Daniel Miller (music producer)  

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Daniel Miller (°1951) is an English music producer and founder of Mute Records. As The Normal, he wrote and recorded "Warm Leatherette" (1978).

Contents

Biography

Miller is the son of two Austrian-Jewish refugees from Nazism, Martin Miller and Hannah Norbert-Miller, born into a family of actors.

Miller studied film and television at the Guildford School of Art (now University for the Creative Arts) from 1969-1972, where he became interested in synthesizer music. By the end of the 1960s, he became frustrated with rock music's lack of experimentation and became interested in the sound of German bands like Can, Faust, Neu! and Kraftwerk. Miller worked as a DJ in Switzerland before returning to England at the height of punk, which he enjoyed due to the energy and do-it-yourself attitude of the music. He later became interested in the electronic music scene such as Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire which inspired Miller to create his own music. Using money from film editing and working long hours, he gathered enough money to buy a cheap 700S synthesizer and a TEAC four-track reel-to-reel tape recorder leading to the creation of the band, The Normal.

Birth of Mute Records

After returning from a live tour, Miller found a pile of demo tapes on his doorstep. Because he had included an address on the "Warm Leatherette" single cover, people had wanted to do a similar small-scale deal with Mute. The turning point for Mute Records came when Miller listened to a tape by an artist called Fad Gadget and liked what he heard. In 1979, Mute Records began releasing singles by Fad Gadget including 'Back to Nature', the follow-up to 'Warm Leatherette'. Miller ran the label from his North-West London flat.

Music projects

The Normal

Miller recorded two songs, "T.V.O.D." and "Warm Leatherette". The latter was inspired by J. G. Ballard's novel Crash. He called it The Normal to demystify and make it very bland and completed the package by setting up a record label for the release, Mute. He had researched how to make a single so he got some test pressings. Not knowing anything about retail or distribution he approached Rough Trade Records in Portobello Road, London. Originally a record outlet, Rough Trade had expanded into a label and distribution network. Miller took a test pressing into the shop to see if they would be interested in buying a box of them. Rough Trade Records boss Geoff Travis went to the back of the shop with Miller and played "Warm Leatherette". They loved the recording and helped him press 2000 copies of the single. "Warm Leatherette" was released in May 1978 and sold out very quickly. After receiving critical acclaim for the project Miller decided to explore further. He had been helping out at the Rough Trade Shop when he was given an offer of live work. Not wanting to perform alone, he formed a duo with the late Robert Rental who was recording material in a similar style at the time. The live event was hosted by DJ Colin Faver and included Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire. After that event, Miller and Rental took on a Rough Trade tour supporting Stiff Little Fingers. Miller and Rental went down very badly; Stiff Little Fingers were a traditional punk band supported by two people with synthesizers and a backing tape.

Silicon Teens

Another early Mute signing was the synthpop band Silicon Teens, with four imaginary band members: Darryl (played by Frank Tovey), Jacki, Paul, and Diane. The recordings were all recorded by Miller himself and engineered by Eric Radcliffe, who would later work on many other Mute releases. An album titled 'Music for Parties' was released in 1980 and consisted of classic rock 'n' roll songs, like 'Memphis, Tennessee' and 'Just Like Eddie', done in an upbeat synthpop style. The Silicon Teens gave an insight into Miller's idea of an all-synthesiser teenage pop group.

Duet Emmo

Duet Emmo was a one-off collaboration between Daniel Miller, Graham Lewis and Bruce Gilbert spawning an album and single, both titled 'Or So it Seems' in 1983. Lewis and Gilbert were both members of Wire until 1979 when the band split up. All three had been friends for a long time. They had all been using Blackwing Studios, and had shared the same engineer, Eric Radcliffe. An initial project had been suggested in 1980 but the success of Depeche Mode and Yazoo had kept Miller busy until the end of 1982. Lewis and Gilbert had both been releasing their own material under the name Dome. Duet Emmo was an anagram of Mute and Dome.

Sunroof

With fellow Depeche Mode music producer Gareth Jones, Daniel Miller has released a few remixes under the name Sunroof. Starting with a remix of "Oh Yeah" for the 1997 Can remix album Sacrilege, there has also surfaced remixes for Neu!, Kreidler, Pizzicato Five, Goldfrapp, Faust, MGMT, Charles Wilp, Ellis Island Sound, Future Bible Heroes and To Rococo Rot.

The Sunroof debut album, Electronic Music Improvisations Vol. 1, was released in May, 2021.

Mute: A Visual Document

In 2017, Miller co-authored Mute: A Visual Document (Thames & Hudson) with Terry Burrows. An illustrated hardback book that detailed the history of Mute Records, it was named Book of the Year by both Rough Trade and Electronic Sound magazine.

Linking in in 2023

1 + 2 (album), 101 (album), 1985–1990: The A List, A Broken Frame, A Question of Lust, A Question of Time, Alan Wilder, Andy Fletcher (musician), Appliance (band), Black Celebration, Blackwing Studios, Blasphemous Rumours / Somebody, Bloodline (Recoil album), Book of Love (album), Book of Love (band), Book of Love discography, Cabaret Voltaire (band), Can (band), Catching Up with Depeche Mode, Chicks on Speed Will Save Us All, Chicks on Speed, Chris & Cosey, Cloudland (album), Come (UK band), Construction Time Again, Daniel Miller, Dead Media, Dome (band), Dome 3, Don't Go (Yazoo song), Dreaming of Me, Easy Listening for Iron Youth, Electricity (Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark song), Everything Counts, Exciter (Depeche Mode album), Fad Gadget, Festival Forte, Gag (album), Gareth Jones (music producer), Get the Balance Right!, Greatest Hits (Depeche Mode album), Guildford School of Art, Happy End of You, Hard Corps (English band), I Like to Score, I Start Counting (band), IKLECTIK, Independent Label Market, Infinity (Yann Tiersen album), It's Beginning To And Back Again, It's Called a Heart, John Foxx and the Maths, John Foxx, Just Can't Get Enough (Depeche Mode song), Kapital (album), Kidney Bingos, Kraftwerk, Kreidler (band), Leave in Silence, List of cult music artists, Live at the Seaside, Love, in Itself, Machine Soul: An Odyssey Into Electronic Dance Music, Mark Stewart (English musician), Martin Gore, Martin Miller (actor), Master and Servant, Miranda Sex Garden, Mojo Awards, Mount Vernon Arts Lab, Music Complete, Music for the Masses, Mute Records discography, Mute Records, My Friend Dario, Never Let Me Down Again, New Hormones, New Life (song), Nobody's Diary, Non-Stop (Andy Bell album), Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret, Oberheim Xpander, One Day (Vince Clarke and Paul Quinn song), Only You (Yazoo song), Or So It Seems, Oxygen (Swans EP), Paul Kendall, People Are People (album), People Are People, Personal Jesus, Polly Scattergood (album), Polly Scattergood, Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions, Recoil (band), Regis (musician), Remixes 81–04, Rhythm King, Richard Warren (musician), Robert Rental, Roland MC-4 Microcomposer, Roland System 100, Sacrilege (album), See You (Depeche Mode song), Shake the Disease, Silicon Teens, Situation (song), Snakedrill, Snakes and Ladders (Frank Tovey album), Soak (album), Soft Cell, Some Bizzare Album, Some Great Reward, Songs from the Red Room, Songs of Faith and Devotion, Soundedit Festival, Sounds of the Universe, Speak & Spell (album), Stevo Pearce, Strangelove (song), Stripped (song), Supernature (Goldfrapp album), Synclavier, Television Personalities, Terry Burrows, The Best of Depeche Mode Volume 1, The Best of Fad Gadget, The Buggles, The Collection (Yazoo album), The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (soundtrack), The Golden Age of Wireless, The Grace Jones Story, The Grey Area of Mute Records discography, The Lonely Robot, The Lost Tapes (Can album), The Meaning of Love, The Normal, The Punishment of Luxury (album), The Singles (Goldfrapp album), The Singles (Soft Cell album), The Singles 81→85, The Singles 86–98, The Two Ring Circus, The Very Best of Soft Cell, The Videos 86–98, The Violet Flame, Timo Blunck, To Rococo Rot, Toby Mott, Ultra (Depeche Mode album), Upstairs at Eric's, Utopia (Goldfrapp song), Vero Electronics, Vince Clarke, Violator (album), Volk (album), Warm Leatherette (album), Warm Leatherette, Whitehouse (band), Wire (band), WIXIW, World Imitation Productions, Yazoo (band), You Make Me Feel So Good, You Surround Me, Your Life Is a Lie





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