Country star Phil Vassar brings 25th anniversary 'Paradise' tour to Cranston (Photo Credit: Phil Vassar)

Country music star Phil Vassar brings his “25 Years of Paradise” tour to the Park Theatre on Oct. 24, celebrating the 25th anniversary of his breakout No. 1 hit “Just Another Day in Paradise.” The intimate acoustic performance promises nightly setlist changes and covers of musical legends like Billy Joel and Elton John.

For Vassar, the Northeast holds a special place in his career trajectory. “Boston was like one of my first cities to play my records,” Vassar recalled in a recent interview. “They played ‘Carlene’ and it was a huge hit and ‘Paradise’ and all that stuff, and everybody else kind of caught up with them.”

The Cranston performance is part of what Vassar calls his “last run of the season” — seven shows in seven days across the Northeast before heading back to Nashville. The piano-pounding performer will bring his signature intimate listening room format to the Park Theatre, a stark contrast to the festival stages he’s graced throughout his career.

“It’s a great listening room,” Vassar explained about venues like the Park Theatre. “It’s not like a festival for 50,000 people where you’re doing somersaults and jumping up on top of the piano and all that. But I love playing these kind of shows.”

The 2025 tour takes on profound significance following a life-altering heart attack that nearly claimed Vassar’s life. The health scare led to a stroke and five months of rehabilitation in Atlanta, fundamentally shifting his perspective on performing and life itself.

“I’m the guy that worked out every day, ate right, ate spinach and chicken and never drank and did drugs and I’m the one that dies,” Vassar reflected, describing the genetic heart disease that struck despite his healthy lifestyle. “I don’t take it so seriously anymore. I just have fun and play my hits whenever it’s time to play them.”

Rather than slowing him down, the experience has reinvigorated his gratitude for music. “I’m very grateful to be able to do what I do and still do what I love,” he said. “I’m never nervous. I’m always excited to get there and just start playing.”

While Vassar has accumulated 10 No. 1 hits and 27 Top 40 tracks over his career, “Just Another Day in Paradise” remains his signature song — and for good reason. “It was such a big number one song,” Vassar explained. “Everybody kind of knows me for that song, even though I’ve had other number one songs. When you’re naming the tour, ’25 Years of Paradise’ sounded like a good name.”

The song was born from a decidedly un-paradise-like moment. “I wrote the song because my washing machine flooded my kitchen,” Vassar recalled with a laugh. “I’m going, what in the hell’s going on? It captures a moment in time where I’ll never forget that day.”

What surprises Vassar most is how his 1990s and 2000s hits continue resonating with new generations. “It’s funny now because a lot of the songs that I wrote that were hits in the ’90s and 2000s, they’re still relevant today,” he said. “You see these 18-year-old kids singing ‘Little Red Rodeo’ or ‘Paradise.'”

When asked if songs take on new meaning over time for both artist and audience, Vassar was thoughtful. “I think they do because they grew right along with me, right?” he said. “I mean, I’ve been having hits for 30 years. I didn’t have kids before a lot of these songs, you know.”

Vassar’s songwriting success extends well beyond his own performances. His catalog includes hits for major country artists: Alan Jackson’s “Right on the Money,” Tim McGraw’s “My Next Thirty Years” and “For a Little While,” and Jo Dee Messina’s “Bye Bye” and “Alright.”

That success came despite early resistance from industry professionals who told him piano players wouldn’t make it in Nashville. “Everybody was trying to tell you what you couldn’t do instead of what you can do,” Vassar said. “I just hated all the negativity.”

The Virginia native’s commitment to helping emerging artists continues through his relationship with Old Dominion, the band that has become one of country music’s biggest acts. “I’ve known the Old Dominion guys for a long, long time,” Vassar said. “I sort of was responsible for bringing them to Nashville, you know, doing some stuff with me in Virginia. Of course, I was in the middle of all my heyday at that point, but I would bring those guys out, and now they’ve surpassed us all.”

The pride in his voice is unmistakable, and the relationship continues: Vassar will join Old Dominion’s Canadian tour dates in spring 2025.

Despite celebrating a quarter-century milestone, Vassar isn’t resting on his laurels. “We’ve just been in the studio, recorded about seven or eight new songs,” he revealed. “I’m getting my studio back up and running — my barn down here in Nashville — and I’m excited to get back in and start cutting some new things.”

He’s also considering new music videos, noting how technology has made production more accessible. “Back in the day, we’d spend $100,000 or $200,000 on a video — it was crazy expensive,” he said. “But now I think you can really put together things a lot cheaper. I could see us definitely doing some more of these things because I think visually, it’s so fun to see.”

The “25 Years of Paradise” shows feature a singer-songwriter format that Vassar particularly enjoys, drawing inspiration from solo performances by Jimmy Buffett, Vince Gill, Billy Joel and Elton John. The setlists vary each night based on audience requests and the performer’s mood.

“People call out songs, and I play. It’s really great,” Vassar said about the interactive nature of his performances.

After the Cranston show, Vassar heads to his home state of Virginia for a performance at Alexandria’s Birchmere Music Hall on Oct. 26, where he attended shows as a young musician and where friends from his college days at James Madison University often fill the crowd.

For an artist who has performed everywhere from the White House to venues across Europe and Australia, the Northeast tour represents both a homecoming to the region that first embraced his music and a celebration of endurance — not just of a hit song, but of a life and career that nearly ended too soon.

Phil Vassar’s “25 Years of Paradise” tour performs at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 24, at the Park Theatre, Cranston. Tickets available at parktheatre.com.

Ryan Belmore is the owner and publisher of What's Up Newp. He took over the publication in 2012 and has grown it into a three-time Rhode Island Monthly Best Local News Blog (2018, 2019, 2020). He was named LION Publishers Member of the Year in 2020 and received the Dominique Award from the Arts & Cultural Society of Newport County the same year. He has been awarded grants for investigative and community journalism, and continues to coach and mentor new local news publications nationwide. Ryan...