Exclusive: Twenty years ago in 1990, Fab Morvan won what now very well may be the most controversial Grammy Award ever given out. His group Milli Vanilli was given the Best New Artist award. Months later, when it was admitted that Morvan and partner Rob Pilatus weren't the ones who sang on hit songs like 'Blame It On the Rain' and 'Girl You Know It's True,' their Grammy was taken back and the media and music industry chewed them up and spit them out just as fast as they built them up. Now, two decades after that tumultuous year, PopEater had the chance to chat with Morvan about those rocky days, and what his life is like now, and why current artists using Auto-Tune are essentially doing the same thing Milli Vanilli did. "People think they know the story with us, but they don't," Morvan told PopEater. Well, now you can.Milli Vanilli, the Real Story -- 20 Years Later
By Mike Hess Posted Jan 29th 2010 02:03PM
Exclusive: Twenty years ago in 1990, Fab Morvan won what now very well may be the most controversial Grammy Award ever given out. His group Milli Vanilli was given the Best New Artist award. Months later, when it was admitted that Morvan and partner Rob Pilatus weren't the ones who sang on hit songs like 'Blame It On the Rain' and 'Girl You Know It's True,' their Grammy was taken back and the media and music industry chewed them up and spit them out just as fast as they built them up. Now, two decades after that tumultuous year, PopEater had the chance to chat with Morvan about those rocky days, and what his life is like now, and why current artists using Auto-Tune are essentially doing the same thing Milli Vanilli did. "People think they know the story with us, but they don't," Morvan told PopEater. Well, now you can.Throughout our interview, Morvan was open, concise, warm and -- perhaps most surprisingly -- perfectly unbiased and not jaded by the industry that made him, but also broke him. Everything was open for discussion, from the inner workings of Milli Vanilli to the unfortunate passing of his bandmate Rob to his current projects as a dance artist. Read the full chat below:
What's life been like for you lately?
I started working with different producers and working with a dude called Sean McCaff, and together we have a project called SMFM, which is our initials, but also stands for Supplying Mirages for Mankind (SMFM Web site here). It's a dance project and we're about to do some releases in the next few months.
Given the history of Milli Vanilli, was it hard to get back into the music business?
I never had a problem creating music. Creating the art isn't the problem. It's always the business aspect, and people connected to other people in the business. I'm not on the black list -- the invisible black list -- but when I do come back and my name is mentioned, then we bring back a lot of things from the past that some people don't want to talk about. Because, in reality, the smallest two links in the chain, those were the ones put in front and had to take the fault for everyone when in fact, there was a whole machine behind Milli Vanilli. What about that? I'm not pointing the finger at anybody, but it's obvious that we couldn't handle things by ourselves, and ironically enough, we were the ones put on a pedestal and taking the fault for it all.
It's so obvious, everything now. The thing is, for me, you don't know me as a producer or songwriter. I'm very easy to hit. It's very easy to get on Fab Morvan, ex-member of Milli Vanilli. I'm really happy when I get a chance to say something and have it repeated properly and not out of context. Some of the people looking from the outside who don't get all the information.
People think they know the story with us, but they don't. I have to be patient, because patience is a virtue, and that's the way the life is. So, c'est la vie.
So you feel that yourself and Rob were set up as scapegoats when it was really a much larger operation?
Yeah. I'm taking responsibility for what I did. I'm saying right here: "Yeah, I did it.' OK. But I'm the only one. I'm not the only one in this, but people don't get and grasp that because it's never really been brought up to them in a concise way. A lot of people just go on what's being fed to them. I understand, some people are just looking for whatever's put in front of them. If it's put in a certain way, that's how they see it. I'm the kind of guy that's going to look at things from every different angle. People are sitting in their living room not even walking in my shoes like 'They're responsible! They were behind it all!" Well, somewhat, but to point the finger at two guys -- a lot of people made a lot of money. After all of it, the smallest link in the chain were the ones who were left hung out to dry and then having to fight to create something for yourself when everyone's pointing the finger at you. You're the guilty one, but in fact, there are a lot more. Things happen, there are consequences to any decisions and actions you make, and you have to be strong to say 'This is it.'
Let's make something clear, I was not the only one. A lot of people just ran away.
Were you ever tempted to call people out to expose the real story?
I'm not that kind of guy. There's many ways to go about things in life. You can be the better man, be strong -- you fall and stand back up. You do your thing. It's about being the bigger man. I don't have to point the finger. I just want people to read between the lines, that's all I'm asking.
I love music. Music has been my inspiration and strength for years, and I'm going to keep doing it and doing it. I feel very lucky that I've been able to do what I love. Now I'm reinventing and recreating, because you never know what's going to happen. Life can come and strike you in the face. I don't know, I might die tomorrow. Look what happened in Haiti? Who would have thought that one of the places that needed the most help in this world would get hit. What's the reason? I don't know, but life strikes and sometimes you just have to be strong. Sometimes the harshest things in life can be a blessing in a way. It's all allowed me to really define who I was. I would have never become who I am today if I hadn't gone through this struggle. There's a lot of good in life, there's a lot of bad. If you balance both and keep growing and evolving, if you are an artist, everything lands itself into your music.
We see it with Haiti. What I love is to see how powerful music is. All the artists come together and with the power of music, it makes us focus and brings us together. When I went to see U2 once, I was amazed at the power those guys have. When you hear them sing those songs, you feel human. It makes you think, then it makes you evolve.
Your reputation took a beating, which must make it tough to break through now.
The only thing people see when my name is mentioned is tights. They have no clue what I am as an artist because nothing has been put out yet. You can go online and go to my Web site and my blog and see what is dear to my heart. No one is there to write it for me, so I write it myself. I'm trying to do the best I can to show people what I am. You remember someone in tights, but this person has evolved. Just like any human beings, you change, but some people don't realize that sometimes. They don't think that you can change or that you remain in that box.
It's been 20 years since the sudden success and aftermath of your Grammy win. Looking back now, what's the one thing that you took away from the whole situation?
The one thing I'll say is it's amazing how you can be the king at one point, quote unquote, and everyone loves you and the minute your time has passed and it's time for you to get torn down. When it's tear down time -- woah, it's harsh. There's no pity. They will hurt you however. Jabs, uppercut, hooks, and they want to see you on the floor knocked out. TKO. That's what they want. I saw it happen to some people, but when it happens to you, it's amazing how devastating it can be. When the negativity is directed at you, it hurts because you're there as an entertainer. You want to please your fans, have a good time and make them smile. You do the best you can on stage for them, and suddenly, you're nothing but a joke. Everything we did was from the heart. With all the effort we put into entertaining people, we got slapped back in the face by the mean jokes. I was surprised to see how things can turn so quickly. Usually, in the career of artists, it's gradual. It takes a few years and then 'Okay, well, he's done.' For us, it happened from one day to the next and that was shocking. Brutal! They are brutal! But, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, and you study all of that. I studied everything that happened about me. I have a lot of material, a lot of music, and in time you'll see what kind of an artist I am.
Sometimes, when you're thrown in that fast lane life, you can get confused, and rightfully so. You're surrounded with yes people who agree with everything you say. You lose your bearings. There's no more people that you can count on as far as being honest and true to you, so you're pretty much alone. So when the train stops and you get off, you're really alone. You come in this world alone and you leave alone.
A lot of pop stars today lip sync during their performances and have other tools to help them sing. Since that's essentially what got you in so much trouble, how do you digest that?
The pop climate has changed. I'm not saying if it's for the best and for the worst. But authenticity of an artist has changed. Now, a great video is one of the most important things because this is your tool to promote. Your live show isn't your number one thing anymore, the video is what people are paying attention to. So there's a whole different string of artists that came along with what took place in the past.
I have to say something and be clear about it. When people say: "Well, you didn't sing on the record"... OK, cool. I didn't. But to be technical, when someone records in a studio and Auto-Tune does your job, it isn't you anymore. It could be anyone, because you're not doing it anymore, the machine is doing it. So, are you doing it? When it comes time to perform it live, you can't replicate it. So when people say 'You should sing on the record, man.' Well, yeah, but now technically a lot of the people who are singing on the record with Auto-Tune aren't doing their job.
I'm not criticizing anyone in particular, I'm just observing what's going on, that's all. I see some comments saying we didn't sing on the record, but I just want to be precise because I've never gotten a chance to say that clearly. It's like, what's the point of singing with Auto-Tune? It's not you! Then you got the video, but that's the way things are now. People don't seem to care. The new generation doesn't seem to care about music now, because a lot of people are stealing it ... but that's whole other thing.
Once your voice has been doctored to a point where we don't even know it's you -- I'm not talking about people who do it as a style or to fit a certain song, because the goal was to make it sound like that and it's a gimmick. I'm talking about singers, pop singers, who without it -- ain't nothing going, baby. I'm trying to have people look at them. I'm just trying to bring up another point for discussion. I'm tired of people always pointing the finger at me and criticizing when in fact, look a little closer at everyone out there and inform yourself more.
There were rumors about Milli Vanilli not singing even before the Grammy win. Were you prepared for the word to get out there?
Yeah. That's the difference between Rob and I. Rob maybe thought it was a never-ending story, and when you walk in our shoes, that's really how it felt. Everything is just moving, moving, moving. You go around the world three or four times over, but it seems like it's never going to stop. In the back of my mind, I was thinking this can't go forever. It's going to crack eventually. I'll use an analogy. When you fight and you know a punch is coming, when the punch lands, you'll feel it but you anticipate the punch and you won't fall. When you don't anticipate the punch, it hurts and that's when you fall down. I anticipated it, Rob didn't, and I think there lies the difference in how we were hit by it.
Rob sadly passed away due to a drug overdose. Do you think the Milli Vanilli scandal was the primary cause of his demise?
No, this is not essentially the cause, but it was a big part of it. When it comes as a shock, people lose respect for you and that's hard. Especially if you didn't see it coming and suddenly you have to deal with it. There were other elements to the story to what Rob was involved with at the time, and that didn't help. The pain was deep.
There was no more support system. You're like that little kid on the playground that everyone picks on. The bullies are coming around and circling, but there's nobody around to protect you. And we're not Americans -- so our families and support systems were abroad and not here. We were trying to just face the music and remain strong at the time, not really aware that the grand scheme of what had happened and that it affected the world as well. It was big news. Only in time, I noticed how many people knew me, knew of me and knew the story. We bridged a gap in generations as a result of what happened.
And you're documenting your life and story in a movie, right?
There will be a movie. When it's done, you'll see the true story. Kathleen Kennedy is involved and there's more people coming to the table. When we're happy with everything, it'll go. I'm a consultant on it. The problem is, in 2.5 hours, how much can you put in there? That's the challenge. Everything you want to put ... it's not just the story on Rob and Fab, but society and generations. Desert Storm was happening. It's a picture in time you're taking, not just Rob and Fab.
What's the biggest lesson you took away from it all?
Like I said, I lived the life of 100 men and I'm thankful for it because I have more insight on life as a result. I wouldn't be who I am today if I hadn't gone through what I've been through. Life is all about living. You live to learn. Whether you're a painter, or whatever you create ... everything has a certain weight to it. Living life as an artist in important. The way up is not easy, but it goes. On the way down, you see what you're made of. It's how you fall and how you stand back up on your feet, because you become an example for others. Be a student for life and keep evolving. Life is too short man, so do the best while you're here. Again, look at Haiti. That really rings like a bell -- wake up people. Those people have nothing. Look at the conditions they're living in, and by looking at them and the crying and the help getting over there, us giving through charity -- you look at life very differently. You see what's important to you and you go back to basics.
There's a lot of bull---- in this world, and what happened to me humbled me. When you haven't been humbled, you look at life as a whole different way. Things happen for a reason. I know it sound philosophical, but that's the way it is.
What's helped you get through the tough times?
For me, as an artist, your salvation is your music. If you pull yourself into it and connect to it and this is the most important thing to you -- what gives you your strength and balance in life -- that's salvation. You'll find happiness. It's all about being happy in the end.
For aspiring artists looking to get into the music business, what lessons or cautionary tales would you share with them?
Fame is the confusing element of the life of a pop star. You have to be very clear on what that is, and if you don't separate your job and yourself, you're bound to fall. Sometimes people play with fire, but it's still fire. It will bite you and burn you in the ass.
Make sure to surround yourself not with yes people, but when you're in the studio, you need people to tell you: 'That sucks.' That's very important. Second, representation. You need trust, whether it's in management or an attorney. Whatever you sign, you have someone professional look it over. Then, keep on developing yourself. Do it from the heart. Give it all you've got, because you never know. Nothing is for sure in life, so come from the heart. Things will take their turn for the best or for the worst. Hop on the ride and just be ready. Whatever decisions you make, you have to stand behind them and deal with the consequences.
Those are very simple, but if someone would have told me that before, I'd be in a different situation. (laughs) But I guess, you live and learn. You have to have a certain sense of humor about life and what life does. Life gets in the way and sometimes knocks you over your head, but not too hard -- hard enough that you can take the heat.
So with your sense of humor, can you look back at Milli Vanilli and all of the drama and laugh?
I can smirk. A little smirk, like 'Wow, that was crazy.' I can't even believe that it was me. We're talking about a much younger man with a different thought process thrown into this thing. Things were moving so fast you're not really aware of what's going on and what you're doing. People around you are much older, who know about how to play your youth. They just know how to play you. The artists of today, people are much more business-minded. They've studied and learned from the other people's mistakes.
The one thing I've learned, a lot of things are very controlled. When it comes to answering questions, and because I went through what I went through, being open is the best way because in the end, what is always comes out. what isn't always comes out. If you're not what you are, it will always come out and I learned my lesson the hard way.
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I'm a radio person, and that's where music is music. In that world we are all blind to what the artist looks like.
From the moment this issue exploded I scratched my head and said "Who cares?". If the two people who stood up to accept the award didn't sing, that doesn't mean there weren't any singers.
The award was from the record industry for the artists who recorded those songs. Instead of taking away the award, they should have given the award to whomever recorded them and let them get the respect they deserved.
It has amazed me for over 20 years that nobody seems to care about the "Real" artists behind those songs. By all rights they sold a lot of records and should've continued to crank out tunes.
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This is one of the most inane interviews I have ever read. Of course more than two people were involved in the farce of Milli Vanilli. But to conduct an entire ,lengthy interview with nothing but cliches and continue to espouse the notion the 'the real story is yet to be told' is just pathetic.
Jesus, what a self righteous jerk he is!
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If anyone ever thought that Milli Vanilli did that all on their own they were idiots. They were two young men that were used by people in the music industry. The people that did that to them never took resposibility. Regardless of what happened they were GORGEOUS young men and a delight to watch on video. Their songs still make me smile.
They were used as pawns and thrown out to the sharks!
Fab Morvan still gorgeous today!
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Fab's outlook in life as seen in this interview inspires me very much. Thank you Fab! I was and still is a big fan of Milli Vanilli.
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When Milli Vanila songs came out no one knew who song them. Until the video basically. It was the same with Madonna, yes Madonna. Her songs were on the radio for 6 months and no one knew who it was singing. Everyone thought it was a black girl, so when the videos came out and a white girl was suppose to be the voice of the songs, people couldn't believe it. They use to play Madonna songs on the radio without even mentioning the artist name. I still don't believe that Madonna sang her first album, that is why her voice sounds so different on the 2nd and 3rd one.
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Those poor abused men only did what they were hired to do. If your feel that way you are a loser and drain on society. just so you know.
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I was furious when this happened. I really liked them. At first I did blame them. Now I blame the music industry machine. You know, the one that wants to to buy music after they have sued you for "sharing" your music. This is the same people who lobbied the gov't to allow a hidden tax on ALL blank cassette tape sales. Why? Because it was assumed you were going to copy music from LP to cassette.
I don't blame it on the rain ;~) I blame it on the money hungry industry itself. Too bad they can't be sued...
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I loved Milli Vanilli, I couldn't understand all the s**t about them. I still love them, I'm glad he's going to make it big again.
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They all do it. Except for the heavy rockers and the hair bands of the 80's almost all the popsters lip sync. They do it on anything liv. It just that some are better at it than others. Its an art in and of itself. I dont condone it it, but seriously I know I couldnt and doubt that anyone else could either, give a show with as much physicality to it as some like Brittany and not have the track piped in. I iwll challenge anyone to get up on a stage and jump around and dance their asses off for 2 hours and not be out of breath or not able to sing as well. seriously go to an arobics class one day for 20 minutes and see if you can sing while you are doing it all.
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I temember these guys. If you'r a singer or claim to be, I expect you should sing on key. When they did sing with their own voices they were off key and hit flat notes all over the place. That sealed it for them. Sorry but you can't move on to the next round.
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The fact is that he accepted that what they did was wrong but people they were very young and trusted the advice of older people who left them out to dry and this a lesson for all of us. BE CAREFUL WHO WE TRUST AND DON'T BE TOO QUICK TO ACCEPT OFFERS!!
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Milli Vanilli thought they could sing and wanted to go on their own - That's what did them in! The other entertainers mentioned can sing! Milli Vanilli was a sewer act and got flushed into a cesspool where it belonged with all of those profitting from that flushed right along side of it.
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Fab is a great artist.
And is great his new dance music project SMFM.
(DJ Sean MCcaff & Fab Morvan)
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Milli Vanilli was huge, and still are!!! I look forward to the movie. Who wouldn't have done the same as they did? "Blame it on the manager"! The ironi is that the truth came as a result of Rob&Fab wanted to sing themself on the next album..........
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I remember those days, I was a teenager when all this mumbo jumbo came thru, those were times I knew real artists..., I feel sorry for those guys, I liked them, well give'em a break, today´s so called artists are real fiasco, and this so called artist are shameless pointing their insulting fingers to those who were real artists, How dare!!! they're pitiful
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OMG, he's STILL drop-dead GORGEOUS!!!
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I LOVE FABRICE, AND DESPITE ALL THAT HAS HAPPENED HES DOING GREAT AND I'M SO PROUD OF HIM AND HIS NEW PROJECT IS DOING GREAT, SO IN ALL HE'S A SURVIOR AND PLEASE DON'T PUSH HIM YOU'LL ONLY MAKE HIM EVEN BETTER.
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Milli Vanilli!!
Yeap sad news that we have lost Rob.
The music lives on and 20 years down the line "Girl Im Gonna miss ya" means an awful lot to me. Thanks guys...
Chris
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All I have to say is F*** Arista Records for letting something like that happen & F*** Frank Farian for not having enough balls or the skills to market the group he had without Rob & Fab. The two front-men didn't know what they were doing, they were young & easily enticed by money, popularity & fame & weren't thinking about what could possibly happen. Anyone in this situation would probably do the same thing they did. Oh and F*** the original group itself for not stepping up or standing their ground and just taking it in the A** from the label execs, letting them put Rob & Fab in as front-men and destroying any and all artistic & marketing value their group had. Idiots! But now the labels are reaping what they've sown. They've tricked the public too much and now look at the state of music. Fab, your song Anytime sounds great for this time, very up to date pop feel to it and if I heard it without knowing it was you, I would have thought it was someone like Craig David, Jason Derulo or Iyaz. Great job Bro, keep it up.
Peace,
Long Time Fan
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I'm really agreed with one thing ( an important one) they're not alone in this, it's suppose to be many many many people in an singer acreer, producer manager etc.. etc. what they won with this fraud and not benn returned? money, royalties? new contracts with other "new" artist? mmmmmmmm interesting!
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