

Tom Miller - Bio
Born in
Hialeah, Florida on Oct. 5, 1965, Tom Miller was named and adopted two days
later by Nathan Anderson Miller and Alfreda Rowena Reed Miller. Tom lived with
his parents and his Aunt, Alice Miriam Reed, who was a piano teacher and the
organist for her Church. Alice was very influential in Miller's early interest
in music, and Miller could be found at age 3 playing songs on the house piano.
Miller's sister, adopted from a different family than Miller's, is Gwenna Lou
Miller Bowers.
Tom used to
listen to the many records in his Aunt Alice's collection, mostly classical,
and was known to pick up various Beethoven compositions by ear. He also
listened to Alice's collection of old comedy classics which helped to inspire
an interest in performance. He was given an electric guitar by his parents and
often jammed with his friends in garage bands. When Miller was 15, his sister
convinced him to enroll in acting school with the legendary "First Lady of
Florida Theater", Ruth Foreman. Tom Worked in television and dozens of
commercials and stayed working as an actor and sound/light tech under the wing
of Ruth Foreman for more than five years, and credits Foreman with activating
his muse to perform on the stage.
In 1976, Tom
purchased his first album; an eight track tape by Parliament called, The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein.
It remains a favorite of his to this day. Other early influences included Jimi
Hendrix, The Archies (A recording used for the cartoon that his sister used to
play all the time), and strangely enough, Cher (Another of his sister's
obsessions). When Tom's parents took him to see the musical performance of
Beatlemania, he was blown away by the music. He had his father buy the cast
recording. Later, when he finally heard the actual Beatles recordings, he was
inspired to make recordings of his own. Particularly, he was inspired by
bassist Paul McCartney (and his solo album, McCartney), to take up the
electric bass and make multi-track recordings. At the time, multi-track
recording (where one musician plays and sings all the parts of a song by
tracking one instrument over another) was a rare thing indeed. It seemed at
the time only McCartney and Stevie Wonder stood out among a rare few for such
a recording technique. Miller's first four-track recorder was a TEAC Model 2,
which cost over $10,000. Miller, self-admittedly, "conned" his father into the
purchase. Over time and with additional conning as the years went by, Miller
acquired new and better audio tools. He became absorbed with multi-track
recording equipment, and the process of recording. Tom Miller evolved into a
low tech old school studio rat with a penchant for what he affectionately
refers to as his "rinky dink" style of composition and audio engineering.
Tom Miller
recorded his first 45 record when he was 15 at Criteria Recording Studios in
Miami with engineer, Chuck KirkPatrick. He sang and over-dubbed all the
instruments himself. The A side was called, "The Underground" and the B side
was called, "Playin' Games". Miller also arranged, wrote and recorded several
hundred songs on his own, in his bedroom. He would often play the recordings
for his father who was known for the phrase, "It's good... for what it
is."
In his first
year of high school, Miller met his long time friend and collaborator Charles
McWhorter. He and McWhorter formed a duo and began to make recordings, with
Miller writing and recording the music and McWhorter writing lyrics and
singing. They were later joined by guitarist John Williford and formed a band
called Penguin. All the
members of Penguin were contributing equally to the song writing and recording
process, with McWhorter stepping out on keyboards and musical content. This
union, with other musicians falling in and out of the group, was to last for a
decade in which 5 official albums were released. Miller refers to this period
of his career as, "Music College - the Master's Program." Miller met a
girlfriend toward the end of the Penguin experience to whom he now refers to
as, "The Platypus". During a painful band breakup as Tom prepared to move to
Gainesville, Florida, she threw master tapes containing hundreds of Miller and
Penguin recordings into a dumpster. During this time, Tom also collaborated
with his high school friend Don Traub, a guitarist and songwriter. With the
vocal talents of front man Bruce Samut (From Malta) and lyricist Ulrico Font,
the band Middle Earth was formed. Middle Earth rehearsed intensively for two
years and played only two shows at the end of that time: a house party which
was shut down by the police department, and a performance in the town square
gazebo before an enthusiastic regatta festival crowd of several thousand
people. Shortly thereafter, Middle Earth disbanded due to... "creative
differences."
Arriving in
late 1984 in Gainesville, Florida, where Miller attended music classes at
Santa Fe Community College (most of which he failed), he met up with members
of a band called Plastic Age and became their bass player. Plastic Age
performed for several years. It was at this time Miller met long time friend
and collaborator, "Ron" who is, among many other professions and vocations,
the Executive Director of Miller's FREDInk label. "Ron" also maintains an
archive of all of Miller's known recordings, writings, and artworks. As a
photographer, "Ron" has archived thousands of pictures of Miller's career in
Gainesville, spanning almost two decades. After several years in Gainesville,
Miller took an abrupt leave of absence to return to Miami in an effort to
rekindle Penguin. Penguin reformed for a brief period of two years, while
Plastic age broke up in Gainesville. He never told the Plastic Age members he
was leaving. Miller refers to this incident as an early mid-life
crisis.
When Miller
left Penguin to return to Gainesville, (Miller's 2nd early mid-life crisis),
he formed an alliance with ex-Plastic Age frontman, Robert Johnson. The two
put together Gainesville's innovative 80s bands The Screaming Helens and Speed
Queen. Miller left Speed Queen, much to Johnson's dismay, to play bass in the
popular Gainesville band, NDolphin. He spent the next several years touring
and performing with NDolphin. The band often performed with the River Phoenix
fronted group, Aleka's Attic, and more often than not, played to sellout
crowds. NDolphin, because of "creative differences", broke up, despite being
on the cusp of a recording contract offer from Sony. Fed up with music, Tom
turned his focus on a new venture... live performance art.
For the next
decade, Miller helmed his bizarre, self-centered talent shows, The Tom Miller
Show and The Perpetual Motion Church (in which Tom became an ordained
minister). His shows featured a variety of high talent and no talent... often
populated with drag queens, unfunny comedians, clinically insane people, punk
musicians, and women who easily bared their breasts. Miller scandalized
Gainesville with his outspoken criticism of government, a naked press
conference, paintings featuring the Chief of Police as Elvis, art and media
events, an unhealthy preoccupation with UFO research, and a decade of hosting
Gainesville's hemp fests. Miller ran a highly publicized campaign to become a
Gainesville City Commissioner and, in the process, dished the dirt on the then
Mayor to such an extent that the conservative official was never elected to
office again.
During this
time, Tom also focused on his writings and poetry and became a member of
Christy Scheffield Sanford's Gainesville Poets and Writers group. Miller
struck up a close friendship with the gifted poet and writer, James
Valvis, who helped Miller to hone his
writing craft and publish nationally in many various magazines of the
independent press. It would not be uncommon to see Miller at Gainesville
venues screaming and spitting poetry to an enthusiastic crowd of coffee house
drunks. The audience could easily relate to Miller because Miller was also a
coffee house drunk.
When the Tom
Miller Show found its home at a venue called the Common Grounds Coffee House,
the success of the show peaked. Many feature articles about Miller and his
performance art were published in the local media. It is at this coffee house
that Miller booked a comedian called, "The Nurse from Hell". Little did Miller
know at the time, "The Nurse from Hell" was also a ferocious guitar player and
singer who was passionately committed to the music of the blues. His name was
Vini Demon. Demon and Miller struck up a friendship and worked together on the
performance art shows until one day, Demon asked Miller if he'd like to jam
sometime. Miller, whos interest in musical endeavors was on the wane took him
up on the offer. Soon after, Tom and Vini were joined by the co-owner of
Common Grounds, Joe Basilone and harmonica player Skibo Demon. Miller had
known Skibo for years and had booked him on occasion at his performance art
shows. With the addition of Reggie Johnson on the drums, Vini and
the Demons went into rehearsal. They
performed their debut show at Common Grounds on October 29, 1999.
Shortly
thereafter, Johnson was dropped for... "creative differences." After
auditioning several new drummers, it was agreed that Evil Evan Demon was the
only one for the task at hand, due to his deep rooted musical passion
knowledge, and his tasteful command of the trap set. Over the next three
years, the band performed in venues ranging from Miami's Tobacco Road to
Atlanta's Fat Matt's Rib Shack. The Demons took Gainesville by storm and were
frequently covered in the media wherever they went. They simultaneously
terrorized and inspired audiences with their ear shattering volumes, Jack
Daniel's infused, deep rooted "Demonized" blues standards and originals, and
their refusal to accept (for themselves and on behalf of all musicians)
mistreatment or undercompensation. Miller became obsessed, and then finally
captured by the spirit of the blues. He followed a course of events that
seemed set for him all along. It was at this time that Vini and the Demons met
Muddy Waters' daughter, Ros Morganfield. She became a fan of the band and said
of the Demons, "You are taking my father's music to a whole new
level."
When Bo
Diddley and Vini Demon had a chance meeting in a music store, and when Bo
later made a surprise appearance singing and performing with the Demons,
Miller sold his soul to the blues. Partly encouraged by Bo Diddley and Ros
Morganfield, Miller and his bandmates left Gainesville and their former lives
behind and moved as a band to Chicago in October of 2001, the beginning of a
long cold Winter. Vini and the Demons completed their mission to evangelize
the blues to their ever growing legion of fans and supporters through 2005.
During that time, Miller had the privilege of performing with many of the
world's blues greats including Bo Diddley, Steve Bell, Shirli Dixon, Phil Guy,
Chico Banks, Lindsey Alexander, Billy Branch and the Sons of Blues, Carlos
Johnson, Sharon Lewis, Harmonica Hinds, Sugar Blue, Harmonica Kahn, Eddy
Clearwater, Little Arthur Duncan, Eddie Taylor, Jr., Larry Taylor, and blues
singer and entertainer, Tommy McCracken.
CURRENTLY:
Tom Miller lives in Gainesville, Florida where he is the
host and Director of "The Tom Miller Show". The Tom Miller Show is the longest
running variety show in Gainesville. During it's most recent run at the
Shamrock Irish Restaurant & Pub, Miller had the distinction of generating
the largest bar tab in the history of Gainesville.
The last incarnation of the Tom Miller
Show was a 4 Episode Television Show examining Gainesville's
politics, characters, arts, music, and nightlife. This "live" television
show, was co-produced and co-directed by Gainesville Performance Artist
and Musician, frog. MILLERVISION ran Consecutive Mondays from March 19th to
June 4th of 2007 at the Shamrock Irish Restaurant & Pub.
Miller has to his credit over 40 books of
published poetry and short stories, paintings and works of art too numerous to
mention, over 40 CD albums of solo material which he refers to as,
"AudioArt" (on the FREDInk label) along with numerous recordings with many
other artists' for which he was producer. Miller also has over one-hundred Art
"Videofilms" which he directed and/or starred in including, Womp (Co-Directed
with Shawn Spencer), Dance Theory - The Master's Class, Cold, Return of Gootis
(Co-Directed with Shawn Spencer), The Miller & Pearl Show, Ring the Bell
Gently Sweet Frog, A Great American Movie I, II, III & IV(Co-Directed with
Don Traub), The Outdoor Billy Bob Johnson Show, Good Morning, The Tom Miller
Show - Live on TV, The 5 Minute Artist Presents Series, and MILLERVISION. Tom Miller is listed in Wikipedia, and was voted one
of the 20 most interesting people in Gainesville by Insite Magazine. Miller
recordings, videos, and artwork can only be purchased by way of the FREDInk Website Or directly from
Tom Miller.
Tom Miller
plays bass as his alter ego, Slam Gunther in the 60s
revival band, Charles
Ray and the Righteous Kind.
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