Henry Paul
Henry Paul was born in Kingston, New York, United States on August 25th, 1949 and is the Country Singer. At the age of 74, Henry Paul biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 74 years old, Henry Paul physical status not available right now. We will update Henry Paul's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Henry Paul (born August 25, 1949) is an American southern rock and country singer/songwriter who appeared on stage for the Southern rock band Outlaws.
He left to form the Henry Paul Band but it was then returned to the Outlaws.
He is also a founding member of the country band BlackHawk.
Early life
Henry was born in Kingston, New York, and lived on a farm near Hurley, but as his father and mother divorced, he, his sisters Anselma and Helen, and his mother moved to Temple Terrace, a suburb of Tampa, Florida. He appeared at the 19th String Coffee House and Music Emporium in Tampa and playing in the 18th String Coffee House and Music Emporium, and by 1969, he returned north to Greenwich Village, New York, to pursue a career in music at the age of 17. While living in New York, he retraced his hero Bob Dylan's footsteps and performed on the streets to make a living while cutting demos for Epic Records. He returned to Tampa in 1971 after being invited to perform a concert in his hometown. Henry and Jim Fish founded Sienna, a republic rock band formed in the United States, with future Outlaw members Monte Yoho and Frank O'Keefe.
Sienna disbanded in 1972, and Paul joined the organisation "The Outlaws," which had been established in 1967. Billy Jones was the first to play in Tampa, Florida, and they soon added Billy Jones. They were on the road opening shows for several well-established Southern rock bands, including Lynyrd Skynyrd. Clive Davis of Arista Records discovered them and signed them to their first recording contract; they became the first rock band to perform on the fledgling label. On the success of hits including "Green Grass and High Tides" and "There Goes Another Love Song," they quickly went gold on their self-titled debut album. Henry left in 1977 after recording two more albums with the Outlaws, and decided to go solo. Following Hughie Thomasson's death, Paul became the bandleader of The Outlaws in the first lineup not to include Thomasson since the band's inception. The Outlaws released "It's About Pride," their critically acclaimed collection from 2012. Henry, Monte Yoho (drums), Randy Threet (bass guitar), Dave Robbins (keyboards), Dale Oliver (lead guitar), and Steve "Grits" Grisham (guitars) are among the band's current lineup's extensive tour dates around the United States.
Henry Paul Band formed Henry Henry Paul Band, which first appeared on 1979 with the album Grey Ghost. He's been outlawed since being outlawed. It featured songs like "So Long" and "Grey Ghost," which was dedicated to Ronnie Van Zant's memory. When picturing a portrait of a woman with the words "Lonely Dreamer" underneath, Henry Paul told Songfacts that he wrote "Lonely Dreamer" rather than drawing a girl's image. Feel The Heat, 1980, the band released three more albums, including the title track and "Whiskey Talkin'" and "Longshot" that debuted on the Billboard, as well as "Whiskey Talkin'" and "Longshot," which eventually debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles Chart in 1980. They were released in 1981, Anytime, which included the hit "Keep Our Love Alive" on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart and #23 Billboard Top Tracks Chart, as well as Richard Paige of Chicago's Mr. Mister & Bill Champlin of Chicago, with background vocals by Richard Paige of Mr. Mister & Bill Champlin. The album also included a non-charted single "Life Without Your Love" that was released on various album rock stations, a cover version of Van Morrison's "Brown Eyed Girl" on some album rock stations, and a live show highlight "Crazy Eyes." Henry's last, self-titled album was released in 1982, with the Henry Paul Band playing "Hold On," Heat Of The Night," and "Tragedy" on the back. During the Henry Paul Band period, he also did Voice over work at WYNF-FM (95ynf) in Tampa Bay, Florida.
The Henry Paul Band disbanded in 1983, when Paul reunited with Hughie Thomasson of the Outlaws. Soldiers of Fortune was created as a result of their collaboration in 1986. Paul stayed with the band until 1989, when he left to pursue a new passion in country music, founding BlackHawk in 1991. Van Stephenson and Dave Robbins joined Paul in BlackHawk to create a new blend of country music, utilizing three-part harmony and reflective songs.
No. BlackHawk is the No. 1 in the BlackHawk family. "Goodbye Says It All" was one of 11's first on CMT in 1994. The band formed a touring band after the success of their self-titled debut album. They have released five studio albums, BlackHawk, Strong Enough, Love & Gravity, The Sky's the Limit, Spirit Dancer, and one compilation album, Greatest Hits. They were nominated for Top New Vocal Group or Duet by the Academy of Country Music in 1994, but they were unable to support Gibson/Miller Band. The group left Arista for Columbia Records in 2002, with one album, 2002's Spirit Dancer, being released on that label. Radiance Records has licensed the 2008 lineup. "Brothers of the Southland" BlackHawk's first studio album in 12 years was released in July 2014. The title track is dedicated to Southern Rock bands and those that have passed away.