Paul Cauthen

Musician

Popular As Paul Cauthen's Big Velvet Revue

Birth Year 1986

Birthplace Tyler, Texas U.S.

Age 38 years old

Nationality United States

#34561 Most Popular

1950

Jim Paul Cauthen had spent time in the 1950s with Buddy Holly and The Crickets and was good friends with Holly's bandmate Sonny Curtis, who later fronted The Crickets.

Cauthen got his start playing in an Americana/indie folk rock band singer-songwriter duo with musician David Beck.

1985

Paul Mark Cauthen (born 1985/1986) is an American singer-songwriter from East Texas.

He started his music career in an Americana/indie folk rock duo called Sons of Fathers, before turning solo.

He has released three albums and an EP as a solo artist, the most recent being Country Coming Down released in April 2022.

Cauthen was born in Dallas, Texas.

He grew up in a religious household.

His father was a song leader in the conservative Christian Church of Christ, and his father's twin brother was the preacher there.

Cauthen's father and uncle sang as a musical duo in church.

Cauthen has said that the church he grew up in did not allow instruments, so the focus was on a cappella singing of what he called "heavenly highway hymns, the old hymnals", but that if he was active in the church, he would be a fifth-generation song leader/preacher.

Cauthen has said that his family is from Texas on both sides.

His grandmother's family was from West Texas as well as part of New Mexico because her father sold drill bits for oil wells.

Cauthen's father is a fifth-generation Texan via Montgomery, Alabama, where Cauthen's paternal grandfather went to school with Hank Williams.

Although his maternal grandfather Jim Paul Cauthen died when he was 10 years old, Cauthen was deeply influenced by his grandfather, who gave him a guitar and was a songwriter himself.

Cauthen was his only male grandchild.

Cauthen's grandfather also taught him – and his two sisters – how to sing harmonies at a very young age.

Cauthen's grandmother taught him piano.

2009

Cauthen met Beck, whose father was Bill Whitbeck, long-time Robert Earl Keen bass player, in San Marcos, Texas in 2009.

They got to know each other at a regular local songwriter's night series at Cheatham Street Warehouse.

Beck gave deejay Jessie Scott their demo, who gave their demo to manager Marty Schwartz, who came out of retirement to manage the duo.

The band was initially called Beck & Cauthen but they later changed the name of the band to be Sons of Fathers when musician Beck sent a cease and desist letter.

Sons of Fathers featured Beck on the upright bass and Cauthen on guitar, with both singing vocals.

2011

Both their 2011 and 2013 Sons of Fathers records, the self-titled Sons of Fathers and Burning Days, were produced by Lloyd Maines.

Burning Days featured Regan Schmidt on lap steel/electric guitar, Dees Stribling on drums, Bryan Mammel on keyboards/accordion, Tony Browne on guitar/mandolin.

The record also features Maines on pedal steel and Corby Schaub on guitar.

The duo also had a studio called Fast Horse Studios where they produced records by local bands like Canvas People, Carson McHone, Luke Bell, Pake Rossi, and others.

2014

In April 2014, after five years together, the Sons of Fathers broke up.

Cauthen cited differing musical focuses.

2016

In 2016, in a shift from singing as a duo to lead vocals, Cauthen released his first solo record called My Gospel on Lightning Rod Records.

Parts of the record were recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama and features the work of Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist, Gus Seyffert.

The song, "As Young As You'll Ever Be" is about the death of Cauthen's friend, the San Marcos, Texas-based singer-songwriter Victor Holk.

My Gospel was listed as number 23 of Rolling Stone magazine's top 40 country records of 2016.

2018

In 2018, Cauthen released the EP, Have Mercy.

The EP, recorded live at Modern Electric in Dallas, was produced by Beau Bedford, whose band the Texas Gentlemen appears on the record.

A notable song off the EP was the opening track, "Everybody Walking This Land", which calls out hate and complicit racism.

That song, "Everybody Walking This Land", was used in the end credits to the season 2 opener of the Starz network TV show, American Gods.

On June 22, 2018, Cauthen made his Grand Ole Opry debut as a solo artist.

Cauthen had previously played the Opry twice with Sons of Fathers.

2019

In 2019, Cauthen released his second solo record called Room 41.

At one point Cauthen considered calling the record Holy Ghost Fire after that track on the album, but eventually settled on Room 41.