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Artist
Thundering power fused to sparkling accessibility: from the downbeat, Paperback Hero is a band blessed with both strength and intellect, champions of a monumental sound elevated by an endearing, prophetic optimism. In one short year, the North Hollywood, California-based group has earned both a loyal west coast audience and expanding national media visibility. As winners of the 2005 KROQ-Budweiser-Hard Rock Café Battle of the Bands, their electrifying live performances provided potent persuasion for industry judges and new fans alike. The show isnt just us, declares vocalist Bryan Hopkins, its the crowd and us, all together in the same room. All four members of Paperback Hero have separate, intertwining histories in the L.A. rock scene. There is a tangible chemistry and an intense brotherhood. Hopkins and bassist Dan Fine were the first two components; they invited guitarist Chris Latham over to play casually with every intention of enlisting him, while drummer Pete Burke, originally a pay-to-play hired gun, was soon conscripted as a full member. Notably, the quartet shares mutual credit as songwriters. Dan Fine, the detail guy, injects structure to Hopkins enthusiastic aspirations; Latham, also an accomplished recording engineer, contributes studio expertise and incendiary guitar chops, while beneath the hard-driving drumming of Burke beats a deep, thoughtful rhythm. From their first gig, it was apparent to the band and the audience alike that this was the real deal. Every t