"Fans will appreciate Metsa's stories about the writing and reception of many of his songs."Publishers Weekly
"More than simply a title of regional interest to Midwesterners, this musical journey will resonate with readers who prefer their tell-alls spiced with a generous helping of conviction and a dash of humility."Kirkus Reviews
"Blue Guitar Highway is a convincing testament to the strength that a performer can draw on by remaining in touch with his or her roots, while remaining open to the trials and rewards along the road of an America steeped in song."Discorder Magazine
"You’ve got to admire Paul Metsa. He chased his dreams and became an accomplished Minneapolis-based guitarist and songwriter. Although he’s often lived gig to gig, you sense from this memoir that he’s loved the ride."Lake Superior Magazine
"Blue Guitar Highway has so many compelling stories that you can’t put it down."Star Tribune
"Metsa’s style is readable, sometimes funny, sometimes lyrical, and full of passion."Northeaster and North News
"Blue Guitar Highway is . . . Paul Metsa’s equivalent of Bob Dylan’s Chronicles, Vol. 1."Hometown Focus
"Metsa uses his talents as a songwriter and lyricist to full advantage. His prose sets us to laughing, crying, and remembering often within the same sentence. . . . This memoir belongs on any music fan’s bookshelf."Mark Munger, Cloquet River Press
"Reading the words of Paul Metsa as recorded in his memoir, Blue Guitar Highway, is a walk through the several decades of the local music scene with all of his and its connections with the ages and stages of American music writ large."Twin Cities Daily Planet
"While the 271-page work is full of telling, humorous anecdotes from Metsa’s lifeincluding the time he slipped Grateful Dead front man Jerry Garcia some leftover, psychedelic mushroomsthe story’s primary message is one of perseverance and passion."The Downtown Journal
"Blue Guitar Highway conveys all the sweet absurdity, dry humor, and passion for the language of music that has made Metsa’s story sing."Grand Rapids Herald-Review
"For music-lovers who admire the 80s and 90s in the Twin Cities rock-and-roll scene, Metsa’s journey is worth delving into."Woodbury-South Maplewood Review
"Blue Guitar Highway, by Paul Metsa will certainly please music buffs who remember Metsaʼs days in the joints on Minneapolisʼs West Bank."River Falls Journal
"Packed with colorful details about music venues in Minneapolis and on the Range and with references to things uniquely Minnesotan, Blue Guitar Highway offers lots of local appeal. On a broader plane, Metsaʼs book is an anthem to professional musicians who live to play. His heartfelt tributes to those who influenced him in his musical pursuits are numerous. So belly up to the bar now and then, and get to know this gregarious Minnesotan, a born storyteller."Duluth News Tribune
"Metsa writes so well that he can even make a hangover seem beautiful. Compelling, gripping and laugh out loud funny even as he describes some far from funny happenstance, Metsa takes us on his lifelong ride, from the death of his mother on an operating table, to his bust for cocaine possession, through a personal quest to save a beloved local theatre, all told within the roller coaster ride of a musician from whom “quit” is definitely not an option. He is Minnesota’s other Dylan."Sound Waves Magazine
"The anecdotes are entertaining, the self-deprecating humor is often captivating, and the music trivia is mostly entertaining to those of us who know little about the music and the culture of Minnesota in the middle of the last century."No Depression
"Metsa is the other great folksinger from Minnesota's Mesabi Iron Range."Huffington Post
"Metsa is a mountain in Minnesota music."—Bobby Vee
Though Metsa tested the waters in New York and Los Angeles, Minnesota has been home base for most of his career, and there, he is considered a legendary musician and songwriter. Though not as well-known as fellow Minnesotan Bob Dylan, Metsa's story has much in common with those of other rock stars—ample amounts of sex and drugs, plus some trouble with the law and IRS. Though Metsa has often performed with less famous musicians, he has also shared a stage with Bruce Springsteen, Willie Nelson, and Pete Seeger. Fans will appreciate Metsa's stories about the writing and reception of many of his songs. Though the memoir rambles and Metsa is a serial name-dropper, readers will find him to be pleasant company. (Oct.)
A veteran of the Minneapolis bar-band scene takes readers on a ramble down the roads of a life spent working on the outer edge of fame but on the center stage of satisfaction.
While he may be a first-time memoirist, Metsa is a long-time raconteur who has been saving up stories from nearly 40 years in the music business, most of it spent in his beloved home state of Minnesota. From his first junior-high garage band to a successful stint with a Grateful Dead–esque ensemble to a bevy of solo gigs, Metsa has dedicated his heart to performing, and his earnest and often self-deprecating memoir—sprinkled with generous doses of Kerouac/Kesey flights of verbal fantasy, some more successful than others—shows him to be as likable a narrator as ever graced a bar stool. Too many rock memoirs dwell on excess at the expense of inspiration; Metsa quickly dispenses with the former (a bout with cocaine in the '80s) to better concentrate on the latter. Fusingmusic and social activism has allowed the author to build a loyal following in addition to attracting attention from such luminaries as Nora Guthrie (Woody's daughter), John H. Hammond (the rock promoter who helped elevate Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger to prominence) and the late progressive Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone. The best example of this dedication comes in a chapter called "Slings and Arrows," in which Metsa details his (unfortunately unsuccessful) attempts to save the historic Guthrie Theater from demolition.
More than simply a title of regional interest to Midwesterners, this musical journey will resonate with readers who prefer their tell-alls spiced with a generous helping of conviction and a dash of humility.