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Chilli Willi & The Red Hot Peppers
In Chilli Willi and the Red Hot Peppers Pub
Rock revealed its hippie roots.
Martin Stone, once the guitar lynchpin in much touted London
bands The Action and Mighty
Baby, and fiddle player Phil 'Snakefinger' Lithman - who had
spent the late Sixties soaking up the flower power vibes in San
Francisco - came together early in 1972 to make a country blues
album for Revelation Records, an independent label established to
release material recorded at the first ever Glastonbury Festival
the previous summer.
Called Kings of the Robot Rhythms, Chilli Willi's debut
featured guest appearances by Jo Ann Kelly and various members of Brinsley
Schwarz. In order to do the album justice live, Stone and
Lithman recruited banjo player Paul 'Diceman' Bailey, Paul 'Bassman'
Riley and drummer, Pete Thomas.
By mid-1973 the band's loose-limbed bluegrass and western
swing-flavoured songs were great favourites in pubs like The
Kensington and The Tally Ho (in Kentish Town), as well as benefit
gigs and free festivals all over the South of England, where they
frequently shared stages with bands like Hawkwind.
In 1974 they signed to reggae specialist Trojan Records' rock
offshoot, Mooncrest, for a second album - Bongos Over Balham
- which they promoted on the 'Naughty Rhythms Tour'.
The band broke up immediately afterwards with Lithman going on
to become a key member of San Francisco avant-garde band The
Residents, and Pete Thomas joining Elvis
Costello & The Attractions
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| The
Band |
Martin Stone
Guitar, vocals
Phil 'Snakefinger' Lithman
Fiddle
Paul 'Diceman' Bailey
Banjo
Paul 'Bassman' Riley
Bass
Pete Thomas
Drums
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