Frankie Miller (country musician) explained

Frankie Miller
Birth Date:17 December 1931
Origin:Victoria, Texas, U.S.
Genre:Country music
Label:4 Star Records, Columbia Records, Starday Records, United Artists, Bear Family Records, Heart of Texas Records
Website:frankiemillercountry.com

Frankie Miller (born December 17, 1931, Victoria, Texas) is an American former country singer.

Biography

Miller landed time singing on local station KNAL and recorded for Gilt Edge a subsidiary of 4 Star Records at the beginning of the 1950s, but served from 1951-53 in the United States Military during the Korean War. In 1954 he signed with Columbia Records, releasing several singles, none of which sold well. Through the latter portion of the decade, Miller performed and recorded locally, sporadically releasing singles.

He recorded his biggest hit "Blackland Farmer" for Starday in 1956. In 1959 he signed with Starday Records and released several singles which became hits on the country charts, including "Blackland Farmer", the 1956 recording, "Family Man", "Baby Rocked Her Dolly", and "A Little South of Memphis". He performed on the Louisiana Hayride and the Grand Ole Opry, and was featured in Cashbox magazine.

His last charting hit came in 1964, and he recorded with United Artists in 1965, but quit the music business soon after. He worked as a car salesman in Arlington, Texas later in life. In the 1980s, Bear Family Records reissued his LPs.

Singles

YearSingleChart Positions
US CountryUS
1959"Black Land Farmer"5
"Family Man"7
1960"Baby Rocked Her Dolly"15
1961"Black Land Farmer" (re-release)1682
1964"A Little South of Memphis"34

External links