Based in the east side of Columbus, Ohio, Miller-Kelton plays a lyrical style of country-rock that explores the strange wilderness of American culture.  Julia O'Keefe's bittersweet vocals float over a powerful rhythm section, alternately celebrating and lashing out at a world that has lost its mind.  Slashing guitars light up the freeway, while the band crashes ever onward to an uncertain salvation.  

The band's critically acclaimed first effort, Goodbye Cindy, offered a folk-tinged, minimalistic set of stories, focusing on O’Keefe’s singing and the bands trademark vocal harmonies, and garnered national and international air play.  For its second album, Tip-Top, MK recorded live in the studio to reflect their electric guitar driven live shows. The result is a driven, churning set of songs evoking life in Driving Park and the Hudson Corridor, described by fellow Singing Moon artist Robert Loss as "a seething expose of America’s false faces."  
 
For their third release, a five song EP simply titled “Miller-Kelton, the band found themselves moving slightly away from the folk Americana rock of their previous outings to a more upbeat guitar pop.