Red Hot Chili Peppers, American rock band that combined funk and punk rock to create a new musical style in the 1980s. Heavily influenced by the Los Angeles punk music scene in the late 1970s, school friends Anthony Kiedis (b. Nov. 1, 1962, Grand Rapids, Mich., U.S.), Flea (original name Michael Balzary; b. Oct. 16, 1962, Melbourne, Austl.), Hillel Slovak (b. April 13, 1962, Haifa, Israel—d. June 25, 1988, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S.), and Jack Irons (b. July 18, 1962, Los Angeles) formed Tony Flow and the Miraculously Majestic Masters of Mayhem. The group performed along the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles during the early 1980s, wearing only strategically placed tube socks, which, as a stage gimmick, became their trademark.
By 1983, under the name the Red Hot Chili Peppers, they had a loyal underground following and a recording contract with EMI. Their first album to reach the Billboard 200 charts was The Uplift Mofo Party Plan (1987). Just as the band was beginning to enjoy commercial success, Slovak died of a heroin overdose and Irons left the band, leaving Kiedis and Flea to re-form with John Frusciante (b. March 5, 1970, Queens, N.Y., U.S.) and Chad Smith (b. Oct. 25, 1962, St. Paul, Minn., U.S.). Their 1989 album, Mother’s Milk, became a surprise hit. The album went gold by early 1990 and was followed by the more successful Blood Sugar Sex Magik (1991), which included the band’s first Top Ten single, “Under the Bridge,
” as well as the Grammy Award-winning “Give It Away.
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Through a number of lineup changes, the Red Hot Chili Peppers continued to release well-received albums, including Californication (1999), By the Way (2002), and Grammy-winning Stadium Arcadium (2006). The band went on hiatus in early 2008, and the following year Frusciante announced that he had left the group to pursue a solo career.