About Tor Miller
Native New Yorker Tor Miller is endearingly vague when asked to explain the source of his singing voice. He grew up, he says, with a dad "who was part of the Glee Club at university, and he'd sing all the time at home, all these old college drinking songs. But my mum can't sing to save her life. My parents always say that I would sing around the house all the time, too, but I don't remember that. I do know that they would go to parent evenings and ask my teachers about my participation in music, and the teachers would go: 'What? He never contributes.' I'd sing along to the radio, but I never thought anything of it." (one can easily lose count of the great singers who will give a similar answer when quizzed about their talent. How cool must it be to be able to shrug in explanation -oh, the singing? I never thought anything of it.)
As Tor tells it, it took a major upheaval in his life to kickstart his conviction and self-belief, and turn him from someone who would "sing around the house all the time" into an artist on a mission. When he was 12, his parents moved from Manhattan out to New Jersey and six months later, Tor enrolled in a new school. It was those six months, and the two years that followed, that would shape him both as a singer and as a songwriter. Each weekday he and his mother would do "a 90-minute commute. She would drop me off and I'd sit for about half an hour, waiting for school to open, listening to the music she had given me – Ziggy Stardust, Elton John, Fleetwood Mac. I listened to those records pretty much nonstop, up and back. And that was the point when I started writing my own songs."
As is so often the case, a great teacher proved another catalyst. "I had this piano teacher at the new school who would just let me play what I wanted to, so I'd play him these songs and sing along really quietly, and one lesson he said: 'You have a really good voice. Next week, instead of just working on the piano part, we'll learn the vocal as well. And the week after, we can try writing something.' So it was all thanks to that one teacher."
The music lessons aside, Tor's new school was, for a long time, not a place he was happy to attend. "I was a complete outcast; I didn't talk to anyone for about two years. But I was getting confident in my music, and wrote my first couple of songs, so I decided to perform at the eighth-grade talent show – and at that point, no one had really ever heard me even speak. I was so mad about moving schools and leaving all my friends, so I hadn't participated in anything, but I got up there and performed a song I had just written, and immediately after, people suddenly wanted to talk to me, I got all this attention – especially from girls! It propelled me to keep going, and I started booking shows, open-mic nights in places like The Stone Pony in Asbury Park. I went to high school, and joined a jazz band there, and some of the guys in that joined my band, and we just carried on playing shows. But it all came from that first performance in eighth grade."
The songs "began to pour out, most of them about isolation and loneliness," Tor says with a wry laugh. "I felt that I'd been taken out of the city and away from a life I loved, and thrown out on a horse farm in New Jersey. And here, suddenly, was something I liked – and I didn't like anything at the time." The bug had bitten him and, when he took up a place studying music at NYU, Tor dived right in. "The moment when it felt properly real was in my first semester at college, when I was writing all these songs. There was this room in the basement of my dorm building, next to the laundry room, it could reach 100 degrees in there, but I'd be in there three or four hours every day, writing away, skipping class, and I really felt that I was coming into my own. My attitude was, 'No, fuck the classes, you need to be working on your music'.
Glassnote Records – home to artists such as Mumford & Sons, Phoenix, Childish Gambino and CHVRCHES – picked up on the buzz about Tor, and last year, he signed to the label. Which led, he admits, to a slightly tense family summit with his mum and dad. "I'm supposed to be on this two-year leave from college at the moment, and I think my parents both fully expect that I'll be going back there at the end of it. It was an incredibly awkward conversation when the deal came about. I had to say: 'Because of this, I don't think I'll be going back to college next year.' That was pretty nerve-wracking."
Headlights, the title track of Tor's EP released in February 2015, includes Hold the Phone, a song from Tor's dorm-basement days that he recorded on his i-Phone, and which first gained traction when Zane Lowe named it as the Next Hype on his R1 show and Now and Again which has a swagger Ziggy would have approved of, and a sonic eclecticism that recalls Lindsay Buckingham's multilayered production mastery. But it is Midnight that most captures Tor's impassioned musicianship – and his abiding, imperishable love for the city he was forced to abandon temporarily as a teen.
In the midst of the release of his new single Carter & Cash, Tor is working to complete his debut album at London's Eastcote studios with the producer Eliot James (Noah and the Whale, Two Door Cinema Club, Plan B, Bloc Party). Tor describes the recording environment as "a bit dilapidated, which is exactly how I like it. And Eliot is a producer who really drives the recordings, and captures the grit in a song. It's a huge relief to finally find the right match." He's determined not to play it safe, he says, or smooth off the rough edges in his songs. "Risk-taking is rare in music. When I wrote some of these songs, I'd listen to some of the lyrics and think, 'Fuck – do I really want to be saying that? Do I really want to let everyone know how I feel?' But I think that's something you have to do if you want to produce work that is honest."
The key moment in Midnight is when with the backing vocals rising to a tumult behind him, Tor sings "Calling out, calling out for something true." The most thrilling thing about Tor Miller – though he may not have realized this yet – is that he's found it.
Comments
Explore Nearby
-
1
Q&A Residential Hotel
Hotels -
2
Happy Ending Lounge
Restaurants -
3
Hudson River Park's Batting Cages
Attractions -
4
Studio Self Catering Apt Lower East Side
Hotels -
5
Gloria's Tribeca Mexican
Restaurants
-
1
Q&A Residential Hotel
70 Pine Street -
2
Studio Self Catering Apt Lower East Side
Orchard Street and Stanton Street -
3
The Solita Soho Hotel, an Ascend Hotel Collection Member
159 Grand St -
4
One Bedroom Self-Catering Apartment - Little Italy
Mulberry Street and Broome Street -
5
Apartment in Chinatown
49 Catherine St -
6
W New York - Downtown
123 Washington Street -
7
The Ludlow Hotel
180 Ludlow Street -
8
The Sohotel
341 Broome St -
9
Club Quarters, Wall Street
52 William St -
10
Duane Street Hotel Tribeca
130 Duane St
-
1
Happy Ending Lounge
302 Broome St -
2
Gloria's Tribeca Mexican
107 W Broadway -
3
Spur Tree Lounge
76 Orchard St -
4
Jing Star Restaurant
27 Division St -
5
Umami Burger
225 Liberty St Ste 247 -
6
Nam Son Vietnamese Restaurant
245 Grand St Frnt 1 -
7
A-Wah Restaurant
5 Catherine St -
8
Bunny Chow
74 Orchard St -
9
Open Door Gastropub
110 John St -
10
Ken's Asian Taste
40 Bowery -
11
Shu Jiao Fu Zhou Cuisine
118 Eldridge St -
12
Tribeca Park Deli
1 Walker St -
13
Roxy's Coffee Shop
20 John St -
14
Fish Market
111 South St -
15
Royal Seafood Restaurant
103-105 Mott St -
16
China Chalet
47 Broadway -
17
Lovely Day
196 Elizabeth St -
18
Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten
7 Rivington St -
19
Elevate Restaurant & Lounge
93 Bowery -
20
The General
199 Bowery -
21
Sofia's of Little Italy
143 Mulberry Street -
22
Trading Post NYC
170 John Street -
23
Peasant
194 Elizabeth St -
24
Cafe Select
212 Lafayette St -
25
City Hall
131 Duane St -
26
Norman's Cay
74 Orchard St -
27
Hotel Chantelle
92 Ludlow St -
28
Onieal's Grand Street Bar & Restaurant
174 Grand St -
29
Sazón
105 Reade St -
30
Sons of Essex
133 Essex St
-
1
Hudson River Park's Batting Cages
Pier 25 -
2
DeLury Square
Fulton Street -
3
Pier 25 — Hudson River Park
West Side Highway -
4
Dialog in the Dark Exhibit
11 Fulton St, Pier 17 -
5
Nelson A. Rockefeller Park
River Ter & Warren St -
6
IRT Subway - City Hall (Abandoned)
City Hall Park -
7
City Hall Park
31 Chambers St -
8
Battery Park City Esplanade
Hudson River throughout BPC -
9
Columbus Park
67 Mulberry St -
10
Zuccotti Park
117 Trinity Pl. -
11
City Hall Park
17 Park Row -
12
Drive495
495 Broadway -
13
City Hall Park Manhattan NYC
Broadway at Chambers St -
14
Chatham Square Restaurant
6 Chatham Sq -
15
Vintry Fine Wines
230 Murray St -
16
Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA)
215 Centre St -
17
Rosetta Wines & Spirits
40 Exchange Pl -
18
Puro Wine
161 Grand St -
19
The Drawing Center
35 Wooster St -
20
Lower East Side Tenement Museum
97 Orchard St -
21
Mission Escape Games
55 Chrystie St RM210 -
22
Lower East Side Tenement Museum
103 Orchard St -
23
Museum at Eldridge Street
12 Eldridge St -
24
Terroir Tribeca
24 Harrison St -
25
9/11 Tribute Center
120 Liberty St
© 2025 NYNY.com: A City Guide by Boulevards. All Rights Reserved. Advertise with us | Contact us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Site Map
