The Boston Globe

Frank Farian, 82, producer behind Milli Vanilli

- By Peter Keepnews

Frank Farian, the German record producer who was best known as the mastermind of Milli Vanilli, the duo that scaled the charts in 1989 but fell from grace when it was revealed that they didn’t do any of the singing on their records, died Tuesday at his home in Miami. He was 82.

His death was announced by Philip Kallrath of Allendorf Media, a spokespers­on for Mr. Farian’s family.

Milli Vanilli’s first American album, “Girl You Know It’s True,” was released in 1989. It sold several million copies worldwide and won the duo, Rob Pilatus and Fab Morvan, a Grammy Award as best new artist.

But the next year, Mr. Farian revealed that the songs on the album were actually sung by studio vocalists, and that in performanc­e Pilatus and Morvan — energetic dancers who put on a crowd-pleasing show — were lip-syncing.

The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences subsequent­ly rescinded the duo’s Grammy. The real vocalists were later identified as Brad Howell, Johnny Davis, and Charles Shaw.

Both Mr. Farian and executives of Arista, the record company that released Milli Vanilli’s album in the United States, said the label had not been told that Pilatus and Morvan did not sing on it. The two performers disputed that. (A different version of the album had been released elsewhere under the name “All or Nothing” in 1988.)

Although Mr. Farian was best known in the United States for the Milli Vanilli scandal, he had establishe­d himself as a hitmaker in Europe before then, notably with the disco vocal group Boney M, a worldwide phenomenon in the 1970s and ’80s, for which he was the producer and primary songwriter.

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