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Mike Mills

 
Artist: Mike Mills
  • Born: December 17, 1958, Orange, CA
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Bass

Biography

Mike Mills was the bassist for R.E.M., arguably the most important and influential American rock band of the post-punk era. Born December 17, 1958, in Orange, CA, he was raised in Macon, GA, and while attending junior high school met drummer Bill Berry. Despite early personality clashes, the two played together in a number of local bands and eventually became best friends, jointly attending the University of Georgia. There they formed R.E.M. with singer Michael Stipe and guitarist Peter Buck; honing an atmospheric, jangly pop sound often reminiscent of the Byrds, the group toured relentlessly prior to issuing their debut single, "Radio Free Europe," on the tiny Hib-Tone label in mid-1981. After the record's success on college radio attracted the attention of IRS Records, they released the Chronic Town EP a year later.

R.E.M.'s first full-length album, 1983's Murmur, cemented their reputation as critics' darlings. Despite little mainstream airplay, 1984's Reckoning reached the Top 30 and with the darkly beautiful follow-up Fables of the Reconstruction, the band earned increasing MTV visibility for the videos "Can't Get There From Here" and "Driver 8." 1986's Lifes Rich Pageant revealed a growing awareness with sociopolitical concerns (among them environmental issues and American foreign policy) and featured Mills' first lead vocal on the single "Superman"; the following year's Document was R.E.M.'s commercial breakthrough, buoyed by the Top Ten hit "The One I Love." Released on Election Day 1988, the Warner Bros. label debut Green was R.E.M.'s most pointedly polemic effort to date, although the hits "Stand" and "Pop Song 89" also reflected the band's wry sense of humor.

Following the Green tour, R.E.M. took an extended break, during which time Mills, Buck, and Berry teamed with singer/songwriter Warren Zevon to record an LP as the Hindu Love Gods. R.E.M. returned in 1991 with the chart-topping Out of Time, which generated the Top Ten hits "Losing My Religion" and "Shiny Happy People"; Mills again assumed lead vocal duties for the single "Near Wild Heaven." The elegiac masterpiece Automatic for the People followed in 1992 and as alternative rock took over the pop charts, the band was widely acknowledged among the chief inspirations behind a generation of new artists. While touring in support of 1995's Monster, Mills was forced to undergo abdominal surgery to remove an intestinal tumor. He returned to complete the tour and two years later, R.E.M. resurfaced with New Adventures in Hi-Fi. Minus Berry, the remaining trio issued Up in 1998. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Mike Mills
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This article is about Mike Mills, the R.E.M. bassist. Other similar sounding articles include the Irish journalist Michael Mills and Mike Mills (director).
Mike Mills
A middle-aged Cuacasian male with long wavy blond hair plays a bass guitar and sings into a microphone while wearing glasses, a green blazer, yellow-and-black striped shirt, and dark pants.
Mills performing with R.E.M. in 2004; Ken Stringfellow is visible in the background.
Background information
Birth name Michael Edward Mills
Born 17 December 1958 (1958-12-17) (age 50)
Orange County, California
Genres Alternative rock
Occupations Musician, songwriter, producer
Instruments Bass, vocals, guitar, piano, accordion
Years active 1980–present
Associated acts R.E.M., Hindu Love Gods, The Backbeat Band
Automatic Baby

Michael Edward Mills (born December 17, 1958 in Orange County, California) is an American musician and songwriter who is a founding member of the alternative rock group R.E.M.. Though known primarily as a bassist, piano player and background singer, his musical repertoire includes many other keyboard, guitar, string, wind and percussion instruments. He also contributes to much of the band's songwriting.

Contents

Biography

Early life

As a young boy, he moved with his family to Macon, Georgia and attended Mount de Sales in the early '70s. Mills' father Frank was a singer whose appearances included The Ed Sullivan Show, while his mother Adora was a piano teacher, which helped him develop a love of music at an early age. He met and formed a band with drummer friend Bill Berry in high school. They met Peter Buck, Michael Stipe, and Joe Thomas, a musical influence from the University of Georgia, after starting at the University of Georgia in Athens.

R.E.M.

Mills, Berry, Buck, and Stipe decided to drop out of college and focus on their band, now named R.E.M. The band quickly developed a following and were soon signed to I.R.S. Records.

Mills is responsible for the songwriting of many of R.E.M.'s songs, including "Nightswimming", "Find the River", "At My Most Beautiful", "Why Not Smile", "Let Me In", "Wendell Gee", "(Don't Go Back To) Rockville", "Beat a Drum", "Be Mine" and "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?". In addition to providing backing melodies, he has also sung lead vocals on "Texarkana", "Near Wild Heaven", The Clique cover "Superman" and The Troggs cover, "Love is All Around".

Mills was arrested for indecent exposure in Athens in the early 1980s, known in R.E.M. lore as "the water tower incident"[citation needed].

Mills is also known for his collection of Nudie suits that he often wears on stage, and were first seen in the 1994 video for "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" and then regularly on the subsequent 1995 Monster Tour.

R.E.M.'s 2004 album Around the Sun was heavily shaped by Mills' piano and keyboard parts, and he had many prominent vocal parts on the 2008 album Accelerate.

Other work

Mills co-produced (along with Mitch Easter) Hermitage, the 1987 album by the Virginia-based band Waxing Poetics.

The three instrumentalists from R.E.M. all performed on Nikki Sudden's 1991 album The Jewel Thief, including the single "I Belong to You". They also joined up with Warren Zevon to form the group Hindu Love Gods for a single self-titled release in 1990, which featured a minor hit in the Prince cover "Raspberry Beret".

In late 2003, Mills briefly joined the "Tell Us the Truth" tour, an anti-war, anti-Bush administration collaboration with Tom Morello (guitarist for Audioslave and Rage Against the Machine, who, like Mills, did a solo acoustic set), Jill Sobule, Steve Earle, Janeane Garofalo, Billy Bragg, and others.

In March 1999, Mills defeated over one thousand other entrants in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's annual "Final Four Fiasco" contest by correctly picking the final four teams in the 1999 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.

Mills played piano on Mudville's 2007 album Iris Nova.

Mills also recorded a brief piano part for the song "Soma" from The Smashing Pumpkins' 1993 album Siamese Dream, which was recorded in Georgia.

Personal life

Mills has one son, Julian, born in 1989. Mills introduced Julian during a show at the Red Rocks Amphitheater in Denver, Colorado, in 1999. Julian was present at R.E.M.'s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on March 12, 2007, at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel as well as the Georgia Music Hall of Fame induction in 2006. Julian is now a student at Ole Miss.

Mills' father, Frank, died on September 25, 2001, at the age of 65. A singer whose appearances included The Ed Sullivan Show, he had recently retired to Lake Oconee in Greene County, reported Online Athens at the time. In addition to singing, Mr. Mills had been a pilot for the U.S. Marine Corps. He was laid to rest four days later at the First Methodist Church of Greensboro, Georgia.

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