| MITCH MILLER |
![]() CBS - S 52416 MITCH MILLER - MITCH'S GREATEST HITS Side 1: March from the river Kwai and Colonel Bogey - The yellow rose of Texas - Sing along - The bowery grenadiers - Song for a summer night - Silly little tune Side 2: The children's marching song - Do-re-mi - Hey, Betty Martin - Bonnie Eloise - Walkin' down to Washington - Het little baby |
![]() BRUNSWICK - SSS 119 DANCE & SING WITH MITCH MILLER Side 1: Yes sir, that's my baby - Heartaches - Someday (you'll want me to want you) - Get me to the church on time - On the sunny side of the street - Silver dollar Side 2: Wedding bells (are breaking up that old gang of mine) - Into each life some rain must fall - I'm gonna sit right down and write myself a letter - You always hurt the one you love - Red wing |


| MITCH
MILLER (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, Miller is an accomplished oboe and English horn player. He supported himself in the 1930s and 1940s as a session musician. Among his more celebrated studio dates in the non-classical field were for The Voice of Frank Sinatra and bebop pioneer Charlie Parker’s famous Bird With Strings albums. He played in the CBS house orchestra for the 1938 Orson Welles War of the Worlds broadcast. He later recorded Sibelius’s Swan of Tuonela with Leopold Stokowski for RCA, and the Mozart Oboe Concerto for Columbia Records.
Miller served as the head of A&R (artists & repertory) at Mercury Records in the late forties. In 1950 he took the same position at Columbia Records, where he would remain until the early 1960s. Miller signed and produced many important pop standards artists for Columbia, including Frankie Laine, Johnnie Ray, Ray Conniff, Percy Faith, Johnny Mathis, Tony Bennett, and Guy Mitchell (whose pseudonym actually was based on Miller’s first name), and helped direct the careers of artists who were already signed to the label, like Doris Day, Dinah Shore and Jo Stafford to just name a few.
Miller is frequently (and probably unfairly) referred to by rock
music historians as an “enemy” of early rock and roll. He did back
John Hammond’s signing of Bob Dylan to capitalize on the folk music
craze. While he did ultimately lose his job as
In the 1960s Miller became a household name with his television show Sing Along with Mitch, a sing-along program featuring him and a male choir. During the second season of Sing Along with Mitch, Mitch Miller himself coined the catch phrase “All Smiles.” These were preceded by the instructions to “sing along; just follow the bouncing ball” (a large dot that “bounced” above the words that were superimposed on television of the song that Mitch was singing). Miller’s biggest hits with the choir were “The Yellow Rose of Texas,” a drum-propelled version of the old march, and “Colonel Bogey March,” then enjoying new popularity from its use in the movie The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957). In addition to the television show, Miller and his choir recorded a series of best-selling albums.
One
of the singers in Miller’s choir, Bob McGrath, went on to a long
career as one of the hosts of the PBS children’s television show
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![]() PHILIPS - 429382 BE MITCH MILLER Colonel Bogey - Marche de la riviere Kwai Victoire du Colonel Nicholson - La construction du pont - La danse dans le camp - Finale |
![]() CBS - CBS S 8372 MITCH MILLER March of the river Kwai - Colonel Bogey Yellow rose of Texas |