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With
over 70 million records sold, BJ's vocal versatility is as apparent today as
it was when he recorded his first hit in 1967, “I'm So Lonesome I Could
Cry.”
Since the mid-1960s, BJ Thomas has become one of the most recognized and
respected voices of the American musical landscape. He has impacted many
areas of popular music with 15 Top 40 pop hits, 10 Top 40 country hits, 5
Grammys, 2 Dove awards and 15 Gold and Platinum Records. He is the only
artist to successfully move to the top of three music genres not as a
crossover and also have crossover success.
“As a singer,” BJ states, “I have the chance to lift the spirits of the
audience and make them feel good, at least for the evening.”
It's an attitude people have noticed. Fans frequently approach BJ to thank
him for the impact of his songs ranging from the mega hit “Raindrops Keep
Fallin' On My Head” to country smashes like “New Looks From An Old Lover.”
BJ's music is testimony to the fact he is a survivor. He has overcome
personal adversity and addiction as well as weathered professional storms to
emerge musically stronger than ever. |
He owns one of the most distinctive voices in American pop music—a
reassuringly masculine timbre conveyed with a smattering of unique
embellishments that represent a distillation of the most influential genres
in pop culture.
Nothing about the identifiable sound of
B.J. THOMAS’ voice has changed, but there’s a re-energized commitment behind
it. Recognizing the continued loyalty of his fans, B.J. re-launches with the
forthcoming Curb Records release of LOVE TO BURN, his first new studio album
in almost a decade.
Concurrent with that project, he will be
contributing six songs to the soundtrack of the independent picture JAKE’S
CORNER; is in production with Allan Swartsburg and Bob Mann of NY Deep Diner
on an upcoming Brazilian album in which B.J. lends his voice in an exciting
new style; and created RAINDROPS & BOONDOCKS, an HD video of a recent live
concert.
“We’ve always tried to do the right thing
as far as getting our music out and encouraging people with positive music,”
B.J. reflects.
Indeed, many of B.J.’s signature hits—the
Oscar-winning Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head, the million-selling (Hey
Won’t You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song and his
career-igniting cover of Hank Williams’ I’m So Lonesome I Could
Cry—invariably find the plots’ protagonists employing some level of
positivity to overcome the universal battle with loneliness.
Continuing his supportive inclinations, a
series of positive-themed discs were embraced by the gospel community,
giving him the first four platinum albums in gospel history. A
brief-but-successful foray into country music—dotted by Whatever Happened To
Old Fashioned Love and New Looks From An Old Lover, written by his wife,
Gloria, Red Lane and Latham Hudson—emphasized classic family ideals and
commitment, as did the still-familiar theme to Growing Pains, As Long As We
Got Each Other, sung on the tube with Jennifer Warnes.
His lyrics aren’t just words to B.J.
THOMAS. He’s lived out his musical ideals, turning down career opportunities
for years when he thought they might interfere with the home life he
established in the Dallas area with Gloria and their three daughters: Paige,
Nora and Erin.
“We weren’t really silent,” he observes,
“but we weren’t really chasing the prize, so to speak.”
But an interesting confluence of events
helped to recharge B.J.’s career commitment. The girls grew up and left
home. The surprise emergence of Raindrops in a key scene in Spider-Man 2
underscored his continued place as an identifiable cultural touchstone. And
he discovered through technology just how deep and loyal his fans’
commitment runs.
“One of the real catalysts behind this is
I did an interview with an online disc jockey,” B.J. explains. “He
interviewed me and then put some music together for a one-hour package that
could be accessed on the Internet, and he had 3.5 million downloads in three
days. So we said, ‘Hey, our people are sitting right there. We just gotta
figure out a way to reach them.’”
LOVE TO BURN, a release that synthesizes
the wide-ranging styles that have influenced his career. It includes a
barrelhouse version of T-R-O-U-B-L-E, a song originally associated with
Elvis Presley, whose landmark recordings Suspicious Minds and In The Ghetto
came when he used producer Chips Moman and his associated musicians—the same
guys who contributed to such B.J. Thomas classics as I Can’t Help Believing,
Hooked On A Feeling and No Love At All. LOVE TO BURN digs into Allen
Toussaint’s New Orleans-flavored Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues) and
features a Dobie Gray-penned ballad, Stranger in the Mirror, which finds
B.J. in movingly sensitive form.
In a sign of real synchronicity, B.J. was
also approached to do his first acting role since the 1973 movie Jory, which
introduced Robby Benson. JAKE’S CORNER writer-director Jeff Santo had
developed the script with B.J.’s Rock And Roll Lullaby as sonic inspiration.
B.J. re-cut the song for the picture, and ended up on screen, a marked
change after resisting that line of work.
“Gloria and I actually sat down after I
finished Jory, and she wanted to know if I wanted to pursue being an actor,”
he notes. “At that time, I was on the road almost 300 days a year. The music
was very successful, and both of us kind of agreed that movies would take
too much time—that I would just pay attention to my music.”
The JAKE’S CORNER soundtrack represented
a bit of a reunion for B.J., given that the music was written by Steve
Dorff, who also composed the Growing Pains theme.
One of its key tracks, When the Hero
Dies, also provides a symbolic reflection on B.J.’s own life with its mix of
public acclaim and private commitment. The song celebrates the contributions
of such legendary figures as Johnny Cash, John Wayne, Bob Hope, John Lennon
and Martin Luther King. But its real strength comes by putting the
sacrifices of everyday Americans on the same plane as those more familiar
faces.
“That was very key and very significant,”
B.J. suggests. “We got these big names and we’ve got to perpetuate what
they’ve done and what they’ve allowed us to do. But the song also included
the mothers and fathers and teachers and preachers and the Unknown Soldier.
It just got me.”
Music certainly “got” B.J. Thomas from a
very early age. Born in rural Hugo, Oklahoma, just north of the Texas
border, his family soon moved to Houston, where he was attracted to the
country of Ernest Tubb and Hank Williams (one of his strongest memories is
of attending a Hank concert with his father) and the soul of Jackie Wilson
and Little Richard, whose Miss Ann was the first single B.J. ever bought.
In fact, the embellishments, repetitions
and melisma that have become a trademark of B.J.’s identifiable style were
adapted from one of those mentors. “I got that from Jackie Wilson,” B.J.
says. “What he could do was amazing. If you do it the right way, it puts a
lot of sincerity and meaning into the word that you’re singing. I always try
to use it where it emphasizes the emotion of the song.”
After his initial successes on a small
Southern label, B.J. signed with New York’s Scepter, where the roster also
included Ronnie Milsap and Dionne Warwick. In fact, it was Warwick who
introduced B.J. to songwriter-producer Burt Bacharach, leading to his
performance of Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head for Butch Cassidy & the
Sundance Kid.
The song has shown an amazing
resilience—it was featured in Forrest Gump when Tom Hanks’ character
encountered President Lyndon B. Johnson; it made the soundtracks for Clerks
II, The In-Laws and Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle; and it appeared almost
in its entirety during Spider-Man 2.
B.J. has shown a comparable resilience.
He married Gloria at the Chapel of the Bells in Las Vegas just weeks before
Hooked on a Feeling hit the Top 10. Their relationship remains intact nearly
40 years later, a tangible sign of his sincerity in his
find-the-silver-lining musical themes. “We’ve always had each other, even
through the hard, wild, stupid, crazy times,” he says. “She was just right
there for me, and I’ve been there for her, too. If there’s anything that got
me to today it was having her.”
She’s still there, running their
management company as B.J. reinvigorates his public persona, one that very
much reflects his desire to convey some basic meaning to both his daughters
and his fans.
“That’s been a real positive, wonderful
thing that’s a part of the music that I’ve been a part of—making someone
lift their head up or making someone feel OK,” he says.
“All I am is just another guy. I’ve been
very lucky. I’ve had a wonderful life, I’ve been a husband and a father who
cherishes his children and now I’m a grandfather, and I’m motivated like all
these teachers and preachers and mothers and fathers to help my kids grow up
with character and self-respect. I hope that doesn’t sound too grandiose,
but that’s what it comes down to. It’s what I’ve tried to do with my music
and with the majority of my life.”
That he has succeeded at home and still
maintained a place as one of music’s most recognizable voices is truly
remarkable.
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