Adam Miller was an American singer-songwriter, active in the 1970s.
Life and career
Miller grew up in Washington, D.C., and also spent some time in Europe. As a treble - or boy soprano - he was soloist in the Washington National Cathedral Choir. He started playing guitar and piano and began writing his own songs as a teenager.[1]
Miller released two solo albums on Chelsea Records (distributed by RCA Records), featuring songs he wrote for Cassidy, and also new songs. His first album Who Would Give His Only Song Away was released in 1972. It was produced by Wes Farrell and features, among others, Larry Carlton on guitar, Mike Melvoin on piano, Jim Horn on saxophone and Hal Blaine on drums. It was described as "Piercing lyrics and Miller's twangy, folksy vocals are pleasant but it is the album's fine, far-ranging instrumental background that sets the production above ordinary folk and into a sort of pop-folk category."[3] Another reviewer stated that "there's mystery, enigma in his lyrics and music. And yet it's so clear, so smooth. He lets you so deep into his head, you have to listen and let the music mean what it means – to you."[4]
Miller's second album Westwind Circus, produced by Terry Cashman and Tommy West, was released two years later and features Michael Kamen on synthesizer, and Steve Gadd and Rick Marotta on drums, among other musicians. After the release of this album, he disappeared from public life.[5]