Jim loved music: he explored early European singing in the cathedrals of England, he eagerly insisted on learning the piano at the age of 9 in Depression-era Cleveland, he worked at creating detailed vocal compositions and periodically sold them to small publishers, he lead John Marshall Junior High School with a select crew of local Seattle professionals to a big choral project in 1952 that was covered in the newspapers and recorded onto LP records.
Jim loved musicians: he collected sheet music and recordings, he went not to one but to four colleges filled with exceptional professors in the pursuit of his eventual PhD from the University of Washington, he founded swingle-singing jazz quartets and scholarly ensembles for ancient music, he co-founded both the Seattle Conservatory of Music and the Academy of Music Northwest which have graduated over a thousand young music students, ready for college and careers in the performing arts, he invited world-class artists to perform in the high-ceilinged “music room” at the center of his bespoke designed house.
Jim loved his wife Dee most of all: the way she changed his life in San Diego when they met at the marina, for Dee’s exquisite eye for art and design, he loved her for putting up with his stubborn independent nature, he loved her for talking him down from high almighty perches of certainty, he loved her for her own exuberant joy in traveling, fun, and adventure, he loved her for quiet times at home as the Black Forest clock chimed down the hall and they each, amazingly, found that marriage could be a perfectly suitable way to continue living together.
Jim greatly loved people and the world-at-large: being in the middle of conversations, holding forth on his favorite topics, going to concerts and restaurants, eating succulent and flavorful meals at any time, traveling to foreign destinations, and discovering new seas to sail with his mariner buddies.
He was preceded in death by good friends Dorothy Klotzman and Willard Schultz, and by his wife Dolores V. Wells. Jim is survived by former wife Cindy Paul, nieces Nancy, Joy, and Toby around Portland, Oregon, his sister-in-law Ros Paul of West Linn, and by his dear friends and neighbors.
Toward infinite horizons, carried on the breath of a consoling God–Jim Paul, may your memory be eternal!
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