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Showroom  |  Events Center   |  Weekly Entertainment  |   Summer Concert Series  |   Movies  |  Packages

Bill Medley with
Paul Revere & The Raiders
August 22 - 24 • 7:30pm
Tickets are $55/$45/$35
Get Tickets Now

When Bobby Hatfield passed away in November 2003, it was a fearsome blow to Bill Medley, who co-founded The Righteous Brothers in 1962.

Medley had lost a friend, a business partner and—most of all—a singing partner with whom he’d been associated since his late-teens. Some observers may have expected him to walk away from music. If so, they simply didn’t know Bill.

“I love to perform, I love to be on stage,” Medley says. “I just feel so alive when I’m sharin’ with the audience.” In fact, it’s not unexpected that Medley would turn to music to help him navigate the next segment of his life; music has been there from the beginning.

Born in Los Angeles and raised in Orange County’s Santa Ana, Medley always had a passion for music, but he sort of stumbled upon it as a career after he quit school at age 16. His father led a big band and played saxophone, his mother played piano and sang. Naturally, Medley gravitated to glee club and amateur singing contests during his youth, but it wasn’t until he heard the music of Ray Charles that the idea of making music for a living coalesced.

“When I heard Ray Charles, it wasn’t so much that I wanted do that,” he reflects. “It was that I needed to do that.” Medley taught himself to play piano, which led to writing songs, and he figured songwriting—rather than performing—would be his key to a career in music. But when he peddled his songs to other singers and musicians, they invariably declined to do them. “They would hear me sing, and say, ‘What about you?’ That was basically why I became a singer.”

Medley formed a local group called The Paramours, and was introduced to Hatfield, who led The Variations. But one night they put their voices together, and the result was magic.

“We just started singin’ these rhythm & blues duets, and it was just absolutely instant,” Medley recalls. “Never had to rehearse it. He knew ‘em, I knew ‘em—‘I’ll sing this note, you sing on top,’ and that was it. The instant we sang together, it was like one voice.”

Showroom at South Point
Bill Medley
Their partnership lasted four decades, though Medley explored his solo options apart from the duo on occasion. He went on his own in the late-‘60s for six years. In 1976, following the death of his wife, he pulled back from the music business to raise his son, eventually doing another solo stint in the early-‘80s. Plus, he demonstrated his versatility by joining forces with another duet partner, Jennifer Warnes, on the chart-topping song from “Dirty Dancing,” “(I’ve Had) The Time Of My Life,” which came up a winner at the Grammys, the Oscars and the Golden Globes.

As Medley segues into a new portion of his career, he’s also performed duets publicly on occasion with his daughter, McKenna, who has her own show in Las Vegas.

But he has no plans to find another permanent singing partner. Instead, Medley expects to strike out one more time on his own, with the stage serving as a safety net from which he’s still able to make a connection—with the fans who continue to adore both The Righteous Brothers and Medley’s powerful bass, but also with his own passion for music.

Not that his rare gift makes him any different from the people who inhabit the audience.

“My friends that I see on a daily basis are guys I went to junior high and high school with,” he notes. “It just has kept me very, very sane. So when I go out on stage to perform, I really feel like I’m one of those fans. I understand how they feel.”

Paul Revere and the Raiders
Paul Revere organized the Raiders in 1958 in Idaho. A few of the highlights of Paul Revere's outstanding career are:

Paul Revere and the RaidersPaul Revere and the Raiders were the first rock group to be signed with Columbia Records.

In 1965-1966 Paul Revere and the Raiders were featured on the ABC TV five-day-a-week network show "Where the Action Is" produced by Dick Clark.

Paul Revere and the Raiders appeared on 520 "Where the Action Is" network shows on ABC.

In 1968 & 1969 Paul Revere co-hosted a weekly ABC series, "Happening".

Paul Revere also co-hosted a five-day-a-week summer show, "It's Happening".

In summer of 1971 the Raiders' recording of "Indian Reservation" sold nearly 4 million singles, making it the biggest selling record for Columbia Records in 10 years.

The group has performed thousands of concerts in North America, Europe and Asia as well as being seen on major TV shows.

Paul Revere and the Raiders had 25 consecutive hit singles. Some of which include:
Like Long Hair
Great Airplane Strike
Louie, Louie
Good Thing
Steppin' Out
Ups and Downs
Just Like Me
Him or Me
Kicks
Indian Reservation
Hungry
Birds of a Feather

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