Paul Quinn may refer to:
Paul Walter Quinn (born 1959, Dundee) is a Scottish musician who was the lead singer of cult 1980s band Bourgie Bourgie, and also released records with Jazzateers, Vince Clarke and Edwyn Collins and sang on an early track by the French Impressionists.
Quinn was a classmate of Edwyn Collins between the ages of 11 and 15, and sang backing vocals on "Rip It Up" by Collins' band Orange Juice. After singing with Postcard Records band Jazzateers (contemporaries of Josef K, The French Impressionists and Aztec Camera) he formed Bourgie Bourgie in May 1983 along with former members of his previous band. Bourgie Bourgie were signed by MCA Records and released two singles in 1984, both of which charted in the UK, "Breaking Point" peaking at number 48 and "Careless" at number 96. The group began recording an album with producer Mike Hedges but it remained unreleased when they split up. Quinn then collaborated with Edwyn Collins on a version of The Velvet Underground's "Pale Blue Eyes", released on Postcard Records boss Alan Horne's new Swamplands label, which reached number 72 in the UK in August 1984. In early 1985, Quinn released his first solo single, "Ain't That Always the Way", which again featured Collins but was credited solely to Quinn for contractual reasons, which was also a minor hit, reaching number 98 in the UK. He then collaborated with Vince Clarke on the "One Day" single, which fared similarly.
Paul Quinn (c. 1986 – 20 October 2007) was allegedly killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army
A native of Cullyhanna, County Armagh, Paul Quinn, then 21 years old, was lured to a farm at Tullycoora, near Oram in County Monaghan, where three of his friends were held hostage. When he arrived at the farm, a group of some ten or more men beat him with iron and nail-studded bars for upwards of half an hour, breaking every major bone in his body. Quinn was taken at around 18:00 to Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Drogheda, where he died two hours later.
Quinn's parents, Breege and Stephen, have said that members of the Provisional IRA South Armagh Brigade were responsible. Their son had had "run-ins with the Cullyhanna ASU on a number of occasions", and had "floored" the son of one of the active service unit (ASU) leaders in a pub row. Following the incident, the mother of the young man appeared at Quinn's family home with a hammer in her hand and told the family their son would have to leave Ireland. The murder is believed to have arisen as a result of a dispute between Quinn and the local IRA.
"Love Fever" is a post-disco song by American urban singer Gayle Adams. It was released in 1981 by Prelude Records. It was remixed by François Kevorkian.
"Love Fever" peaked at #24 on the Billboard Black Singles and #7 on the Dance chart. By end of January 1982, the position was number 9.
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Love a word that comes and goes
but few people really know what it means to really love somebody
love though the tears may fade away
i'm so glad your love will stay
cuz i love you and you showed me, jesus
what it really means to love
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Patient, love, kind, love, sweet, love, kind, love
Love a word that comes and goes
but few people really know what it means to really love somebody
love though the tears may fade away
i'm so glad your love will stay
cuz i love you and you showed me, jesus
what it really means to love
The nights that i've cried you love me
when i should have died you love me
i'll never know why you love me
its a mystery me now i'm glad i see jesus
When all hope was gone you love me
You gave me a song that you love me
now i can go on cuz you love me
its a mystery to me now i'm glad i see jesus
The nights that i've cried you love me
when i should have died you love me
i'll never know why you love me
its a mystery me now i'm glad i see jesus
What it really means
what it really means
what it really means
To love
What it really means
what it really means
what it really means
To love
To love...
Patient patient kind
That's love
To love...
Patient patient kind
That's love
To love...
Patient patient kind
That's love
To love...
Patient patient kind
That's love
ooh(to tune of verse repeat twice)
To love...
Patient patient kind