Jimmy Miller


Jimmy Miller was an American record producer and musician. While he produced albums for dozens of different bands and artists, he is known primarily for his work with several key musical acts of the 1960s and 1970s.
Miller rose to prominence working with the various bands of vocalist Steve Winwood. His best acclaimed work was his late 1960s-early 1970s work with the Rolling Stones for whom he produced a string of singles and albums that rank among the most critically and financially successful works of the band's career: Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers, Exile on Main St. and Goats Head Soup. In the late 1970s, he began working with Motörhead and continued to produce until his death in 1994.

Early life

Miller was born in Brooklyn, New York City, the son of Anne Wingate and Bill Miller. Bill was a Las Vegas entertainment director who had booked Elvis Presley into the International Hotel for his 1969 return to live performance.
Jimmy's half-sister Judith recalled that "Jimmy’s musical life had started at age 8 playing the drums, writing music, and crooning."
His half-sister was Judith Miller, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for The New York Times who was imprisoned for not revealing her sources in the Plame–Wilson CIA affair.

Career

Miller first trained and worked as the protege of Stanley Borden. Borden, the original backer of Island Records, suggested Miller to Chris Blackwell, who brought him to the United Kingdom.
Miller's first job in the UK was to remix a single from the Spencer Davis Group which had done well in the UK charts, "Gimme Some Lovin'". Blackwell recalled that Miller introduced "a kind of wild magic" and "turns up the heat, threatens some kind of chaos", which resulted in "a new sound." Miller's remix entered the US top ten and broke the band in the country. He then co-wrote its follow-up "I'm A Man" with the band's singer-keyboardist, Steve Winwood.
After Winwood left the band in 1967, Miller continued to work with Winwood by producing Winwood's band Traffic as well as the sole album by the Eric Clapton–Winwood supergroup Blind Faith. During this period, Miller also produced the UK Number 1 single for The Move, "Blackberry Way", the first two albums by Spooky Tooth and co-produced the hit Delaney & Bonnie album from 1969, On Tour with Eric Clapton.
In addition to producing five of their albums, Miller notably added instrumentation to several songs by the Rolling Stones. His contributions include the opening cowbell on "Honky Tonk Women" and drumming on "You Can't Always Get What You Want," "Tumbling Dice," "Happy," and "Shine a Light."
In the late 70s, Miller collaborated with Motörhead and produced two of their albums, Overkill and Bomber. In 1983, Miller produced Johnny Thunders's In Cold Blood. In 1991, Miller helped produce Primal Scream's breakthrough album Screamadelica. Miller also produced three tracks for the Wedding Present's 1992 compilation Hit Parade 2.

Personal life

Miller's marriage to Gayle Shepherd, a member of the singing group the Shepherd Sisters, produced a daughter, singer Deena Miller.
Miller and his second wife Geraldine had a son, Michael, who died at the age of 32. Through Geraldine, Jimmy Miller had a stepson, Steven Miller, a news photographer who spent 25 years working for The New York Times. Geraldine died of breast cancer in 1991.
Miller used hard drugs.
Miller died in Denver, Colorado, at the age of 52, from liver failure.

Discography

YearArtistAlbum details
1967TrafficMr. Fantasy
1968Spooky ToothIt's All About
1968TrafficTraffic
1968The Rolling StonesBeggars Banquet
1969Spooky ToothSpooky Two
1969TrafficLast Exit
1969The Rolling StonesLet It Bleed
1969Blind FaithBlind Faith
1970Delaney & Bonnie & FriendsOn Tour with Eric Clapton
1970Ginger Baker's Air ForceGinger Baker's Air Force
1970SkyDon't Hold Back
1970SkySailor's Delight
1971The Rolling StonesSticky Fingers
1972The Rolling StonesExile on Main St.
1972KrackerLa Familia
1972Bobby WhitlockRaw Velvet
1973The Rolling StonesGoats Head Soup
1973KrackerKracker Brand
1974Locomotiv GTLocomotiv GT
1979TrapezeHold On
1979MotörheadOverkill
1979MotörheadBomber
1980PlasmaticsNew Hope for the Wretched
1983Johnny ThundersIn Cold Blood
1991Primal ScreamScreamadelica