Biography
A vocal ensemble that emerged as one of the most enduring oldies ensembles in U.S. popular music, the Mills Brothers evolved rapidly from novelty sensations into mainstream hitmakers and sustained audience fascination across many decades. First promoted under the name "Four Boys and a Guitar," their initial releases carried an explanatory notice confirming that listeners were hearing nothing beyond a single guitar. That disclaimer proved necessary because the quartet recreated trumpets, trombones, and saxophones so convincingly with their voices alone that early releases such as "Tiger Rag" and "St. Louis Blues" evoked a spirited Dixieland ensemble rather than an a cappella act. Even after the novelty aspect diminished, the group's layered harmonies continued to engage successive generations.
All four siblings were born in Piqua, Ohio—John, Jr. in 1910, Herbert in 1912, Harry in 1913, and Donald in 1915. Their father ran a barber shop and established his own barbershop quartet, the Four Kings of Harmony; the sons absorbed close-harmony techniques directly from him and soon performed locally. During one engagement, Harry Mills misplaced his kazoo—the group's standard accompaniment—and improvised by placing his hand over his mouth, unexpectedly producing a trumpet-like tone. The brothers then incorporated the effect into their routine, assigning John the tuba part, Donald the trombone, and Herbert a second trumpet line. The approach suited vaudeville stages, and the Mills Brothers also began appearing on a Cincinnati radio station in the late 1920s.
Following their relocation to New York, the quartet created a sensation and scored major successes in 1931 and early 1932 with "Tiger Rag" and "Dinah," the latter a duet with Bing Crosby. Bewildered audiences struggled to accept the printed assurance on the discs: "No musical instruments or mechanical devices used on this recording other than one guitar." Although the recording technology of the period allowed some leeway, the Mills Brothers truly resembled a small studio band. (In a reverse sense, this mirrored early Duke Ellington's Orchestra sides, where plunger-muted work by Bubber Miley and Tricky Sam Nanton made horns resemble voices.)
Further visibility arrived in 1932 through a role in the film The Big Broadcast and additional successes including "St. Louis Blues" and "Bugle Call Rag." The unexpected passing of John, Jr. in 1936 struck the group hard, yet John, Sr. assumed the bass role and Bernard Addison joined on guitar. Nevertheless, interest appeared to fade by the late 1930s; although the brothers recorded duets with Ella Fitzgerald ("Dedicated to You") and Louis Armstrong ("Darling Nelly Gray"), their releases no longer matched earlier commercial peaks. Everything shifted in 1943 when "Paper Doll," a gentle, close-knit ballad, emerged as one of the decade's dominant hits—twelve weeks at number one and six million copies sold, along with sheet-music sales. The group appeared in several motion pictures during the early 1940s and returned to the top in 1944 with "You'll Always Hurt the One You Love."
Middle-of-the-road pop influences gradually entered their repertoire during the 1940s; by decade's end the Mills Brothers began working with conventional orchestras, frequently led by Sy Oliver, Hal McIntyre, or Sonny Burke. In 1952 "The Glow Worm" became their final chart-topping single. The act persisted through the 1950s even after John, Sr. largely stepped away in 1956. A shift from Decca to Dot yielded a modest 1958 success, a version of the Silhouettes' "Get a Job" that underscored the clear doo-wop debt owed to the Mills Brothers' early recordings. As a trio, Herbert, Harry, and Donald maintained a presence on the oldies circuit until Harry's death in 1982 and Herbert's in 1988. The remaining brother, Donald, later performed with the next generation—his son John II—until Donald's passing in 1999.
All four siblings were born in Piqua, Ohio—John, Jr. in 1910, Herbert in 1912, Harry in 1913, and Donald in 1915. Their father ran a barber shop and established his own barbershop quartet, the Four Kings of Harmony; the sons absorbed close-harmony techniques directly from him and soon performed locally. During one engagement, Harry Mills misplaced his kazoo—the group's standard accompaniment—and improvised by placing his hand over his mouth, unexpectedly producing a trumpet-like tone. The brothers then incorporated the effect into their routine, assigning John the tuba part, Donald the trombone, and Herbert a second trumpet line. The approach suited vaudeville stages, and the Mills Brothers also began appearing on a Cincinnati radio station in the late 1920s.
Following their relocation to New York, the quartet created a sensation and scored major successes in 1931 and early 1932 with "Tiger Rag" and "Dinah," the latter a duet with Bing Crosby. Bewildered audiences struggled to accept the printed assurance on the discs: "No musical instruments or mechanical devices used on this recording other than one guitar." Although the recording technology of the period allowed some leeway, the Mills Brothers truly resembled a small studio band. (In a reverse sense, this mirrored early Duke Ellington's Orchestra sides, where plunger-muted work by Bubber Miley and Tricky Sam Nanton made horns resemble voices.)
Further visibility arrived in 1932 through a role in the film The Big Broadcast and additional successes including "St. Louis Blues" and "Bugle Call Rag." The unexpected passing of John, Jr. in 1936 struck the group hard, yet John, Sr. assumed the bass role and Bernard Addison joined on guitar. Nevertheless, interest appeared to fade by the late 1930s; although the brothers recorded duets with Ella Fitzgerald ("Dedicated to You") and Louis Armstrong ("Darling Nelly Gray"), their releases no longer matched earlier commercial peaks. Everything shifted in 1943 when "Paper Doll," a gentle, close-knit ballad, emerged as one of the decade's dominant hits—twelve weeks at number one and six million copies sold, along with sheet-music sales. The group appeared in several motion pictures during the early 1940s and returned to the top in 1944 with "You'll Always Hurt the One You Love."
Middle-of-the-road pop influences gradually entered their repertoire during the 1940s; by decade's end the Mills Brothers began working with conventional orchestras, frequently led by Sy Oliver, Hal McIntyre, or Sonny Burke. In 1952 "The Glow Worm" became their final chart-topping single. The act persisted through the 1950s even after John, Sr. largely stepped away in 1956. A shift from Decca to Dot yielded a modest 1958 success, a version of the Silhouettes' "Get a Job" that underscored the clear doo-wop debt owed to the Mills Brothers' early recordings. As a trio, Herbert, Harry, and Donald maintained a presence on the oldies circuit until Harry's death in 1982 and Herbert's in 1988. The remaining brother, Donald, later performed with the next generation—his son John II—until Donald's passing in 1999.
Albums

What A Wonderful World!
2025

Souvenir Album
2022

The Decca Singles, Vol. 2: 1937-1939
2017

The Decca Singles, Vol. 1: 1934-1937
2017

Wonderful Words Of Life: The Inspirational Recordings
2016

Musical Moments to Remember: The Mills Brothers – From Swing to Sweet (Recorded 1931-1953)
2014

Daddy's Little Girl
2013

Vintage Music No. 159 - LP: The Mills Brothers
2011

Sessions 2: Be My Life's Companion
2010

Sessions 1: The Glow Worm
2010

Sessions 3: Paper Doll
2010

Mills Brothers - From The Archives (Digitally Remastered)
2010

The Best Of The Mills Brothers 20th Century Masters The Millennium Collection
2000

All Time Greatest Hits
1997

Four Boys And A Guitar
1995

The Anthology: 1931 - 1968
1995

Merry Christmas
1995

Paper Doll
1992

Great Hits
1985

Fortuosity
1978

The Board Of Directors
1968

The Board Of Directors Annual Report
1968

Great Hawaiian Hits
1961

Who Put the Devil in Evelyn's Eyes / Beware
1953
Singles
