"It's not music," he was quoted as saying, "its a disease." When Bob Dylan, soon to become one of rock's most influential artists, joined the Columbia roster in 1961, it was not Mitch Miller but another label executive, John Hammond, who signed him. But he turned down an opportunity to sign Buddy Holly, and he was outspoken in his dislike of rock 'n' roll in general. Miller had also tried to sign Elvis Presley for Columbia before being outbid by RCA. He was sympathetic to blues and folk music and had one of his biggest hits in 1951 with Johnnie Ray's "Cry," a histrionic performance often cited as a rock 'n' roll precursor. By then he had established himself as a hit maker for Columbia Records and a career shaper for singers like Tony Bennett, Rosemary Clooney, Johnny Mathis, Doris Day, Patti Page and Frankie Laine.īy the time Mitch Miller's television "Sing Along With Mitch" show left the air, his era of popular music had largely ended with the emergence of rock. Miller, with his beaming smile and neatly trimmed mustache and goatee, became a national celebrity. Mitch Miller and the Gang serenaded them with chestnuts like "Home on the Range," "That Old Gang of Mine," "I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen" and "It's a Long Way to Tipperary." When the concept was adapted for television in 1961, with the lyrics appearing at the bottom of the screen, Mr. The "Sing Along With Mitch" album series, which began in 1958, was an immense success, finding an eager audience among older listeners looking for an alternative to rock 'n' roll. Mitch Miller had been an accomplished oboist and was still a force in the recording industry when he came up with the idea of recording old standards with a chorus of some two dozen male voices and printing the lyrics on album covers. Mitch Miller, a Rochester native who was born on the Fourth of July, 1911, one of five children of Abram Calmen Miller, an immigrant from Russia and a wrought-iron worker, and Hinda Rosenbaum Miller, a former seamstress. In the 1980s and '90s he was a frequent guest conductor of symphony orchestras.
Miller was later involved in the production of several other Broadway shows, few of them hits. Miller brought in Gordon Cotler to doctor the script-book after McNally departed Philadelphia. Terrence McNally asked that his name be removed from the credits prior to opening night, with Alex Gordon as a pseudonym in the Playbill credits. Terrence McNally wrote the musical's book, but left the production during the out-of-town Philadelphia try out. The official opening on Broadway's Billy Rose Theatre was postponed from Februto March 2, 1968, after Broadway previews began performances on February 7, to allow time for rewrites to the book. The musical's out-of-town opening on Januat the Shubert Theatre, Philadelphia, PA., closing after 20 performances, moving to Broadway's Billy Rose Theater. Playbill credits listed, Book: Alex Gordon (Terrence McNally), Gordon Cotler Lyrics: Alfred Uhry Music: Robert Waldman Dance Music: Arnold Goland Musical Direction, Dance and Vocal Arrangements: Theodore Saidenberg (who had worked with Miller on his television "Sing Along" show). Mitch Miller involved himself with the creative writing and composing team, raising a Broadway production fund, getting United Artists to put up $500,000 to produce a musical version, an adaptation of the 1952 novel by John Steinbeck, "East of Eden," called "Here's Where I Belong," which closed after only one disastrous performance. After departing Columbia Records in 1965.
After rock came to dominate the record business and the singalong craze ran its course, Mitch Miller left Columbia and ventured into the Broadway theater, with limited success.
In the early 1950s he was also musical director of Little Golden Records, which made widely popular recordings for children.
In 1950, at the invitation of a former Eastman classmate, Goddard Lieberson, executive vice president of Columbia Records, Miller took the equivalent position there. Miller went to work for Mercury Records in the late '40s, initially as a producer of classical music and then head of artists and repertory in the pop division.