Texas native Rhett Miller is perhaps best known as the frontman of the Dallas-based alt-country band the Old 97ʼs, although he has also pursued a critically acclaimed solo career. Formed in 1993, the Old 97ʼs built a devoted following with their brash blend of country and power pop influences, making a splash with 1995ʼs Wreck Your Life, which won the group a brief stay on the roster of Elektra Records, a period kicked off with one of their finest hours, 1997ʼs Too Far to Care. All four members also pursued side projects, but Millerʼs solo career captured the most attention, with the literate songwriter training his eye on such subjects as fatherhood, sex, and love. Making his solo bow with 2002ʼs The Instigator, most of Millerʼs solo albums have been dominated by cool, melodic pop tunes with a drier and more confessional bent than his work with the band, though 2012ʼs The Dreamer explored a middle ground between his pop and alt-country sensibilities, and the 2011 set The Interpreter: Live at Largo revealed heʼs a sure hand with other peopleʼs songs.
Strictly speaking, Miller launched his own career before the Old 97ʼs were formed. He recorded his first solo album, a series of acoustic folk songs
entitled Mythologies, in 1989. Future Old 97ʼs bassist (and a solid songwriter in his own right) Murry Hammond produced the album, and their partnership later blossomed into a full-fledged band. While releasing a string of well received albums with the Old 97ʼs, Miller and Hammond also performed together as the Ranchero Brothers, a two-man acoustic duo that was originally launched as a means of testing new music for the Old 97ʼs in front of a live audience. The Ranchero Brothers developed their own distinct following, although no albums resulted from the project.
Taking time off from the Old 97ʼs, Miller began recording his first major-label solo effort in February 2002, this time with the help of producer/multiinstrumentalist Jon Brion. The Instigator appeared nearly seven months later, followed by a tour with ex-Crowded House frontman Neil Finn in early 2003. Miller then returned to the studio with the Old 97ʼs, squashing worried rumors that he planned to halt the bandʼs career and focus on his solo efforts. He did, however, find time to balance the two projects, and his second solo release, The Believer, was issued by Verve in February 2006. After returning to the studio with the Old 97ʼs for 2007ʼs Blame It on Gravity, Miller continued his juggling act by recording another solo album. The self-titled record appeared in 2009 courtesy of his new label, Shout! Factory. His next two solo albums, 2010ʼs The Interpreter: Live at Largo and 2012ʼs The Dreamer, were both released by Millerʼs own Maximum Sunshine label. After releasing one of the Old 97ʼsʼ strongest albums in years with 2014ʼs Most Messed Up, Miller took a new turn in his solo career with 2015ʼs The Traveler, which featured backing from the band Black Prairie (which includes several members of the Decemberists) and a guest appearance from Peter Buck of R.E.M. Following more recording and touring with the Old 97ʼs, Miller repaired to Brooklyn, New York, where he cut the 2018 album The Messenger with producer and multi-instrumentalist Sam Cohen, who previously worked with Apollo Sunshine and Yellowbirds. The album was released by ATO Records.