L.A. Guns
Black began putting together a side project for his songs to be called "
Faster Pussycat" with guitarist
Mick Cripps. Black switched to lead vocals, Cripps switched to bass, and the two joined guitarist
Tracii Guns and drummer
Nickey "Beat" Alexander and later on guitarist Robert Stoddard to complete this line-up. The name was switched to
L.A. Guns because the owner of the name, Raz Cue, offered to back the band if this line-up would re-use L.A. Guns, a name which had been abandoned over a year prior by a former band of Guns' (
Guns N' Roses). Black changed his name again to Paul Black. From 1985 to March 1987, Paul Black wrote and co-wrote a number of songs, which led L.A. Guns to a record deal with Polygram Records. However, Black left before the record was finished and before the deal was signed. Black was replaced by
Phil Lewis. After leaving L.A. Guns, Black formed Black Cherry, which quickly became one of the most popular and sought after bands in L.A. But, a lawsuit filed by Black against his former band L.A. Guns and
Polygram Records kept Black Cherry from signing a deal. One of the founding members of Black Cherry was guitarist/vocalist Bartt Warburton, who is currently known as "Ukulele Bartt." Warburton and Black have performed intermittently as “Black and Bartt,” as recently as 2024. Warburton also continues to perform on guitar/vocals with his hard rockabilly trio, The Eyeball Cowboys. Black retired in 1993 and seldom played shows. In 2000, Black wrote and recorded an album with Jo Almeida of
Dogs D'Amour called ''Jo & Paul's Sonic Boom, Sun Down And Yellow Moon''. Two compilation albums featuring unreleased archive material of Black singing with L.A. Guns,
Black City Breakdown (1985-1986) and
Black List, as well as
Sun Down And Yellow Moon from Jo & Paul's Sonic Boom, were released on his own label Black City Records. From 2006 to 2008, he was the lead singer of Tracii Guns's L.A. Guns, a spinoff band that existed at the same time as Phil Lewis' L.A. Guns. ==Discography==