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Milli Vanilli

Milli Vanilli was a pop duo from Munich, Germany, that comprised Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus. The duo was founded in 1988 by the producer Frank Farian. They combined pop, rap, R&B, disco and dance music. Farian hired Brad Howell, John Davis, Charles Shaw, Jodie Rocco and Linda Rocco to sing on the records, and had Morvan and Pilatus dance and lip-sync for performances.

History
Formation and All or Nothing, 1984–1989 , the producer of Milli Vanilli, in 2008|264x264px Rob Pilatus, from Munich, and Fab Morvan, from Paris, met at a Los Angeles disco in the 1980s and reconnected again in Munich. They bonded over their experiences growing up black in European cities. In Munich, they attempted to find work as backing singers, then formed their own act and recorded an album for a small record label that sold a few thousand copies. They also worked as dancers for pop singers and hosted club nights. According to Pilatus, they struggled financially and lived in a housing project. The German music producer Frank Farian recorded a cover of the Numarx song "Girl You Know It's True" with session musicians. Farian had previously created the 1970s disco band Boney M, whose frontman, Bobby Farrell, was a dancer who lip-synced to Farian's vocals. According to Pilatus, Farian promised they would be allowed artistic input after they had done enough promotional work. The singles "Blame It on the Rain", "Girl I'm Gonna Miss You" and "Baby Don't Forget My Number" all reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. A 1989 episode of In Living Color parodied Milli Vanilli, mocking their accents, hair and dance moves. In April 1989, Milli Vanilli declined to perform on The Arsenio Hall Show, which requires artists to perform live. In July 1989, Morvan and Pilatus asked to stop giving interviews as their accents were driving suspicion. In mid-1989, Milli Vanilli joined the Club MTV tour alongside several other acts. On 21 July, during a performance on MTV at the Lake Compounce theme park in Bristol, Connecticut, the prerecorded "Girl You Know It's True" vocal track became stuck on repeat. Morvan and Pilatus continued to mime, then ran off stage. and the audience accepted the lip-syncing as part of the show. However, Pilatus said later said the incident was "the beginning of the end for Milli Vanilli". In February, they won Best New Artist at the 32nd Grammy Awards. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times later that year, Pilatus said this was a misunderstanding stemming from his poor English: "I was in shock when I read it ... All I said was that Elvis was a big idol in his time and we were big in ours." Former Arista executives later said that they had known about the deception, though the Arista president, Clive Davis, denied knowledge in 2017. On 19 November, the Recording Academy revoked Milli Vanilli's Grammy award. It is the only time a Grammy has been revoked. Morvan and Pilatus appeared in an episode of the animated series The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3, produced before the scandal and first broadcast in January 1991. At least 26 class action lawsuits were filed claiming that Arista had defrauded consumers. On 12 August 1991, a judge rejected a proposed settlement in Chicago, Illinois, as consumers would have been reimbursed with credits for Arista purchases rather than money. The refund deadline passed on 8 March 1992. Marty Diamond, the former head of artist development at Arista, estimated that only around 50 people had requested refunds. Later projects and death of Pilatus, 1991–1998 Farian repurposed songs planned for Milli Vanilli's second album as The Moment of Truth, released in 1991 under the name the Real Milli Vanilli, with John Davis and Howell as the singers. It was never released in America. In 1993, Morvan and Pilatus released an album as Rob & Fab. The Rolling Stone writer Chuck Eddy gave it two stars, saying it proved they could sing. It sold only 2,000 copies and bankrupted Taj Records. Following the scandal, Milli Vanilli became the butt of jokes. Pilatus fell into addiction. In 1996, after he assaulted two people and broke into a car, he was sentenced to three months in jail and six months at a drug treatment facility in California. He made several suicide attempts. In late 1997, he entered drug rehabilitation in Germany. On 3 April 1998, the eve of their comeback tour, Films and revival, 2010s–present After 20 years in Los Angeles, In 2016, Morvan appeared in a documentary-style KFC commercial about authenticity and his life after Milli Vanilli. Davis died on 24 May 2021 from complications of a COVID-19 infection. On 14 February 2007, it was announced that Universal Pictures was developing a film based on Milli Vanilli. Jeff Nathanson was announced as the writer and director, with Morvan as a consultant. A biographical film by Bret Ratner was canceled in 2021 after sexual harassment allegations against Ratner became public. A biographical film directed by Simon Verhoeven, ''Girl You Know It's True, was released theatrically in 2023. A documentary film directed by Luke Korem, Milli Vanilli'', premiered at the Tribeca Festival on June 10. In 2024, "Blame It on the Rain" and "Girl I'm Gonna Miss You" entered the TikTok Billboard Top 50 after they were used in the Netflix series Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story. Milli Vanilli debuted on the Artist 100 chart at number 88, and their EP 4 Hits entered the Billboard 200 chart at number 197. That year, an online petition demanded the Recording Academy return Milli Vanilli's Grammy. As of 2026, Morvan had gained the rights to the Milli Vanilli name and was singing with a live band. == Style ==
Style
Milli Vanilli blended R&B, rap, disco and dance music. PopMatters described their songs as "perfect late '80s synth-pop that echoed the chic of that decade while paying stylistic heed to the decade that would be", The AllMusic writer Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote that ''Girl You Know It's True'' was fascinating for its "unrestrained, unhinged dorkiness, music that is completely awkward and sort of fun and memorable because of it". Morvan and Pilatus had "chiseled" muscles and wore long braided hair extensions, shoulder pads and spandex. Sheffield described them as "pretty boys who played up their homoerotic allure"; many Americans incorrectly assumed they were a gay couple. He said they presented a "radical new pop aesthetic ... a swirl of different racial and cultural signifiers", combining these elements with "trendy Euro-sleaze" into "rootless cosmopolitan mega-pop for a hip-hop world". == Legacy ==
Legacy
Milli Vanilli came to be viewed with sympathy following changes in culture, technology and the music industry. The Los Angeles Times journalist Chuck Philips wrote the public had been "more impressed by image than talent, more accepting of appearances than demanding of the truth". In later decades, the use of digital technology such as Auto-Tune to manipulate performances became commonplace. Several commentators argued that popular culture had become less authentic with the rise of reality TV and social media, and that "packaged" pop stars were now accepted. In 2020, the NBC journalist Bryan Reesman wrote that that Milli Vanilli were owed an apology: "They were young and foolish, like we all have been. If we had decided the group's debacle was the end of lip-syncing and digital manipulation and had raised our standards, it would be easier for us to justify how we derided them." In the Los Angeles Times, Christine Terrisse wrote that Milli Vanilli's misdeeds seemed quaint in the era of cancel culture. Luke Korem, the director of the 2023 Milli Vanilli documentary, said younger people were confused by the controversy. In 2023, the journalist and former Arista employee Mitchell Cohen said people had taken the scandal too seriously, and noted that there was a "tradition" of comparable acts, such as the 1960s group the Crystals, who were "whoever Phil Spector said they were". The AllMusic writer Stephen Thomas Erlewine noted that many prior Europop acts had been figureheads rather than singers, and that lip-syncing was common in 1980s pop due to the increased emphasis on image and dance routines. He and Sheffield said no one had ever really believed Morvan and Pilatus were the singers. Erlewine wrote that it was hard to imagine how such "transparent, lightweight, and intentionally disposable" music had created controversy. Sheffield argued that it was motivated by Milli Vanilli's androgyny and "flamboyant foreign-ness", and described the backlash as an "ugly eruption of racism, nativism, and homophobia" that the media covered with enthusiasm. He wrote that Milli Vanilli had become an "anti-pop cautionary tale", and that their "dirty-pop" style did not return until a decade later with acts such as Britney Spears, NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys. The Los Angeles Times journalist Meredith Blake observed that Morvan and Pilatus received most of the criticism while Farian and the Arista executives, including Clive Davis, "escaped largely unscathed". Korem said: "There's a bunch of white people that made the lion's share of the money. And then the people like Rob, Fab, Charles — they got kicked to the curb." == Members ==
Members
Fab MorvanRob Pilatus (died 1998) ==Discography==
Discography
Milli VanilliAll or Nothing (1988) • ''Girl You Know It's True'' (1989) The Real Milli VanilliThe Moment of Truth (1991) == See also ==
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