Produced by Tim Simms profile picture

Produced by Tim Simms

About Me


Hey everyone, my name is Tim Simms.
I currently own and manage NMRG - New Millennium Records Group based in Hollywood, CA. We are an independent record label, recording studio and management company dedicated to finding, developing and recording artists.
You're listening to some artists I've worked with which I co-wrote, produced & recorded at NMRG; including songs off of Brooke White's debut album "Songs From the Attic".
We're obviously very proud and excited about Brooke's success on American Idol 7, and her album hitting No. 1 at Amazon.com in three categories and spent four weeks in the Top 10 Pop Albums at iTunes upon the CD's release to the internet in May '08. Brooke's single "Free" is currently No. 1 in Adult, HIT and even Country formats on Clear Channel's 750 online radio stations. We're also proud to announce that SFTA is now also available nationwide in most retailers including over 450 Walmart locations!
I personally pride myself on only "taking on" projects/artists that I feel are truly talented and have something special to offer the world. We're always on the lookout for something unique from bands to singer-songwriters, so feel free to send links to your (or your friends') pages or sites...
Currently I've co-founded a charity organization called The Voice Project. Check out the video below. Los Angeles benefit concert TBA.
Click Music Connection Cover below to read Tim Simms' Interview - Aug. '08
"FREE" - Brooke White's Independent Pre-Idol Music Video
Produced by Tim Simms, Directed by Braden Barty
!!! Start Code To Apply Top Banner !!!!

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 3/8/2007
Band Website: www.NMRGonline.com
Band Members:

Influences: -- Stephanie Lysaght -- LA Times interview

‘American Idol’: Brooke White’s debut album returns to the Internet

03:36 PM PT, May 1 2008

“I had shopped Brooke to practically every label in town and no bites,” confessed fallen Idol Brooke White’s former manager, Tim Simms, in a phone interview today. “No one thought you could shop the good girl.” As of today, however, Brooke White fans will be able to “shop the good girl” –- literally. Brooke’s debut album, “Songs From the Attic,” which she co-wrote and recorded with Tim, has now been re-released on Brookewhite.com.

Over the course of their four years working and recording together, Tim has been everything to Brooke: producer, manager, guitar player, roadie and more. “Its just a great, very, very unorthodox, professional” relationship, explained Tim, who remained in close communication with Brooke and her family throughout the competition. “It’s a great story,” he mused. “It’s like, movie of the week.”

When Tim says “movie of the week,” he is referring not to Brooke’s proclivity for waterworks but to their long, hard struggle for success. Tim first caught wind of Brooke when she was 19, through a friend who was teaching Brooke’s artist development class at the Musicians Institute in Los Angeles.

“Tim, you’ve gotta hear this girl,” said the teacher. “She's got that ‘it’ factor.” Tim wasn’t so sure. “I hear that all the time,” he thought.

With more than a little resistance, Tim agreed to meet the teen student. “I said, OK, my house, quarter to 3, don’t be late,” recalled Tim. When he first laid eyes on Brooke, Tim wasn’t convinced. Her glasses, dress and diminutive presence made him see her as “little meek Brooke … like Mary Poppins, man!” But for reasons he’s still unsure of, Tim recorded the first song Brooke ever played for him: “Come to My Rescue.” At the time, it was the only song in her repertoire. Tim still prizes that first recording and recalls that performance as the moment he knew he’d found something special. “It was just like … when the hairs on the back of your neck go up.”

Tim signed Brooke and began to tirelessly promote her. Eager to “jump on [the Norah Jones] bandwagon,” Tim and Brooke recorded a three-track piano-vocal demo tape, which Tim passed around to his industry contacts.

"You would have thought I was sending them, like, some alien ship,” chuckled Tim.

Tim convinced some contacts at Island Records to attend Brooke’s show at a local pub called Molly Malone’s, but they went home unimpressed. “They were like, ‘We kinda hear what you hear, but we don’t know if the suits will hear it. … Why don’t you record some tracks?’ "

And so they did. “We tried one song and we thought, 'That sounds pretty good,' and we kept going,” Tim explained. Tim and Brooke co-wrote and recorded the entire album in Tim’s attic, and so they called it “Songs From the Attic.” They sought, above all, to make the album organic. Aside from a couple of covers, the album was just an unknown young woman named Brooke, singing from her heart. The album made the rounds, but still, nobody was interested. “The industry, collectively, from New York to Nashville to L.A., everyone passed,” admitted Tim. “No one heard what I heard.”

But Tim kept fighting. “This was just raw talent that can’t be taught or bought,” he insisted. Next came a Star 98.7 video contest. For less than $1,500 and with two days to shoot, Tim and Brooke recorded a music video and entered the competition. Brooke made the top five and got to compete at the Key Club. “Everyone thought she was going to win,” Tim recalled. She didn’t.

“She was ready to throw in the towel,” explained Tim. “Everyone is saying, ‘You can't sell the good girl,’ and I’m like, ‘You’re wrong. Brooke, you don’t have to change. She’s the nicest person I’ve ever met, period.”

Wasn’t there any place where a good girl could be free to be the good girl?

And that’s when it dawned on him. Brooke should audition for “American Idol.” When Brooke countered that she didn’t even know when auditions were, Tim went online to find out. “The last audition was in three days.” Brooke packed her bags and got on a plane. The rest is history.

Now that Brooke has been eliminated, Tim is making “Songs From the Attic” available to the public. As of today, it is available on Brookewhite.com. Needless to say, Tim couldn’t be more pleased about Brooke’s tremendous success. Plus, he adds, “I’m just happy to know that I wasn’t delusional the whole time.”

-- Stephanie Lysaght -- LA Times

(Photo courtesy Fox)


Record Label: New Millennium Records Group
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

The Voice Project

www.voiceproject.orgHere is a new charity organization I co-founded with a friend after he returned from Northern Uganda(Africa). Please take a minute to watch the video and spread the word. We are ha...
Posted by on Tue, 10 Mar 2009 04:47:00 GMT

twitter...what's next?

many many social sites, so little timeok peeps, here's my twitter urltwitter.com/tim_simms
Posted by on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 01:14:00 GMT

Interview in Music Connection Mag

Can I get an Amen?!CHECK IT OUT!
Posted by on Fri, 01 Aug 2008 02:03:00 GMT