YOU GOT A PROBLEM?Tell it to the Rock 'n' Roll Therapist and he will sing a song on the spot, and it will be healed.
The Rock 'n' Roll Therapist's radio Debut was in 1986 on Lynn Samuels' show on WBAI in New York City. Soon after he was he was a regular guest on WFMU, on Bill Burger's 'The Hip Bone,' solving the problems of particularly twisted listeners of that particularly twisted show. In 1989, he became a regular on KTV, the children's show on the fledging CNBC network. This stint lasted a year and a half. Prior to CNBC, he billed himself as the Rock 'n' Rock Psychiatrist, but CNBC's lawyers changed it to ‘Therapist,’ perhaps to steer clear of a potential lawsuit from the American Psychiatric Association. Pretty weird, eh? That's showbiz. In 1990, he moved upcountry to Woodstock where he has been heard frequently ever since on Conversations with Doug Grunther on WDST, Woodstock’s alternative rock station. He has performed the act live all over the US and Canada and in Europe. In 1994 he was invited to Hamburg, Germany to participate in a New Age Seminar directed by popular author and psychic healer, Peter Voss. Voss, who ran across the Rock 'n' Roll Therapist playing in a Cafe in Woodstock believes McMahon is channeling as he sings. McMahon is not sure, but there is no denying that there is a mysterious healing effect within the entertainment. Often just the willingness to air a problem in public where it is treated with lightness and a sense of fun may be enough the create a shift that allows the person to let go of some emotional baggage. But sometimes the cures verge on the magical, like the case of a woman who needed a lot of money to visit a friend in Europe. Within a week, she won more than enough in a sweepstakes she had entered. McMahon doesn't take credit for it, but this kind of thing has happened a few times. From a musical family, Paul has been playing guitar and singing all of his life, which may account for some of his ease in instant songwriting. Not only was his father a pretty good singer, he was also a psychiatrist, which may account for McMahon's more than passing interest in matters of the psyche. He has also dabbled in various alternative healing modalities, including Native American shamanism. |
Children like the r&r therapist because he is one of them most of the time. He sometimes performs at kids' birthday parties, but not if they're mean.
Listen to examples of Rock and Roll Therapy from TV and radio appearances.
"Girlfriend doesn't want to marry me" (3.7mb) (WFMU-FM The Hip Bone)
"I'm in paradise...but" (2.18mb) (KTV, CNBC)
"Cute guy in the office" (2.88mb) (WFMU-FM The Hip Bone)
Need Rock and Roll Therapy?
If you would like some rock and roll therapy click here and email whether you would like Rock'n'Roll Therapy for yourself for another or for a personal appearance (where, when, why). DO NOT tell Paul your problem in advance. You will receive an email response. Indicate in the subject heading if this is an emergency or if there is time pressure.