Milli Vanilli became one of the most popular pop acts in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with millions of records sold. However, their success turned to infamy when Morvan, Pilatus, and their agent Sergio Vendero confessed that Morvan and Pilatus did not sing any of the vocals heard on their music releases. The duo ended up giving back the Grammy Award for Best New Artist. The group recorded a comeback album in 1998 titled Back and in Attack, but the album's release was cancelled after Rob Pilatus died at the age of 32.
Beginnings, 1988–1989
Rob Pilatus met Fabrice Morvan during a dance seminar at a disco in Los Angeles. The two bonded over similar experiences they had growing up in European cities, Paris (Morvan) and Munich (Pilatus). "Something clicked between us," Pilatus said. "Maybe it's because we're both black people who grew up in foreign cities that don't have too many blacks."
The pair reunited in Munich, where they attempted to find work as backing singers, then formed their own act. After adopting the name Milli Vanilli, the pair recorded an album for a small German label that sold just a few thousand records. The pair was focused on becoming famous and struggled with poverty. "We lived in a project. We had no money. We wanted to be stars," explained Pilatus. Music producer Frank Farian learned of the duo and invited Pilatus and Morvan to his Frankfurt studio to listen to a demo.
"We got a call to come to his studio and we said, 'All right that's it,'" Pilatus recalled. "We were just dumb little kids, so we said, 'Let's go.' When we got to the studio, "Girl You Know It's True" was just a demo, he asked us our opinion of it, and if we could sing it and we said, 'Yeah, we could sing it.' And he said, 'Oh beautiful, I believe it, but next week we have shows to do, so don't worry, I'll make you into a millionaire.'"
Farian signed the duo to a contract on 1 January 1988, obligating him to record 10 songs with them a year.But the group's singing in the recording studio did not impress Farian. "These two guys came into the studio, they recorded, but they didn't have enough quality," Farian said.
The final mix of "Girl You Know It's True" was finished by studio performers — including Charles Shaw, John Davis, Brad Howell, Jodie Rocco and Linda Rocco — in March and April.
By May, Pilatus and Morvan were touring Spain, France and Italy, lip syncing to the pre-recorded tracks and thrilling crowds with their distinct style — spandex shorts, thigh-high boots and cornrow hair extensions. According to Pilatus, "We would ask Frank when are we going to be allowed to give some (artistic) input and he would say, 'Yeah, yeah, but right now we need you to go out and do promotion. Of course, you'll get to do it, just work with us.' That's how he strung us along." After "Girl You Know It's True" took off in Germany in summer 1988, Farian produced and wrote most of the material on the Milli Vanilli album All or Nothing. The album was released in Europe in November 1988.
"After Frank released the album, he told us that it was too late to stop now," Pilatus said. "Because the single was such a big success, he said, 'Now you have to go through with it. I'll cover you guys. Nobody will find out.' He said, 'Here, I'll give you $20,000 advance money.' We never had a hit before, so we went along with it. We played with fire and now we know, but it's too late." By December, Pilatus and Morvan came to the realization that their actual voices would never appear on any Milli Vanilli tracks.
All or Nothing was repackaged as Girl You Know It's True for audiences in the United States and was released in March 1989. It became a major success, producing five singles that entered the top five of the Billboard Hot 100, three of which ("Baby Don't Forget My Number", "Blame It on the Rain", and "Girl I'm Gonna Miss You") went to number one. On January 1990, Girl You Know It's True was certified 6× platinum by the RIAA after spending seven weeks atop the Billboard Top 200. Additionally, the album spent 41 weeks within the top 10 of the Billboard Top 200 and 78 weeks within the charts overall. The album was also certified Diamond in Canada, denoting shipments of over a million units there. The success of the album earned the duo a Grammy Award for Best New Artist.
Lip-syncing exposure and media backlash, 1989–1991
Beth McCarthy-Miller, then an executive with MTV, says the duo's English language skills, when they came in for their first interview with the channel, stirred doubts among those present as to whether they had sung on their records. The first public sign that the group was lip-syncing came on 21 July 1989, during a live performance on MTV at the Lake Compounce theme park in Bristol, Connecticut. As they performed, a hard drive issue caused the recording of the song "Girl You Know It's True" to jam and skip, repeatedly playing the partial line "Girl, you know it's..." through the speakers. "I knew right then and there, it was the beginning of the end for Milli Vanilli," recalled Pilatus of the incident. "When my voice got stuck in the computer, and it just kept repeating and repeating, I panicked. I didn't know what to do. I just ran off the stage."
Downtown Julie Brown ran after Pilatus and convinced him to finish the set. "With a bit of pushing and screaming, and a couple of F-words I think as well, I got them back out there," Brown explained on VH1's Behind the Music. Despite the mishap, the concert audience seemed neither to care, nor even to notice, and the concert continued as if nothing unusual had happened.
In a March 1990 issue of Time magazine, Pilatus was quoted proclaiming himself to be "the new Elvis", reasoning that by the duo's success they were more talented musically than Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney and Mick Jagger. This was denied by Fab Morvan, as recently as 2017, saying that Pilatus never used those words and that the quote was taken out of context likely due to Pilatus still not having a full grasp of the English language.
Unlike the international release of All or Nothing, the inserts for the American version of the album explicitly attributed the vocals to Morvan and Pilatus. This prompted singer Charles Shaw to reveal in December 1989 that he was one of the three actual vocalists on the album and that Pilatus and Morvan were impostors. Farian reportedly paid Shaw $150,000 to retract his statements, though this did not stem the tide of public criticism.
Because of growing public questions as to who sang in the group, as well as Morvan and Pilatus' demand to Farian that they be allowed to sing on the next album, on 14 November 1990, Farian announced that he had fired them and confessed they did not sing on the records. Confronted by Los Angeles Times's Chuck Philips, Pilatus confirmed the deception. "It’s True: Milli Vanilli Didn’t Sing" read the headline in the newspaper. "I feel like a mosquito being squeezed," Pilatus said. "The last two years of our lives have been a total nightmare. We have had to lie to everybody. We are true singers, but that maniac Frank Farian would never allow us to express ourselves." The next week, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences revoked Milli Vanilli's 1990 Grammy for Best New Artist. Pilatus and Morvan gave a press conference in front of more than 100 journalists in Los Angeles where they stated their willingness to return their Grammy Award. The duo said they had "made a deal with the devil," and they sang and rapped for the room in order to prove that, although they hadn't sung on the record, they could, in fact, sing.
After these details emerged, different lawsuits were filed under various U.S. consumer fraud protection laws against Arista Records, Pilatus and Morvan. One such filing occurred on 22 November 1990, in Ohio, where lawyers filed a class-action lawsuit asking for refunds on behalf of a local woman in Cuyahoga County, who had bought Girl You Know It's True. At the time the lawsuit was filed, it was estimated at least 1,000 Ohio residents had bought the album. On 12 August 1991, a proposed settlement of a refund lawsuit in Chicago, Illinois, was rejected. This settlement would have refunded buyers of Milli Vanilli CDs, cassettes, records, or singles. However, the refunds would only be given as a credit for a future Arista release. On 28 August, a new settlement was approved; it refunded those who attended concerts along with those who bought Milli Vanilli recordings. An estimated 10 million buyers were eligible to claim a refund and they could keep the refunded recordings as well. The deadline to claim refunds passed on 8 March 1992.
Adding to the controversy, in December 1990 singer-songwriter David Clayton-Thomas sued Milli Vanilli for copyright infringement, alleging that the title song of All or Nothing used the melody from his 1968 composition "Spinning Wheel", a hit for his group Blood, Sweat & Tears.
The Real Milli Vanilli, 1991–1992
The resulting album, released in Europe in early 1991, was renamed The Moment of Truth and spawned three singles, "Keep On Running", "Nice 'n Easy" and "Too Late (True Love)". A Morvan/Pilatus lookalike named Ray Horton was depicted on the cover along with the real singers: Brad Howell and John Davis. In addition, the album featured rappers Icy Bro on "Hard as Hell" and Tammy T on "Too Late (True Love)". Original members and vocalists Jodie Rocco and Linda Rocco remained on 95% of the tracks. Several other artists, including Farian’s No Mercy, have covered one of four Diane Warren-penned songs that are included on The Moment of Truth, “When I Die”. For the American market, Farian chose to avoid any association with Milli Vanilli and had the tracks re-recorded with Ray Horton on the majority of lead vocals. However, The Moment of Truth was never released in that format in the USA.
Try 'N' B
In 1992, RCA signed on to release the album as the debut of the newly created group Try 'N' B. The self-titled release included three additional tracks not on the Real Milli Vanilli release: "Ding Dong", "Who Do You Love", and a remake of Dr. Hook's "Sexy Eyes", and featured original Milli Vanilli vocalists Jodie Rocco and Linda Rocco. Because of significantly better sales under the name Try 'N' B in America, a slightly modified Try 'N' B debut album was released internationally. It featured guest singer Tracy Ganser, a Ray Horton lookalike named Kevin Weatherspoon, as well as Jodie Rocco and Linda Rocco.
Rob & Fab, 1990–1993
Morvan and Pilatus moved to Los Angeles, California, and signed with the Joss Entertainment Group. Sandy Gallin was their manager. They recorded their follow-up album under the name Rob & Fab which was financed by Taj Records in 1992 and released by Joss Entertainment in 1993. Kenny Taylor and Fab Morvan wrote almost all the songs on the album, while Morvan and Pilatus provided the lead vocals. Werner Schüler, a German bassist and songwriter, was their producer. Because of financial constraints, Joss Entertainment Group was only able to release the album in the United States, the priority market to Milli Vanilli. A single, "We Can Get It On", was made available for radio play shortly before the album's release. However, the lack of publicity, poor distribution, and their steep fall from the height of pop-culture visibility after the lip-synching scandal contributed to its failure. The album only sold around 2,000 copies.
Comeback and death of Rob Pilatus, 1997–1998
In order to restore their career, Farian agreed to produce a new Milli Vanilli album with Morvan and Pilatus on lead vocals in 1997. This led up to the recording of the 1998 Milli Vanilli comeback album Back and In Attack. Even some of the original studio singers backed the performers in their attempt to bring back some of the fame that had been shed so quickly. However, Rob Pilatus encountered a number of personal problems during the production of the new album. He turned to drugs and crime, committing a series of assaults and robberies, and was ultimately sentenced to three months in jail and six months in a drug rehabilitation facility in California. Farian bailed Pilatus out of jail. On the eve of the new album's promotional tour on 2 April 1998, Pilatus was found dead of a suspected alcohol and prescription drug overdose in a hotel room in Frankfurt, Germany. His death was ruled accidental.
Fab Morvan's solo career
Morvan spent the following years as a session musician and public speaker while working on writing and performing his new music. In 1998, he was a DJ at famed L.A. radio station KIIS-FM. During this period, he also performed at the station's sold-out 1999 Wango Tango festival concert before 50,000 people at Dodger Stadium. Morvan then spent 2001 on tour before performing in 2002 as the inaugural performer at the brand-new Velvet Lounge at the Hard Rock Hotel in Orlando, Florida. In 2003, Morvan released his first solo album, Love Revolution. He marketed the album through his website and CD Baby. In April 2011, Morvan released the single "Anytime" on iTunes.
Later developments
In 1991, Pilatus and Morvan appeared in a commercial for Carefree Sugarless Gum, which parodied their lip-syncing fiasco. They portrayed animated versions of themselves in an episode of The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 and even signed with a PR firm in hopes of breaking into acting. As they told the L.A. Times, "We think we have the potential to become actors. After all, we got a lot of practice while we were in Milli Vanilli. But the most important thing to us now is the new album."
The duo was featured (and interviewed) for the premiere episode of VH1's Behind the Music in 1997. In 2000, Fab Morvan was featured in a BBC documentary titled It Takes Two: The Story of the Pop Duo about musical duos.
On 14 February 2007, it was announced that Universal Pictures was developing a film based on the story of Milli Vanilli's rise and fall in the music industry. Jeff Nathanson, screenwriter for Catch Me If You Can, producers Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall, and producer executive Adam Yoelin, were supposed to write and direct the film while Fab Morvan served as a consultant. However, in February 2011, it was announced the Milli Vanilli movie would be rewritten and directed by Florian Gallenberger. The documentary "Milli Vanilli: From Fame to Shame" was eventually directed by German Oliver Schwehm, and produced by Hannah Lenitzki from Bremedia Produktion, released in 2016.
In January 2014, the actual Milli Vanilli singers—Jodie Rocco and Linda Rocco, John Davis and Brad Howell—filmed an in-depth interview with the producers of Oprah: Where Are They Now for OWN TV.
In 2015, TMZ reported that Fab Morvan was working on an album with John Davis, one of the original Milli Vanilli singers, called Face Meets Voice.
Ma Baker
Milli Vanilli Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Put your hands in the air
And give me all your money
This is the story of Ma Baker
The meanest cat
From old Chicago town
She was the meanest cat
She was the meanest cat
She really mowed them down
She had no heart at all
No no no, heart at all
She was the meanest cat
Oh she was really tough
She left her husband flat
He wasn't tough enough
She took her boys along
'Cause they were mean and strong
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she taught her four sons
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, to handle their guns
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she never could cry
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, but she knew how to die
They left a trail of crime
Across the U.S.A.
And when one boy was killed
She really made them pay
She had no heart at all
No no no, heart at all
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she taught her four sons
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, to handle their guns
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she never could cry
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, but she knew how to die
And then a man she liked
She thought she'd stay with him
When he informed on them
They did away with him
She didn't care at all
Just didn't care at all
{Here is a special bulletin
Ma Baker is the FBI's most wanted woman
Her photo is hanging on every post office wall
If you have any information about this woman
Please contact the nearest police station}
Don't anybody move
The money or your lives
One day they robbed a bank
It was their last foray
The cops appeared too soon
They couldn't get away
They all gonna loose their heads
It made them mighty mad
And so they shout it out
Ma Baker and her sons
They didn't want to hang
They died with blazing guns
And so the story ends
Of one who left no friends
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she taught her four sons
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, to handle their guns
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she never could cry
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, but she knew how to die
The song "Ma Baker" by Milli Vanilli is about the notorious gangster Ma Barker, who was known for being the mastermind behind a criminal gang that operated in the U.S. during the 1930s. The lyrics describe Ma Baker as a tough and ruthless woman who taught her four sons how to handle guns and commit crimes. They go on to describe how she left her husband and took her sons along with her because they were "mean and strong."
The chorus repeats the phrase "Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker" over and over, which emphasizes her dominance and authority over her sons and the criminal underworld. The lyrics detail the gang's crimes across the U.S. and how they were pursued by law enforcement. Eventually, Ma Baker and her sons are killed in a shootout with the police, and the song ends with the observation that she "left no friends."
The song portrays Ma Baker as a larger-than-life figure who was feared and respected by those around her. The lyrics suggest that she was a force to be reckoned with and that she instilled a sense of loyalty and toughness in her sons. Ultimately, the song is a tribute to her criminal legacy and the notoriety that she achieved during her lifetime.
Line by Line Meaning
Freeze, I'm Ma Baker
Ma Baker commands her victims to stop moving and identify herself as the leader of her gang
Put your hands in the air
Ma Baker demands that her victims raise their hands to ensure they are unarmed and cannot fight back
And give me all your money
Ma Baker is after a quick score and demands that her victims give up all their cash
This is the story of Ma Baker
The song is a retelling of the life and crimes of Ma Baker
The meanest cat
Ma Baker was the toughest and most ruthless criminal of her time
From old Chicago town
Ma Baker and her gang operated out of the infamous city of Chicago
She was the meanest cat
Ma Baker was known as the toughest of the tough
She really mowed them down
Ma Baker's violent nature left a trail of victims in her wake
She had no heart at all
Ma Baker was completely devoid of compassion or empathy
Oh she was really tough
Ma Baker was incredibly strong and could handle herself in a fight
She left her husband flat
Ma Baker's husband was no match for her strength and toughness
He wasn't tough enough
Ma Baker's husband was too weak to keep up with her and her gang
She took her boys along
Ma Baker's four sons were her primary henchmen
'Cause they were mean and strong
Ma Baker's sons were dangerous and powerful in their own right
Ma Ma Ma Ma, Ma Baker, she taught her four sons
Ma Baker was a mentor to her sons, teaching them the criminal ways of the world
To handle their guns
Ma Baker made sure her sons knew how to handle firearms with expert proficiency
She never could cry
Ma Baker was so tough and unfeeling that she never shed a tear
But she knew how to die
Though she was fearless in life, even Ma Baker had to face death eventually
They left a trail of crime
Ma Baker and her gang committed many crimes across the United States
Across the U.S.A.
Ma Baker and her gang's crimes were not limited to one particular region
And when one boy was killed
One of Ma Baker's sons was killed at some point in their criminal career
She really made them pay
Ma Baker took revenge on those who killed her son in a violent and brutal way
And then a man she liked
Ma Baker once had a romantic interest in a man
She thought she'd stay with him
Ma Baker hoped to settle down with this man and leave her life of crime behind
When he informed on them
Unfortunately, the man betrayed her and her gang to the authorities
They did away with him
Ma Baker and her gang retaliated against the man in their usual violent fashion
Just didn't care at all
Ma Baker was completely indifferent to the death of the man she had cared for
Don't anybody move
Ma Baker threatens her victims with further violence if they make any sudden movements
The money or your lives
Ma Baker makes it clear that she values money above human life
One day they robbed a bank
Ma Baker and her gang attempted one final heist at a bank
It was their last foray
This robbery turned out to be Ma Baker and her gang's final criminal act
The cops appeared too soon
Unfortunately for Ma Baker and her gang, the authorities arrived on the scene too quickly
They couldn't get away
Ma Baker and her gang were unable to escape from the bank before the police intervened
They all gonna loose their heads
Ma Baker and her gang face certain death at the hands of the law
It made them mighty mad
Ma Baker and her gang were angry at their impending demise and went out fighting
And so they shout it out
Ma Baker and her sons defiantly declare their autonomy and toughness in the face of death
They didn't want to hang
Ma Baker and her gang preferred dying by gunfire to the humiliating execution of hanging
They died with blazing guns
Ma Baker and her gang went out in a blaze of glory, guns blazing
And so the story ends
The tale of Ma Baker and her gang's criminal escapades has come to a close
Of one who left no friends
Ma Baker was so feared and hated that she had no close confidantes or allies
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Written by: FRANK FARIAN, FRED JAY, GEORGE REYAM
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind