Brad Miller was born in
Burbank, California, and had developed an interest in railroading in his teens. After a few years of hanging around railyards and learning all the lore of steam and diesel engines, he decided to record the sounds of some of the last steam locomotives operating on a major rail line. Eventually, around 1958, he and his friend, Jim Connella, formed a company called Mobile Fidelity Records and started cutting records from these field recordings, which they released through railroading magazines and model train shows. Sound effects recording was quite the rage at the dawn of stereo, and one of these albums of train sounds was even reviewed favorably in
High Fidelity magazine. A few years later, Ernie McDaniel of San Francisco radio station KFOG decided to put one of Miller's albums,
Steam Railroading Under Thundering Skies, and an easy listening album, on separate turntables and broadcast them together. His late-night stunt produced a barrage of listener phone calls (most of which were positive), much to his surprise. He later related the episode to Miller, who was inspired by the idea. While working with arranger
Don Ralke, Miller recorded a series of tunes, most of them Ralke originals, played by a string-laden orchestra, then mixed in a variety of environmental sounds he had collected. He took several months fine-tuning the blend, then cut a deal with Philips to release it under the title of
One Stormy Night, credited to the Mystic Moods Orchestra. With the help of producer
Leo Kulka, Miller quickly developed a series of albums similar to
One Stormy Night:
Nighttide,
More Than Music,
Mexican Trip, and
Mystic Moods of Love, among others. Don Ralke wrote most of the material and did all the arrangements for the first few albums. John Tartalgia did a few more, then Larry Fotine became the primary arranger when Miller and Kulka moved to the
Warner label. The musical content shifted to mellow covers of current hits ("Love the One You're With"), and Warner's modified the packaging of the albums to make sure there was no mystery that these were records to serve as the
preamble or accompaniment to sexual intercourse. The 1974 release
Erogenous came with an inner sleeve that, when pulled out, showed a nude couple in soft focus. In 1974, Miller founded his own label, called Sound Bird Records, and reissued many of the Mystic Moods Orchestra albums, as well as albums of environmental sounds without music and more train recordings. Of note, the Sound Bird rereleases of the earlier albums also featured soft focus nude couples on the inner sleeve. The
backing track to the song "The First Day of Forever" off the album
Awakening was used for the theme song of the American version of the Japanese superhero television show
Spectreman. ==Discography==