James Miller was an American record producer and musician.
12 Facts About Jimmy Miller
Jimmy Miller rose to prominence working with the various bands of vocalist Steve Winwood.
Jimmy Miller's best acclaimed work was his late 1960s-early 1970s work with the Rolling Stones for whom he produced a string of singles and albums that rank among the most critically and financially successful works of the band's career: Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers, Exile on Main St and Goats Head Soup.
Jimmy Miller was the son of Anne Wingate and Bill Jimmy Miller, a Las Vegas entertainment director and the man who booked Elvis Presley into the International Hotel for his 1969 return to live performance.
Bill Jimmy Miller was a Russian Jew who came to the United States with his family at the turn of the century.
Jimmy Miller owned a New Jersey nightclub called Bill Miller's Riveria which attracted headline acts including future Rat Pack members Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, and Sammy Davis Jr.
Jimmy Miller's remix entered the US top ten and broke the band in the country.
Jimmy Miller then co-wrote its follow-up "I'm A Man" with the band's singer-keyboardist, Steve Winwood.
Jimmy Miller went on to work with Primal Scream on their breakthrough album Screamadelica and William Topley's band the Blessing.
Jimmy Miller produced four tracks on the World Bank's "In Debt Interview" which featured artists including Billy Preston and Bobby Keys, and a rare musical sideline from author Hunter S Thompson.
Jimmy Miller traveled to Woody Creek, Colorado, in 1994 to meet with Thompson for a memorable weekend in May Jimmy Miller died on October 22,1994, of liver failure.
Jimmy Miller had a stepson, Steven Miller, a news photographer who spent 25 years working for The New York Times and lives in Connecticut who is the surviving biological son of Geraldine Miller.