[4] The song did not garner any real success, nor did it get much attention from Dodd; however it resulted in Horace Swaby befriending Miller and sparking an interest in him as a musician with potential.
[5] In the next year and a half, Miller recorded five more songs for Pablo, "Baby I Love You So", "False Rasta", "Who Say Jah No Dread", "Each One Teach One", and "Girl Named Pat", each of which became a Rockers classic with King Tubby dubs on their b-sides.
[9] Other notable tracks featuring Miller's vocals with Augustus Pablo's music and/or dubs include "Keep on Knocking", "False Rasta", and "Who Say Jah No Dread".
In Rockers, Miller plays a singer for a hotel's house band—which is in fact Inner Circle—who are joined on drums by the film's eponymous hero, Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace (himself a musician).
[citation needed] Rockers depicts Miller as he was in real life—a fun-loving and eccentric reggae singer who loved to play, eat, and sing.
The "Peace Concert" took place at the National Stadium in Kingston, Jamaica on 22 April 1978,[15] along with many of the most popular reggae acts of the day.
Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Bunny Wailer, U-Roy, Judy Mowatt, Dennis Brown, Althea and Donna, and many more roots reggae artists and locally famous Rastafari were in attendance.
Two bitter political rivals—Edward Seaga and incumbent prime minister Michael Manley—were to meet onstage and shake hands in front of Miller and other artists.
[17] Inner Circle wrote a song specially for the occasion titled "Peace Treaty", which was a reggae interpretation of the popular folk tune "When Johnny Comes Marching Home".
During Inner Circle's daytime set on a smaller stage nearby—as highlighted in the film Heartland Reggae—Miller brazenly donned a policeman's hat and lit an enormous spliff (until 2015 cannabis was strictly illegal in Jamaica), followed by cheers of delight from the audience.
Miller and Inner Circle had been preparing for an American tour with Bob Marley and the Wailers, and the next album, Mixed Up Moods, had been recorded before his death.
Additionally, Archbishop Yeshaq of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church who hosted his funeral service said that "Miller had a desire to help those in the ghetto [...] and made a plea for man to stop destroying his own brothers and sisters.