Paul Thorn
Mar 29 2010
TICKETS ARE NO LONGER AVAILABLE ONLINE, THEY WILL BE FOR SALE AT THE DOOR STARTING AT 6pm!
Stuart's is excited to announce the return of Paul Thorn to our stage! Paul has come very close to selling out his last two performances, and with good reason. You will not want to miss this show. Don't take it from us, Kris Kristofferson calls him "...the best kept secret in the music business.".
TICKETS ON SALE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 at 10am!
The first thing you notice is The Voice, unique and
distinctive, the voice of a man who has walked a long, hot span over dusty
His newest CD is A
LONG WAY FROM TUPELO, a collection of songs which once again illustrates
Thorn’s versatility and authentic connection to the music of the
From “Everybody
Wishes,” an ode to the complexities of finding the right one, to “I’m Still
Here,” an anthem to human endurance, to “What Have You Done To Lift Somebody
Up,” a rousing gospel number challenging us to step outside our own lives and
simply help someone, to the softly beautiful “When the Long Road Ends,” with
its Appalachian undertones asking us to contemplate what we’ve done with life,
Thorn’s new CD represents the wisdom he has found in middle-years. Paul simply
says, “I'm a little older now, and all the songs are about what's going on in
my life. I'm 43 years old, and it's about what's going on in Paul Thorn's life
at 43, pretty much.”
Prophets are called
and poets are born so it’s no surprise that Paul Thorn is from
Eventually Thorn
developed other interests. Encouraged by his Uncle Merle, himself a
professional boxer, he took up the art of fisticuffs and rose through the
amateur and professional ranks high enough to climb into the ring in 1987 for a
nationally televised bout against three-time world champion Roberto “Hands of
Stone” Duran. “I didn’t win the fight, but few did against Duran.”
Music, however,
remained Thorn’s true passion. He had learned the guitar as a child, and he
began writing what he describes as “cheesy love songs.” These were the sparks
that kindled his musical career. During a family gathering at age 17, Paul ran
into a first cousin, then a keyboardist for Parliament-Funkadelic. He played a
couple of songs for his cousin Stan. Recognizing Paul’s natural talent, Stan
introduced him to veteran songwriter Billy Maddox, who realized not only the
teenager’s raw, innate musical ability, but also The Voice. It was obvious
Thorn had absorbed the differing musical styles in and around
For twelve years,
Thorn worked days and pursued his passion at night, writing with Billy and
often playing in local nightspots, until he was discovered by Miles Copeland.
Paul recorded his first CD, HAMMER AND NAIL, for A&M records, then recorded
AINT LOVE STRANGE for Copeland’s Ark 21 label.
A couple of years
after AIN'T LOVE STRANGE, Thorn switched musical gears and record companies to
record the critically acclaimed
FIREWORKS STAND, a
quirky collection of songs about people on the byways of backwater South. The
title comes from Paul’s childhood. “Growing up a
Pentecostal Preacher’s son, I went to a lot of tent
revivals. In
It was during this
time that Paul began an association with current manager, Bob Brown. Bob
immediately brought booking agency Monterey Peninsula Artists (now Paradigm)
onboard, and he has become a vital, productive mentor and friend.
If listening to a
Paul Thorn CD is satisfying, then catching a Paul Thorn show is a revelation.
He is a superb entertainer fronting a band of musical veterans who know exactly
what to do. He weaves his stories throughout; mostly funny ones about himself,
people he has known, old girlfriends, and childhood discoveries. And his
conversational tones conjure an old buddy sitting in the back of a ’69 Dodge
pickup drinking beer on a dark, sultry
His performance chops
are no accident. Thorn is one of the hardest working people in the business and
a hardcore veteran of the road. Before he became the main attraction, Thorn
opened for some of the most established acts touring today including Mark
Knopfler, Jeff Beck, Sting, John Hiatt, Robert Cray, Marianne Faithful and John
Prine. His tours are heavy and hectic, spanning over 200 dates a year in the
Thorn is a genuine
Southern paradox, a bona fide tough guy with a feeling for the social fugitive.
Behind his songs simmer an old fashioned religious sensibility: that we really
are accountable for how we treat people - the old and the odd, the on-track and
offbeat, the strangers and the strange. His songs are filled with a demented
optimism that says each life still counts; this is the all-important message
that Paul wants to impart to his listeners.
If Merle Haggard is
the poet of the common man, then Paul Thorn is the poet of the unheard; the
commonplace and forgotten people who have been left behind in a Modern South
rushing to score its share of riches from the suzerainties of Wall Street.
Thorn is the real deal, never having broke bad with the people he sings
about.
Thorn doesn’t
vacillate when he talks about what he wants people to take from his songs.
“When folks hear my music or see my show I want them to walk away with a
healthy dose of joy. Most organized religion is like a steel hammer that’s used
to beat us down and make us feel perpetually guilty and unworthy. I’m not about
that. I want to lift people up and set them free.”
A true prophet is
neither seer nor fortune-teller, but a truth-teller. Thorn is able to tell his
truths in an entertaining, accessible, and poetic way, and he has developed a
legion of hard-core believers all over the country. It is The Voice that
attracts them, but it is who he is that holds them.
Paul might not admit it, but his musical career is nothing short of a continuation of the childhood singing and entertaining he did for his father’s revivals. However, things are different now. In Paul Thorn’s world the only price of admission is the cost of a ticket and the willingness to reach out to someone. Chances are that you will feel a little better, a little freer, when you leave it.
As he sings in When
the Long Road Ends…
When
the long road ends we will rest for a while,
I’ll
hold your hand and we’ll share a smile.
Then
we’ll both look back over where we’ve been,
We
will have no regrets when the long road ends.
Spoken like a true poet and prophet, no matter what the down-home preachers say.
For more information, visit www.paulthorn.com













