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Red Hot Chili Peppers Biography



These engaging Hollywood ruffians' mixture of funk, punk and rock encouraged a legion of other bands to regurgitate the formula. Led by Antwan The Swan (Anthony Kiedis, 1 November 1962, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA; vocals), the band's original line-up also featured Flea (b. Michael Balzary, 16 October 1962, Melbourne, Australia; bass), Hillel Slovak (b. 31 March 1962, Israel, d. 25 June 1988; guitar) and Jack Irons (b. 18 July 1962, California, USA; drums). They began life as garage band Anthem before Balzary departed for seminal 80s punks Fear. When Irons and Slovak moved on to join the less notable What Is This?, the nails appeared to be firmly in place on the Anthem coffin. However, under their new name, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, with Flea back on board, acquired a speculative recording contract with EMI Records America. Unfortunately, as Irons and Slovak were under contract with their new band, their debut album had to be recorded by Kiedis and Balzary with Jack Sherman on guitar and Cliff Martinez (ex-Captain Beefheart, Weirdos) on drums. Production was handled, somewhat surprisingly, by the Gang Of Four's Andy Gill.

The band set about building their considerable reputation as a live outfit, much of which was fuelled by their penchant for appearing semi-naked or worse. Slovak returned to guitar for the second album, this time produced by George Clinton. Also featured was a horn section comprising Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley, veterans of James Brown, among others. Martinez returned shortly afterwards to reinstate the original Anthem line-up, and their third album saw a shift back to rock from the soul infatuation of its predecessors. In 1988, they released the Abbey Road EP, featuring a pastiche of the famous Beatles album pose on the cover (the band were totally naked save for socks covering their genitalia). However, the mood was darkened when Slovak took an accidental heroin overdose and died in June. Deeply upset, Irons left, while the band recruited John Frusciante (b. 5 March 1970, New York City, New York, USA; guitar) and Chad Smith (b. 25 October 1962, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA; drums). After the release of Mother's Milk, the single "Knock Me Down" was released as a tribute to Slovak.

On 1991's commercially successful Blood Sugar Sex Magik the Red Hot Chili Peppers accurately diagnosed their motivation, and much of their attraction: "Just recognizing that I was a freak, but knowing that was a cool place to be." Producer Rick Rubin, usually associated with the harder end of the metal and rap spectrum (Slayer, Danzig), nevertheless brought out the band's first ballads, including the classic US number 2 hit single "Under The Bridge" (later revived in a "sanitised" version by UK girl group All Saints). Such sensitivity did little to deter the vanguard of critics who raged at what they saw as the band's innate sexism. Frusciante left in May 1992 and was replaced by a succession of guitarists, before Dave Navarro (b. David Michael Navarro, 7 June 1967, Santa Monica, California, USA; ex-Jane's Addiction) joined in time to participate in the recording of One Hot Minute, released in 1995. The band enjoyed another transatlantic hit two years later with "Love Rollercoaster", taken from the soundtrack of Beavis And Butt-Head Do America.

Navarro left the band in 1998 and was replaced by ex-member John Frusciante, who had spent many of the years in-between struggling to overcome his various addictions. Having endured personal upheavals, it was encouraging to hear the band in such good shape on 1999's US/UK Top 5 album, Californication, featuring stand-out tracks such as "Scar Tissue" (a US Top 10 single), "Parallel Universe", and "Easily". The follow-up By The Way was a collection of mellow and slower paced numbers, very much in the style of "Under The Bridge". Though some critics felt that the band had gone soft, those looking below the surface noticed a balanced maturity and quality songwriting. The album was a huge success and firmly established the Red Hot Chili Peppers as one of the world's most popular bands.

Following the release of a live CD, the group returned in 2006 with a new studio recording. Stadium Arcadium packed in 28 tracks on a double CD and although it proved a huge success, should have been edited down to a magnificent single album.


Source: The Encyclopedia of Popular Music by Colin Larkin. Licensed from Muze.




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