Artist's albums
More Greatest Hits
2001 · compilation
The Best of Hot Chocolate
1996 · compilation
Greatest Hits Volume 2
1995 · compilation
Their Greatest Hits
1993 · compilation
Every 1's a Winner
1978 · album
Man to Man
1976 · album
14:43 in HongKong
2023 · single
The RAK Singles
2021 · album
Remixes and Rarities
2020 · album
Robot Love
2020 · single
Heaven Is In the Back Seat of My Cadillac (D.D. Mix)
2020 · single
Every 1's a Winner (Long Mix)
2020 · single
Hot Chocolate
1975 · album
Everyone's a Winner
2019 · EP
The Greatest Hits
2019 · album
Could've Been A Lady
2018 · single
Another World
2018 · single
You Sexy Thing
2018 · single
You Sexy Thing
2013 · EP
Box Selection (Their 8 RAK Albums 1974-1983)
2011 · compilation
Essential
2011 · compilation
Cicero Park
1974 · album
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Biography
The multidimensional Hot Chocolate incorporated strains of soul, rock, reggae, and disco into their sound and, during the '70s and early '80s, scored a dozen Top 10 hits in their native U.K. Formed by Errol Brown and Tony Wilson, the interracial band debuted in 1969 as Hot Chocolate Band with a cover of Plastic Ono Band's "Give Peace a Chance," issued on the Beatles' Apple Records. The band then forged a long-term alliance with producer Mickie Most and his RAK label, for which Brown and Wilson also wrote material for other artists. From 1970 through 1973, Hot Chocolate released seven singles. "Love Is Life" and "I Believe (In Love)" were Top 10 U.K. hits, as was "Brother Louie," a bleak tale regarding an interracial relationship. A cover version, shrewdly recorded by Stories, went to number one in the U.S. Although Hot Chocolate were active for several years strictly as a singles act, they released eight albums during the mid- to late '70s and early '80s. Cicero Park (1974) trailed "Brother Louie" and continued to explore themes of race and class. It's regarded as the band's most significant artistic statement. Highlight "Emma," in which the subject struggles to find fame and commits suicide, was an additional Top 10 U.K. single, and it reached the same level in the U.S. Hot Chocolate (1975) was propelled by the funkier "You Sexy Thing," yet another A-side that reached the Top 10 of the U.K. and U.S. pop charts. The band finally reached the absolute top in their homeland with "So You Win Again," a relaxed, resigned disco number from Every 1's a Winner (1978). Around this time, Wilson juggled a solo career on the Bearsville label. The band split in 1986, but a different lineup featuring neither Brown nor Wilson took shape early the following decade. Versions of Hot Chocolate performed and toured through the 2010s. Brown, who had released a handful of major-label solo albums, died of liver cancer in 2015. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi