翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Bill Milbrodt
・ Bill Mildenhall
・ Bill Miles
・ Bill Miller (American football coach, born 1931)
・ Bill Miller (American football coach, born 1956)
・ Bill Miller (athlete)
・ Bill Miller (Australian footballer)
・ Bill Miller (basketball)
・ Bill Miller (film producer)
・ Bill Miller (finance)
・ Bill Miller (footballer, born 1890)
・ Bill Miller (footballer, born 1908)
・ Bill Miller (ice hockey)
・ Bill Miller (lacrosse)
・ Bill Miller (left-handed pitcher)
Bill Miller (musician)
・ Bill Miller (outfielder)
・ Bill Miller (pianist)
・ Bill Miller (pole vault)
・ Bill Miller (politician)
・ Bill Miller (right-handed pitcher)
・ Bill Miller (umpire)
・ Bill Miller (wide receiver)
・ Bill Miller Bar-B-Q Enterprises
・ Bill Millin
・ Bill Mills (baseball)
・ Bill Milner
・ Bill Milner (American football)
・ Bill Milroy
・ Bill Mims


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Bill Miller (musician) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bill Miller (musician)

Bill Miller (born January 23, 1955) is a Native American singer/songwriter of Mohican heritage. He was born on the Stockbridge-Munsee reservation, near Shawano in northern Wisconsin.
Miller's Mohican name is ''Fush-Ya Heay Aka'' (meaning "bird song"). He began playing guitar when he was 12 years old, and is an accomplished player of the Native American flute. In 1973, he moved to Milwaukee and won an art school scholarship; today he is an accomplished artist whose drawings and paintings have been widely praised.
In 1984, he moved to Nashville. His biggest break came when popular musician Tori Amos, after listening to his ''Red Road'' CD on her tour bus, asked him to serve as the opening act on her Under the Pink tour. Miller continuously gained fans with other artists from a broad musical spectrum. He went on to tour with diverse musicians such as Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, The BoDeans, Richie Havens, and Arlo Guthrie and wrote songs with artists such as Nanci Griffith, Peter Rowan and Kim Carnes.
In 2005, Miller's instrumental ''Cedar Dream Songs'' won a Grammy Award for Best Native American Music Album.
In an interview, Bill said, "I appreciate people who have something to stand up for. I stand up for the truth. If you stand up for what you believe in you have no idea how many people you'll affect." Miller's songs have always been deeply spiritual and have clearly explored his Christian faith in his own indigenous language; ''Spirit Rain'' exemplifies this elegant dialog. He crossed genres with his 2000 record, ''Hear Our Prayer,'' which was released by Integrity Music as a Christian worship music project. While some songs were co-written by notable songwriters in the genre, he re-recorded some familiar songs such as "Praises" from ''The Red Road'' and "Listen to Me" from ''Raven in the Snow'' which, in a new context made clear that he could still be fully Native and fully a Christian. Perhaps the most notable cuts on the album were his cover of Bob Dylan's "I Believe in You" and a reinterpretation of the spiritual "Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around."
Miller has collaborated with other notable Native American musicians such as Robert Mirabal, Carlos Nakai, and Joanne Shenandoah. His project with Mirabal, ''Native Suite'' was an experimental and traditional project, featuring flute and percussion, as well as Mohican pow-wow singing. His vocals appeared on Thomas Kinkade's 2000 album Music of Light which featured Rob Mathes and Australian Christian diva Michelle Tumes; he also was featured on Cherokee singer-songwriter Jason Upton's album ''Great River Road''.
In early 2008, Miller worked on a project in La Crosse, Wisconsin for The Pump House, a regional arts center. Miller painted one of many herons that will be auctioned off and placed around the city in honor of fine arts. Also in that city, on April 25-26, 2008 the world premier of his symphony, "The Last Stand", was performed by the La Crosse Symphony Orchestra, along with Native American musicians and dancers, with Amy Mills conducting. Co-composed with Joshua Yudkin and Kristin Wilkinson, the symphony grew out of an inspiration Miller had, after visiting the Battle of the Little Bighorn site when he was nine. Called a "symphony of hope", it deals with that battle, and the reconciliation Bill Miller, a man dedicated to his Native and Christian roots, feels must occur.〔(New symphony gives birth to Miller’s vision of reconciliation : La Crosse Tribune )〕〔(Review: ‘Last Stand’ symphony stands out as new classical work : La Crosse Tribune )〕 Thirty-three photos taken by David Joseph Marcou of the "Last Stand" world debut's dress-rehearsal on April 24, 2008, are in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.
In 2015 Bill's mother died, and on her deathbed she told him what she had kept secret all his life, that he was Jewish. After his mother's death, Bill visited Israel and the Western Wall to rediscover his heritage.
== Discography ==
;Albums
* ''Bill Miller and Native Sons'' (1983, Windspirit)
* ''Old Dreams and New Hopes'' (1987, Windspirit)
* ''The Art of Survival'' (1990, Vanguard)
* ''Loon, Mountain And Moon'' (1991, Vanguard)
* ''Reservation Road - Live'' (1992, Vanguard)
* ''The Red Road'' (1993, Warner Western)
* ''Raven in the Snow'' (1995, Reprise/Warner Bros.)
* ''Native Suite—Chants, Dances, and the Sacred Earth'' (1996, Warner Western)
* ''Ghostdance'' (1999, Vanguard)
* ''Healing Waters'' (1999, JVO Records; 2001 Good Cop Bad Cop)
* ''Hear our Prayer'' (2000, Integrity)
* ''Spirit Rain'' (2002, Paras)
* ''A Sacred Gift'' (2003, Paras)
* ''Cedar Dream Songs'' (2004, Paras)
* ''Spirit Songs: The Best of Bill Miller'' (2004, Vanguard)
;Contributing artist
* ''The Rough Guide to Native American Music'' (1999, World Music Network)
* ''Look Again To The Wind: Johnny Cash's Bitter Tears Revisited'' (2015, Sony Masterworks)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bill Miller (musician)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.