with help from troops from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Periodic unrest has continued since, with the government casting the mostly Shiite protesters as Iranian proxies. Unlike other Sunni monarchies in the Gulf, Bahrain — like Iran — has a Shiite majority.

"It really remains to be seen how far the government is going to go in its crackdown on people," saidMaryam al-Khawaja, a Bahraini activist living abroad whose father is jailed in Bahrain. "What we're seeing right now is definitely a lot more heavy-handed than we have in the past few years."

Bahrain says it targets those who aid the enemy

Bahrain's government said its security measures are "a direct and proportionate response" to Iran's attacks.

"The individuals arrested include those who filmed military and strategic sites during an active attack on Bahraini territory, those who passed sensitive information, and those who publicly expressed support for a state that had just launched strikes against Bahraini soil," it said.

"To present arrests made on the basis of conduct as evidence of sectarian persecution and conflate the two — is a framing that we firmly and unequivocally reject," it added.

Since the war's start, at least 41 people — including migrant workers — have been arrested for sharing images of what authorities described as "Iranian aggression," or for expressing sympathy for it. Some are accused of treason — a charge that can carry a life sentence or the death penalty.

Bahrain has tallied more than 600 Iranian drone and missile strikes, which have killed at least two people and struck infrastructure, including a desalination plant, an oil refinery and an aluminum smelter. Iran has also repeatedly targeted the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet headquarters.

Some demonstrators have mourned the killing of Iran's Supreme LeaderAyatollah Ali Khameneiand celebrated strikes on Bahrain, according to videos seen by AP. They also show firebombs being thrown and cars set ablaze.

A father fears his son could be put to death

The day after the war began, 21-year-old Hussein Fatiil and a friend posted social media videos of themselves waving a poster of Iran's supreme leader at a protest outside the U.S. Embassy. Minutes later, plainclothes officers took them away in an unmarked car.

The men resurfaced hours later, calling home from a police station after being interrogated, Hussein's father, Naji Fatiil, told the AP.

Three days later, Hussein called his family again and said he'd been charged with five offenses, including misusing social media and inciting hatred and treason, his father said.

"The charges are extremely serious and exaggerate what happened," he said, adding his son said the protest outside the embassy was peaceful. "Now he might be charged with the most severe punishment. All I want is for my son to have a normal life and not be sentenced to death."

Gulf kingdom of Bahrain cracks down on dissent as Iran war reignites internal unrest

A man detained in Bahrain last month as the island kingdom came undermissile attack from Iranvanished for days, until his...
Cuba to free more than 2,000 prisoners as economic crisis deepens under US pressure

Cuba's government will free 2,010 prisoners in the largest such release in years, it announced Thursday, asthe island bucklesunder increasing pressure from the Trump administration.

CNN A military guard observes from a watch tower at the Combinado del Este prison during a media tour in Havana, Cuba, on April 9, 2013 - Franklin Reyes/AP

The government decided to grant its pardon based on the inmates' good conduct, their health status, and the nature of their "acts committed," according to the notice in Granma, the ruling Communist Party's official newspaper.

It added that the prisoners included young people, women, people above 60 years old, and foreigners. The list does not include prisoners who committed crimes such as murder, homicide, sexual assault or "crimes against authority."

Cuba regularly detains and targets dissidents, including activists, journalists, protesters and political opponents, according to Human Rights Watch.

Havana has previously conducted sweeping prisoner releases as part of deals with international parties – for instance, in early 2025, Cuba released 553 prisoners after negotiations with the US and the Vatican, in which the Biden administration pledged to ease sanctions on the island.

US President Donald Trump rescinded the deal after taking office – prompting Cuba totemporarily pausethe prisoner release, before completing it in March.

The Granma statement made no mention of the US in its announcement, citing the release to "the religious celebrations of Holy Week" as Christians around the world celebrate Easter. But Cuba has been slammed by the Trump administration's pressure campaign, worsening the island's already-struggling economy.

Earlier this year, through military action in Venezuela and threats of tariffs on Mexico, the Trump administrationshut off the flow of oilto Cuba – attempting to strong-arm the communist-run island into making significant political and economic reforms.

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Trump has insisted the Cuban government needs to finally open the island's centralized economy before it collapses. He hasfrequently talkedabout wanting to "take Cuba."

Many of Trump's political allies, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, are Cuba hawks who have long called for the overhaul of its communist leadership.

The island is now quickly running out of whatever oil it has left, which it uses to power vehicles and generate electricity – exacerbating along-running energy crisis.

The island was already prone to prolonged power outages, but those have gotten worse, with power plants lacking sufficient fuel to operate. In March, Cuba sufferedtwo nationwide blackoutsin just one week – leaving its more than 10 million people without power.

Life has ground to a halt, with classes suspended at many schools, workers furloughed to save energy, and flights from some places canceled because Cuba doesn't have enough jet fuel for long-haul flights.

Earlier this week, Trump allowed a Russian-flagged oil tanker into Cuban waters, breaking thefuel blockade,saying: "They have to survive." The White House afterward said this was "not a policy change."

Since Cuban revolutionaries led by Fidel Castro overthrew the US-backed regime of Fulgencio Batista in 1959, the country has been under a strict economic embargo from the US, blocking most commercial activity on the island involving Americans and creating significant legal barriers to any new investment.

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Cuba to free more than 2,000 prisoners as economic crisis deepens under US pressure

Cuba's government will free 2,010 prisoners in the largest such release in years, it announced Thursday, asthe island...
Lauren Coughlin, Nasa Hataoka, Miyu Yamashita tied for Aramco lead

Lauren Coughlin and Japan's Nasa Hataoka and Miyu Yamashita formed a three-way tie atop the leaderboard after one round of the inaugural Aramco Championship on Thursday in Las Vegas.

Field Level Media

The leaders posted rounds of 5-under-par 67 at Shadow Creek Golf Course. Three more are on their tails at 4-under 68: World No. 2 Nelly Korda, Jing Yan and South Korea's Hyo Joo Kim, who has won two straight LPGA Tour events entering the week.

The Aramco Championship, co-sanctioned by the LPGA and Ladies European Tour, features a purse of $4 million and replaces the T-Mobile Match Play on the schedule.

Coughlin, 33, is trying to get back in contention for an LPGA victory after winning her first two titles in 2024 and being shut out in 2025.

She could have been the outright first-round leader after collecting six birdies through 17 holes, but she made her only misstep of the day with a bogey at her final hole, the par-4 ninth.

"I feel like I know this place really well," said Coughlin, who lost in the final of the Match Play last year. "Been in a lot of the places (on the course) that you don't want to be, so I feel like I've been able to ... I just know the spots that I need to land it to a lot of the pins, where to miss if you have to."

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Hataoka's round was the inverse of Coughlin's. She bogeyed the first hole, immediately bounced back at the second and went on to total six birdies.

"Before tournament get (started) we talk about my goal is 5-under total for four days," Hataoka said. "It was (not a) windier condition. That's why I made so many good birdies today."

Yamashita stood at 1 over through her first eight holes but turned it around thanks to an eagle 3 at the 18th hole and four birdies on her second nine, the front side.

"The course is tough, but it's fun to figure it out," Yamashita said through a translator. "So there is always a chance of making bogey, but I want to play patience in golf."

Korda played her first round with her sister Jessica Korda, who recently returned to competition after giving birth to her first child.

"I'm super rusty obviously but I had such a fun time," said Jessica Korda, who posted 3-over 75. "Her and Charley (Hull) are just such great players. I've been on the commentating side and the spectating side, and being inside (the ropes) is so much fun."

--Field Level Media

Lauren Coughlin, Nasa Hataoka, Miyu Yamashita tied for Aramco lead

Lauren Coughlin and Japan's Nasa Hataoka and Miyu Yamashita formed a three-way tie atop the leaderboard after one ...
Tiger Woods said he talked to Trump after wreck: 'I was just talking with the president'

In the minutes after his vehicle overturned on a narrow Jupiter Island, Florida, road, Tiger Woods said he was on the phone with President Donald Trump, according tonewly released body camera video.

Yahoo Sports

Woods' SUVcollided with a slower pickup truck's trailer on Fridayand overturned onto its driver's side. Woods himself climbed out of the vehicle through the passenger side, and spoke with arriving officers at the scene for some time afterward. The officers observed Woods acting in an impaired fashion and placed him under arrest.

At one point, Woods walked down a nearby lane and was called back to the scene. He could be heard saying "Thank you so much. All right. You got it. Bye," and later tells the officer, "I was just talking with the president."

It's not clear who called whom.

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"I feel so badly He's got some difficulty. There was an accident, and that's all I know," Trump said shortly after Woods' incident. "A very close friend of mine, he's an amazing person, an amazing man. But some difficulty."

Woods told an officer at the scene that "he was very apologetic about what he did last night" — apparently a reference to Trump saying that Woods would not be playing in the Masters this year.

Trump and Woods have a long history, having played golf together for many years. Trump awarded Woods the Congressional Medal of Freedom in 2019. Woods is now dating Vanessa Trump, the ex-wife of Donald Trump Jr.

Woods was arrested on charges of DUI and refusing to submit to a lawful test, and was later released. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges, and his attorney has sought permission for Woods to leave the country for treatment.

Tiger Woods said he talked to Trump after wreck: 'I was just talking with the president'

In the minutes after his vehicle overturned on a narrow Jupiter Island, Florida, road, Tiger Woods said he was on the pho...
Cirelli gets 2nd career hat trick and Lightning move into 1st in Atlantic after beating Penguins 6-3

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Anthony Cirelli registered his second career hat trick, Nikita Kucherov had a goal and three points, and the Tampa Bay Lightning moved into first place in the Atlantic Division after a 6-3 victory against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday night.

Associated Press Tampa Bay Lightning center Anthony Cirelli (71) scores against Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Stuart Skinner (74) during the second period of an NHL hockey game, Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken) Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Samuel Girard (49) and Tampa Bay Lightning right wing Nikita Kucherov (86) battle for the puck during the second period of an NHL hockey game, Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken) Tampa Bay Lightning center Jake Guentzel (59) and center Brayden Point (21) celebrate Point's goal during the second period of an NHL hockey game, Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)

Penguins Lightning Hockey

Zemgus Girgensons scored his 100th career goal and Brayden Point scored his second in 14 games for Tampa Bay, which improved to 7-1-2 in the past 10 games. Jake Guentzel and Gage Goncalves both had two assists while Andrei Vasilevskiy finished with 21 saves.

Egor Chinakov scored twice and Rickard Rackell also scored for Pittsburgh. Sam Girard and Kris Letang both had two assists and Stuart Skinner finished with 27 saves.

The Penguins remain in second place in the Metropolitan Division, three points ahead of the New York Islanders.

Cirelli scored Tampa Bay's first two goals and he added an empty-netter for his first hat trick since Jan. 17, 2020.

Cirelli and Rakell traded goals 1:55 apart in the opening seven minutes of the game before Chinakov gave the Penguins their first lead of the game with a backhander from the right circle at 16:10.

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Cirelli notched his second of the game 11 seconds into the second, deflecting a puck away from Bryan Rust and racing up ice for a breakaway, lifting a backhand shot over Skinner for a shorthanded marker.

Point put the Lightning back in front at 14:08 on a rebound. Girgensons took a pass from Gourde behind the net, pulled the puck to his forehand as he reached the crease and tucked a backhander into the open part of the net with 54.7 seconds left in the second.

Kucherov made it 5-2 at 13:50 of the third.

Up next

Pittsburgh: Host the Florida Panthers on Saturday

Tampa Bay: Host the Boston Bruins on Saturday

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Cirelli gets 2nd career hat trick and Lightning move into 1st in Atlantic after beating Penguins 6-3

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Anthony Cirelli registered his second career hat trick, Nikita Kucherov had a goal and three points, a...
Bruce Hornsby talks having Grateful Dead's Bob Weir on new album – 'That stuff hits hard'

Bruce Hornsbywasn't planning to write a new album. Or even new songs.

USA TODAY

After a nearly seven-year span from 2019, when he'd written more than 40 compositions for four records and collaborated with New York chamber sextetyMusic, Bon Iver frontmanJustin Vernonand Shins founderJames Mercer, he was, admittedly, burned out.

Then the "germ of an idea" for what would become the title track to his new album,"Indigo Park,"out now, infiltrated his brain.

"I was giving it the stiff arm for months and months," Hornsby, 71, says, chatting from the wood-paneled studio at his longtime scenic home in Williamsburg, Virginia ("My next move is into a pine box," he jokes).

But he couldn't quash the burgeoning song concept.

In addition to acknowledging the 40th anniversary of his biggest commercial hit, "The Way it Is," Bruce Hornsby releases the album "Indigo Park" April 3, 2026.

"It would wake me up in the middle of the night so I finally said, 'OK, I will take this deep dive and write the song'," Hornsby says. "A lot of this record could be called myRoger McGuinnrecord because the Rickenbacker 12-string is in full force."

Indeed, though Hornsby'sheady musicianship as a pianistis well-documented, he's also playing the electric 12-string guitar on the first five songs of what he calls "a pretty wild record."

Amusical adventureis expected from an artist who broke into the mainstream in 1986 with the philosophical jazz-pop smash"The Way It Is"(hardly typical MTV fodder), cowrote and played on Don Henley's"The End of the Innocence,"toured for a couple of years with The Grateful Dead, composed numerous scores for Spike Lee's films and worked with artists including Chaka Khan, Stevie Nicks, Robbie Robertson and Bonnie Raitt.

The latter adds to the electronic-spiked, beat-propelled"Ecstatic,"while Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig guests on the sprightly "Memory Palace" and late Grateful Dead stalwart Bob Weir adds his unconventional style to "Might As Well Be Me, Florinda."

The cerebral Hornsby – who willtour most of the yearstarting April 9 with his band The Noisemakers – delved into how "The Way It Is" still resonates, working with Weir and Raitt on"Indigo Park", and why hallway-walking is his fallback exercise.

(This interview has been edited for length and clarity.)

Bruce Hornsby releases his latest album, "Indigo Park," April 3, 2026.

Question: Before we talk about the new album, it's the 40thanniversary of "The Way It Is." When you wrote the lyrics"some things will never change," what were you thinking about?

Bruce Hornsby: I was just reflecting on my upbringing, growing up in a small, Upper South Town where those narrow-minded attitudes prevailed. That's how I grew up. It's referenced in a sort of interesting way on this new record on "Silhouette Shadows," which is a look-back song. The last verse is about where I was and what happened when Kennedy was assassinated. (Recites lyrics) "The kids erupted in glee/shouting 'Hooray, Nixon can take over'/Ms. Nimmo jumped their ass and tore 'em down/I was really alarmed and confused/watching the children parroting parents' views." And that was sort of Exhibit A of the pervasive mindset in Williamsburg, Virginia, at that time and "The Way It Is" is sort of another version of that.

And the song has lived on.

It seems to be a song set up for the ages, and that's lucky me. The hip-hop community's embrace of ("The Way It Is") plays no small part. Tupac's is of course the most notable(1998's "Changes"). But hell, in 2021, the great Chicago young rapper, Polo G, did an amazing version called"Wishing for a Hero."It was basically his homage to Tupac, but then (laughs), it's my song. But he had a beautiful gospel choir. So it's still being sort of refreshed in that way.

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Is it the one song you can't take out of your set list?

Well, occasionally I won't do it. And the reason I won't do it is that we're up there and the place is so deeply involved and so intensely demonstrative about (the music) that I go, well, you know, we don't need to play this tonight because (the audience) is so ready to receive what we're doing now. But invariably I'll get a nasty Facebook or Instagram screed from some fan, quote, unquote, who's not really a fan, but …

He knows your hits.

Exactly. I understand that. But I'm not going to be a prisoner to that idea, that I have to be that guy who plays those old songs. I could never do that. I'd rather teach driver's ed than do that.

Bruce Hornsby's new album, "Indigo Park," includes guest appearances from Bonnie Raitt and Bob Weir.

What's the backstory on getting Bob Weir on "Might As Well Be Me, Florinda"?

I ran into him at theRobbie Robertson tribute concertat The Forum in Los Angeles (in October 2024) a few months after he had passed. It was a wonderful night and we were hanging out in this bus and I thought, "hmm, this might be a good match, Bobby and this song." So I told him I had this song I wrote with (longtime Grateful Dead collaborator Robert Hunter) and if you hear yourself singing on it, great. He went, "Send it to me. Yeah, maybe. Oh, forget it, I'm in." It was so funny, so great. We finally got it to him in May last year and he sent us this wild vocal. His vocal is crazy.

It's so him.

It really was just perfect. And that was really lucky. You never know when you ask somebody to perform for you what it will be like when you get it back … We called and gave him all the laudatory remarks and then he went off to do the Dead & CompanyGolden Gate Park concerts. I was hearing little rumblings about some health challenges that he was dealing with, then I didn't hear anything else and all of a sudden, wham, in January, I get the call abouthis passing. That stuff hits hard because you're not expecting it. So I feel fortunate and so happy we have this last little recorded document that might be the last thing he recorded.

It's also great to hear Bonnie Raitt's voice on "Ecstatic." You played on her"I Can't Make You Love Me,"and the last time you were on record together was for your 1993 "Harbor Lights" album. Why was this the ideal song for her?

I thought that it wasnot her standard wheelhouse. Stylistically, it's not a bluesy thing. I did give her one blues thing and she said, "Hey, thanks, at least I've gone this one thing where I can lay into a blues note." (Hornsby sings) "I'm committed to the unseen" – it's that line. So I thought if she was feeling adventurous that this would be something fun for her. Bonnie, I feel like she's my big sister in music. We've been so close. We'll get on the phone and talk for an hour, often.

Let's talk about the upcoming tour. You've spent so much of your career on the road. Do you still tolerate it well?

I hate it. Well, tolerate, yeah, and here's why. It's 2-2 1/2 hours of playing that is great fun. I always say it's more fun than anything you can do outside of a bed and that's still true. But the other 21 hours, the long bus rides, the overnight rides when you're in the bunk and you're being jostled by the funky road. Who likes that? I mean, Bob Dylan probably likes it (laughs) because he's done this never-ending tour for 20-25-years plus. So that's my conflicted feeling about the road. Love the playing. The rest you can have.

Do you try to get out and go for a walk or do something to break the monotony when you're traveling?

I have my routine and it includes a walk. I'm also good at hall walking when it's terrible weather.

You mentioned that you also do that at home when it's too cold to go outside.

Yeah, although in my house I don't have maids looking at me going, who is this tall, goofy guy who keeps passing by?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Bruce Hornsby on new 'wild' record featuring Bob Weir, Bonnie Raitt

Bruce Hornsby talks having Grateful Dead's Bob Weir on new album – 'That stuff hits hard'

Bruce Hornsbywasn't planning to write a new album. Or even new songs. After a nearly seven-year span from 2...

 

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