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{{short description|American-Israeli musician (1962–1988)}}
{{Guitarist infobox
{{Good article}}
| name = Hillel Slovak
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2022}}
| image = [[Image:Hillels.jpg|200px]]
{{Section refimprove|date=June 2023}}
| caption =
{{Infobox musical artist
| born = [[April 13]], [[1962]]<br>{{flagicon|Israel}} [[Haifa]], [[Israel]]
| name = Hillel Slovak
| died = {{death date and age|1988|6|25|1962|4|13}}<br>{{flagicon|USA}} [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]], [[California]], [[United States|USA]]
| native_name = {{Nobold|{{Script/Hebrew|הלל סלובק}}}}
| aliases =
| native_name_lang = he
| genre = [[Alternative rock]]<br>[[Funk metal]]
| image = HillelSlovak1983 (cropped).jpg
| affiliation = [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]]<br>[[What Is This?]]
| label = [[MCA Records|MCA]]<br>[[EMI]]
| image_size =
| caption = Slovak performing in 1985
| notable guitars =
| years = [[1980 in music|1980]] - [[1988 in music|1988]]
| alias = Slim, Pick Handle Slim, The Israeli Cowboy, Mr. Huckleberry
| website =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1962|4|13}}
| birth_place = [[Haifa]], Israel
| origin = [[Los Angeles]], California, U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1988|6|25|1962|4|13}}
| death_place = Los Angeles, California, U.S.
| instrument = {{hlist|Guitar|vocals|sitar}}
| genre = {{hlist|[[Funk rock]]|[[punk rock]]|[[funk metal]]|[[alternative rock]]}}
| occupation = {{hlist|Musician|songwriter}}
| years_active = 1976–1988
| label = {{hlist|[[MCA Records|MCA]]|[[EMI Records|EMI]]}}
| past_member_of = {{hlist|[[Red Hot Chili Peppers]]|[[What Is This?]]}}
}}
}}
'''Hillel Slovak''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''הלל סלובק''') ([[April 13]], [[1962]] &ndash; [[June 25]], [[1988]]) was the original guitarist for the band [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]].


'''Hillel Slovak''' ({{lang-he|הלל סלובק}}; April 13, 1962 – June 25, 1988) was an [[Israelis|Israeli]]-American musician, best known as the founding guitarist of the [[Los Angeles]] rock band [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]], with whom he recorded two albums. His guitar work was rooted in [[funk]] and [[hard rock]], and he often experimented with other genres, including [[reggae]] and [[speed metal]]. He is considered to have been a major influence on Red Hot Chili Peppers's early sound.
== Biography ==
=== Early Years ===


Born in [[Israel]], he later moved to the United States. Slovak met future bandmates [[Anthony Kiedis]], [[Flea (musician)|Flea]], and [[Jack Irons]] while attending [[Fairfax High School (Los Angeles)|Fairfax High School]] in Los Angeles. There, he formed the group [[What Is This?]] with Irons, [[Alain Johannes]], and Todd Strassman; Flea later replaced Strassman.
Hillel was born in [[Haifa]], [[Israel]]. Both of Hillel's parents were [[Holocaust]] survivors. Hillel and his family moved to Queens, New York, and then to [[California]] in 1967. Hillel attended [[Fairfax High School]]. While at Fairfax, Hillel learned how to play guitar and met future bandmates [[Jack Irons]], [[Anthony Kiedis]], and [[Flea (musician)|Michael "Flea" Balzary]]. Hillel formed a band with [[Jack Irons]] on drums and two other high school friends, [[Alain Johannes]] and Todd Strasman. They called their band [[Chain Reaction (band)|Chain Reaction]] and changed the name to [[What Is This?|Anthym]] after their first gig. Hillel became dissatisfied with Todd's bass playing and eventually taught [[Flea (musician)|Flea]] to play bass. Flea quickly surpassed Todd in bass skills and took over bass duties in Anthym.


Slovak, Flea, Kiedis, and Irons founded Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1983, gaining popularity in Los Angeles through their energetic stage presence and spirited performances. Slovak eventually quit to focus on What is This?, which had been signed to a record deal, leaving the Red Hot Chili Peppers to record their 1984 [[The Red Hot Chili Peppers (album)|debut album]] without him, including five songs he co-wrote. Slovak rejoined the Chili Peppers in 1985 and recorded the albums ''[[Freaky Styley]]'' (1985) and ''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]'' (1987) with them.
After graduating from high school they changed the name of their band to [[What Is This?]] (which was a question often asked by people who heard the band play). Flea left Anthym around this time because he was offered a job playing bass in the prominent L.A. punk band [[Fear (band)|Fear]]. The other members of What Is This? understood that it was a good opportunity for Flea and supported his decision. What Is This? continued on and performed many shows along the [[California]] coast. Anthony Kiedis would often be called on stage to energetically introduce the band.


During his career, Slovak developed a serious [[Opioid use disorder|heroin addiction]]. He attempted to [[drug rehabilitation|rehabilitate]] several times but died of an overdose on June 25, 1988, at age 26. Several Red Hot Chili Peppers songs have been written as tributes to Slovak, including "[[Knock Me Down]]", "[[Otherside]]" "My Lovely Man", and "Feasting on the Flowers". In 1999, his brother James published a book, ''Behind the Sun: The Diary and Art of Hillel Slovak'', which features Slovak's diaries and paintings. Slovak was posthumously inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] as a member of the Red Hot Chili Peppers on April 14, 2012, with his brother accepting the award on his behalf.
=== Red Hot Chili Peppers ===


==Life and career==
One night, a man named [[Gary Allen]] (who was apparently friends with Anthony Kiedis) suggested that Anthony, Hillel, and Flea form a "one-off" band and open for his own band. Hillel and Flea were skeptical, but Gary thought Anthony would make a good vocalist because of his rowdy style and partymaniac attitude, so the three of them decided to do it. For the gig, they enlisted Jack Irons as their drummer and wrote the song "Out in LA," a city which Anthony apparently knew well because he had been hitting the Hollywood club scene since he was 12 years old. They dubbed themselves "Tony Flow and the Miraculous Masters of Mayhem". They were a hit with the club audience and the owner asked them to come back the next week.
===1962–80: Early life and Anthym===
[[Image:EarlyRHCP.jpg|220px|thumb|left|Red Hot Chili Peppers, c. 1988. [[Jack Irons]], [[Flea (musician)|Flea]], [[Anthony Kiedis]], Hillel]]
Hillel Slovak was born in [[Haifa]], [[Israel]], to [[Jewish people|Jewish]] parents who were survivors of [[the Holocaust]]. His mother was originally from [[Poland]] while his father grew up in [[Yugoslavia]].<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://jewishjournal.com/culture/arts/music/108646/ | title=The Red Hot Chili Peppers heat up the Holyland | date=October 4, 2012 }}</ref><ref name="allmusic.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.allmusic.com/artist/p126050|title=Hillel Slovak Biography|last=Prato|first=Greg|work=Allmusic|publisher=Rovi Corporation|access-date=November 6, 2010}}</ref><ref name="Yahoo">{{cite web|url=http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/yradish/40175/dead-too-soon-musicians-who-died-before-age-30/|title=Dead Too Soon: Musicians Who Died Before Age 30|last=Peterson|first=Robert|date=July 21, 2009|work=[[Yahoo!]]|publisher=Yahoo.com|access-date=November 12, 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091214052247/http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/yradish/40175/dead-too-soon-musicians-who-died-before-age-30|archive-date=December 14, 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Bloom|first=Nate|title=Jewish Stars 12/16 |newspaper=[[Cleveland Jewish News]]|date=December 15, 2011|url=https://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/archives/jewish-stars/article_7be302da-267e-11e1-b2fe-001871e3ce6c.html}}</ref> They settled in the [[Queens]] borough of [[New York City]], then in 1967 relocated to [[Southern California]]. As a child, Slovak developed an interest in art, and often spent time painting with his mother, Esther.<ref>Slovak, 1999. p. 37</ref> He attended Laurel Elementary School in [[West Hollywood]] and Bancroft Jr. High School in [[Hollywood, Los Angeles|Hollywood]], where he met future bandmates [[Jack Irons]] and [[Flea (musician)|Michael "Flea" Balzary]].<ref name="Consequence">{{cite web|url=http://consequenceofsound.net/2008/07/23/icons-of-rock-hillel-slovak/|title=Icons of Rock: Hillel Slovak|last=Sayers|first=Blaine|work=Consequence of Sound|date=July 23, 2008|access-date=December 22, 2010|archive-date=June 29, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100629033407/http://consequenceofsound.net/2008/07/23/icons-of-rock-hillel-slovak/|url-status=dead}}</ref> Slovak received his first guitar at age 13 as a [[bar mitzvah]] present, and regularly played the instrument into the late hours of the night.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=7:52|language=en}}</ref> During this time, he was highly influenced by [[hard rock]] music such as [[Jimi Hendrix]], [[Led Zeppelin]], and [[Kiss (band)|Kiss]].<ref name="allmusic.com"/>
Their name changed to [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]], and Anthony began writing more lyrics. The lyrics would eventually become songs such as "Green Heaven" and "True Men Don't Kill Coyotes". Over the course of the next six months, the Red Hot Chili Peppers played many shows in L.A. clubs and became something of an underground hit. They scored a record deal with EMI after just that short period of time and were set to record their first album. Flea left Fear, which was a very well-established L.A. punk band, to pursue the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Unfortunately, What Is This? had also gotten a record deal. Since Slovak considered the Chili Peppers to mearly be a side project and not a serious commitment, he left them to concentrate on What Is This?.


As a freshman at [[Fairfax High School (Los Angeles)|Fairfax High School]], Slovak formed a band with Irons on drums and two other high school friends, [[Alain Johannes]] and [[Todd Strassman]]. They called their band Chain Reaction, then changed the name to Anthem after their first gig. After one of the group's shows, Slovak met audience member [[Anthony Kiedis]], and invited him to his house for a snack.<ref name="Kiedis64">Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 64.</ref> Kiedis later described the experience in his autobiography ''[[Scar Tissue (autobiography)|Scar Tissue]]'': "Within a few minutes of hanging out with Hillel, I sensed that he was absolutely different from most of the people I'd spent time with ... He understood a lot about music, he was a great visual artist, and he had a sense of self and a calm about him that were just riveting."<ref name="Kiedis64"/> Slovak, Kiedis and Flea became best friends and often used [[LSD]], [[heroin]], [[cocaine]] and [[methamphetamine]] recreationally.<ref name=apterpgs40/>
During the recording of the What Is This? album, Hillel became frustrated with the band. He contacted Flea about rejoining the Red Hot Chili Peppers. This came at an opportune time, as both Kiedis and Flea were both unsatisfied with Hillel's replacement [[Jack Sherman]]'s playing. After the culmination of the promotional tour for their first album, Sherman was fired and Hillel rejoined the band.


The original bassist for Anthem, which renamed to Anthym, was deemed unsatisfactory, so Slovak began teaching Flea to play [[Bass guitar|bass]].<ref name=apterpgs40>Apter, 2004. pp. 40–45</ref> Following several months of commitment to the instrument, Flea developed proficiency and a strong musical chemistry with Slovak. When Strassman saw Flea playing Anthym songs on his equipment he quit the band, with Flea quickly replacing him.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. pp. 72–73</ref> Shortly afterwards Anthym entered a local [[Battle of the Bands]] contest and won second place.<ref name=apterpgs40/> Anthym started to play at local nightclubs, despite the fact that the members were all underage. After graduating from high school, the band changed their name to [[What Is This?]]. Around the same time, Flea left the band to accept an offer to play bass in the prominent L.A. punk band [[Fear (band)|Fear]]. [[What Is This?]] continued on and performed many shows along the [[California]] coast.<ref name="MullenHillel">Mullen, 2010. p. 21</ref>
Hillel returned to the Chili Peppers for their second and third albums, ''[[Freaky Styley]]'' and ''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]''. With Hillel back on board and contributing his guitar playing, and with Jack Irons rejoining for the third album, the Chili Peppers recorded ''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]''. The songs "Skinny Sweaty Man" and "No Chump Love Sucker" from ''The Uplift Mofo Party Plan'' were written about Hillel. He was nicknamed "Slim Bob Billy", "Slim", or "Huckleberry", and throughout the albums Anthony calls him by these nicknames before he starts a guitar solo.


===1980–82: Red Hot Chili Peppers formation===
=== Death ===
Slovak, Kiedis, and Flea began to create their own music after finding inspiration in a punk-funk fusion band called [[Defunkt]].<ref name=MOJO>Page, Scarlet (July 2004). "Red Hot Chili Peppers: The LA Punks Who Defied Death, Grunge And A Burning Crack Den". ''Mojo''.</ref> The three formed a band with former Anthym-drummer [[Jack Irons]] called Tony Flow and the Miraculously Majestic Masters of Mayhem. The band had only one song, entitled "Out in L.A.", and was formed for the purpose of playing the song once.<ref name=apterpg60>Apter, 2004. p. 60</ref> The song was based on a guitar riff that Slovak wrote while "jamming" with Irons, and was not meant to become a real song until Kiedis decided to rap over the music.<ref>Mullen, 2010. p. 16</ref> Following the group's first show at The Rhythm Lounge, the owner of the bar asked them to return, but with two songs instead of one. After several more shows, and the addition of several songs to their repertoire, the band's name was changed to Red Hot Chili Peppers.<ref name=apterpg61>Apter, 2004. p. 61</ref>


After the band started to gain popularity amongst the L.A. club scene, Kiedis began writing more lyrics. The lyrics would eventually become songs such as "Green Heaven" and "[[True Men Don't Kill Coyotes]]", and the band's concert repertoire quickly grew to nine songs as a result of months of playing local nightclubs and bars.<ref name=apterpg62>Apter, 2004. p. 62</ref> Over the course of the next six months, the Red Hot Chili Peppers played many shows in L.A. clubs and became something of an underground hit. Slovak, Kiedis, and Flea moved into a small house in a high-crime area in Hollywood where they collaborated musically and continued their drug addictions.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 108</ref> The threesome traveled to New York City to perform more shows and to "spread Chili Pepperdom".<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 115</ref> Shortly after the trip, Slovak moved out of the group's shared house to live with his girlfriend.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 117</ref>
Hillel and Anthony developed serious heroin habits early in their careers that ultimately led to Hillel's death. He was once fired from the Peppers for a short amount of time because of this addiction. During the European tour supporting the ''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]'' album, suspicions of his drug problems began to haunt the band. Unfortunately, these suspicions came to public light when Hillel relapsed, resulting in erratic behavior and botched performances. Slovak was found dead of a heroin overdose on [[June 25]] [[1988]], shortly after the band returned from the Europe tour. He was 26 years old. Hillel is interred at [[Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery]] in [[Hollywood Hills]], [[California]].


===1982–88: What is This? stint, ''Freaky Styley'', and ''The Uplift Mofo Party Plan''===
His last recording, a cover version of the [[Jimi Hendrix]] song "[[Fire (Hendrix song)|Fire]]", would later appear in ''[[Mother's Milk]]''.
The [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]] entered Bijou Studios to record a demo tape and subsequently secured a record deal with [[EMI]].<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=9:14|language=en}}</ref> Flea left [[Fear (band)|Fear]] to pursue the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]]. At the same time, [[What Is This?]] had also gotten a record deal. Since Slovak considered the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers|Chili Peppers]] to merely be a side project and not a serious commitment, he left them to concentrate on [[What Is This?]].<ref name=apterpgs70>Apter, 2004. pp. 70–74</ref> Flea ultimately respected the decision, but felt the band would suffer musically without him and Irons. He and Kiedis hired drummer [[Cliff Martinez]] and guitarist [[Jack Sherman (guitarist)|Jack Sherman]] to fill Irons' and Slovak's places, respectively.<ref name=apterpgs70/> During the recording of the second [[What Is This?]] album, Slovak became frustrated with the band and contacted Flea about rejoining the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]]. This came at an opportune time, as the group was dissatisfied with Slovak's replacement, [[Jack Sherman (guitarist)|Jack Sherman]]. Kiedis felt that Sherman's guitar work "didn't have the same spirit" that Slovak contributed to the band's sound.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 132</ref> When Flea asked Kiedis how he felt about Slovak rejoining the band, Kiedis responded by saying, "I'd give my firstborn son to get him back in the band."<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 162</ref> After the culmination of the promotional tour for their first album, Sherman was fired and Slovak rejoined the band.


Slovak returned to the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers|Chili Peppers]] for their second album, ''[[Freaky Styley]]'', which was released on August 16, 1985. [[What Is This?]] had finally disbanded, and Irons returned to the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers|Chili Peppers]] in mid 1986 after Martinez was fired. The relationship between Flea, Slovak and Kiedis began to deteriorate as a result of excessive heavy drug use and addiction. Flea recalled that "it began to seem ugly to me and not fun; our communication was not healthy".<ref>Apter, 2004. p. 133</ref> Kiedis became dependent on heroin, leaving the rest of the group to work on much of the album's material by themselves. The band lived in [[Detroit]] for a portion of the recording of the album, where Kiedis and Slovak indulged in heavy cocaine use. When Slovak was under the influence, he would often wear brightly colored clothing and dance in a "shuffling" fashion, which became the inspiration for the song "Skinny Sweaty Man" from the band's next album.<ref>Slovak, 1999. p. 110</ref> After Kiedis completed a stint in rehab, he rejoined the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]] in [[Los Angeles]] to record their third album ''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]''. Slovak felt a deep connection to the album; he reflected in his diary "It was so fun. I'm so extremely proud of everybody's work—it is at times genius."<ref>Slovak, 1999. p. 65</ref> Slovak was the subject of the songs "Skinny Sweaty Man", "Me and My Friends", & "No Chump Love Sucker".<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. pp. 203–204</ref> He was nicknamed "Slim Bob Billy", "Slim", or "Huckleberry", and throughout the albums Kiedis calls him by these nicknames before he starts a guitar solo. On ''The Uplift Mofo Party Plan'', Slovak experimented with different musical styles, playing the [[sitar]] on the song "[[Behind the Sun (Red Hot Chili Peppers song)|Behind the Sun]]".
== Remembrance ==
Hillel's work was one of the major contributing factors to the Peppers' early sound. Hillel was also a huge influence on a young [[John Frusciante]], who would later replace him as guitarist in the band. Frusciante based a lot of his playing style on Slovak's work. The songs "Knock Me Down" (from ''[[Mother's Milk]]'') and "[[My Lovely Man (song)|My Lovely Man]]" (from ''[[Blood Sugar Sex Magik]]'') from subsequent Peppers albums were written in ode to Hillel.


==Health decline==
Also, on the track "Otherside" Kiedis references Slovak. The song is about Anthony's addictions, and he sings "Heard your voice through a photograph, thought it up and brought up the past, once you know you can never go back". While some suggest this represents Slovak's death serving as a reminder to Kiedis to "never go back" to drugs, others see it as a more straightforward reference to never being able to go back to the past represented by the image.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
Slovak and Kiedis became addicted to heroin early on in their careers, and Slovak often attempted to conceal his addiction from his friends and family.<ref name="Spin">{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rSfPXCr4lJMC&pg=PA48 |title=Bridge Over Troubled Water (p. 48)|work=Spin|last=Thompson|first=Dave|date=August 3, 1993|access-date=January 27, 2011}}</ref> At first, the band were more concerned about Kiedis' addiction, which had become more apparent to the other members due to his willingness to openly discuss his issues. Kiedis was more upfront about his problems while Slovak according to Kiedis was "much more subtle and much more cunning in his disguise."<ref name="Spin"/> During the tour in support of ''Freaky Styley'', Slovak's health began to deteriorate. Slovak and Flea would [[Wrestling|wrestle]] regularly on tour, but Slovak became too weak to participate. Kiedis commented on the situation: "I could tell that Hillel had no inner core of strength; he had been robbed by his addiction of the life force that allows you to at least defend yourself. It was a sad moment."<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 180</ref> A roadie of the band who was concerned for Slovak's health contacted his brother, James, who had been unaware that Slovak had ever used heroin.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=10:32|language=en}}</ref>


Deciding to give sobriety a chance, both Kiedis and Slovak stopped using drugs prior to their European tour in support of ''The Uplift Mofo Party Plan'', and decided to help each other "steer clear" of heroin.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=10:46|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 208</ref> An entry from Slovak's diary on January 21, 1988, discusses his attempts to "begin a new drug-free phase of life".<ref>Slovak, 1999. p. 9</ref> During the tour both experienced intense [[heroin withdrawal]], with Slovak much more unstable than Kiedis. His withdrawal symptoms took a toll on his ability to play his instrument; at one point Slovak had a mental breakdown and was unable to play a show, leaving the rest of the band to play an entire set with no guitar.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 216</ref> He recovered a few days later, but was briefly kicked out of the band and replaced by [[DeWayne McKnight]] for a few shows.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 219</ref> After a few days with McKnight, the band decided to give Slovak another chance, and he rejoined for the European leg of the tour. Kiedis attempted to take Slovak to drug addiction counseling, but Slovak had difficulty admitting that his addiction was serious enough to require medical help.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 221</ref>
== Discography ==
With '''What Is This?'''
*''[[Squeezed (what is this?)|Squeezed]]'' &ndash; (1984)
*''[[What Is This? (album)|What Is This?]]'' &ndash; (1985)
*''[[3 Out of 5 Live]]'' &ndash; (1985)


==Death==
With '''Red Hot Chili Peppers'''
{{quote box |bgcolor=#FFFFF0 |salign=center
*''[[Freaky Styley]]'' &ndash; (1985)
|quote = Hillel was a huge influence on my life. Were it not for him, I would never had begun to play the bass ... Hillel is always with me and my love for him only grows stronger with time.
*''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]'' &ndash; (1987)
|source = —[[Flea (musician)|Flea]] on Slovak's death<ref>Slovak, pp. 9–10</ref>
*''[[The Abbey Road E.P.]]'' &ndash; (1988)
|width = 30%
*''[[Mother's Milk]]'' &ndash; (1989) <small>Performs on only one track, "[[Fire (Hendrix song)|Fire]]"</small>
|align = right
*''[[What Hits!?]]'' &ndash; (1992)
}}
*''[[Out in L.A.]]'' &ndash; (1994)
*''[[Under the Covers: Essential Red Hot Chili Peppers]]'' &ndash; (1998)
*''[[The Best of the Red Hot Chili Peppers]]'' &ndash; (1998)


Upon returning home, Slovak isolated himself from the rest of his bandmates, and struggled to resist drug abuse without the support of his friends, and Kiedis in particular.<ref name="MOJO"/><ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=11:07|language=en}}</ref> He stopped painting and writing in his diary during this time, and little is known about his life during the weeks following the tour, aside from a phone call to his brother on June 24, in which Slovak told him that he was having difficulty staying clean despite his desire to stop taking heroin.<ref name="Slovak, p. 6">Slovak, 1999. p. 6</ref> A few weeks after the band returned from the tour, the members attempted to contact Slovak, but were unable to do so for several days.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=11:16|language=en}}</ref> Slovak died in his Hollywood apartment on June 25, 1988 although his body was not discovered until two days later.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=11:24|language=en}}</ref><ref name="LA Times">{{cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1988-06-30/news/mn-7531_1_hillel-slovak|title=Hillel Slovak; Guitarist in Flamboyant Rock Band|date=June 30, 1988|access-date=January 15, 2011|work=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> On June 27, 1988, Slovak's body was found slumped over the painting he had been working on at the time of his death, he was found holding a cigarette which had burnt a hole in the canvas of the painting. After completion of the autopsy, authorities confirmed that the official cause of death was due to an accidental heroin overdose.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=11:30|language=en}}</ref> He is interred at [[Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery]] in [[Hollywood Hills]], [[California]].<ref name="Slovak, p. 6"/>
== References ==

Following his death, Kiedis fled town and did not attend the funeral, considering the situation to be surreal.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 222</ref> Although he found the death to be a shock, he was not initially "scared straight" and continued to use heroin.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 223</ref> However, a few weeks later, his friend convinced him both to check into rehab and visit Slovak's grave, which inspired him to get clean.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 226</ref> Irons was unable to cope with his death and subsequently left the band, saying that he did not want to be part of something that resulted in the death of his friends. Irons has suffered from severe depression since his death.<ref>{{Cite episode|title=Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers|series=[[Behind the Music]]|network=[[VH1]]|minutes=11:49|language=en}}</ref> This did not end Irons' musical career, however, as he would work with Johannes on several projects, including the band [[Eleven (band)|Eleven]], and would join [[Pearl Jam]] for a period in the 1990s after initially declining to join the band upon its founding. Kiedis and Flea decided to continue making music, hoping to continue what Slovak "helped build".<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 224</ref> They hired [[DeWayne McKnight]] and [[D.H. Peligro]] as replacements, who were later replaced by [[Chad Smith]] and [[John Frusciante]].

==Musical style and legacy==
{{Listen
|filename=06 Behind The Sun.ogg
|title= Red Hot Chili Peppers "Behind the Sun" (1987)
|description= This song was heavily influenced by Slovak's "sultry" guitar sound. The guitarist's melodic riff forms the basis of the song, and Slovak's [[sitar]] playing can be heard during the verses.
|format=[[Ogg]]
}}
Slovak was primarily influenced by hard rock artists such as [[Jimi Hendrix]], [[Santana (band)|Santana]], and [[Led Zeppelin]].<ref name="MullenHillel"/> His playing method was markedly based on improvisation, a style commonly used in funk music.<ref name="Consequence"/> He was also noted he would often play with such force that his fingers would "come apart."<ref name="Consequence"/> Kiedis observed that his playing evolved during his time away from the group in What Is This?, with Slovak adopting a more fluid style featuring "sultry" elements as opposed to his original [[hard rock]] techniques.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, p. 168</ref> On ''Uplift'', Slovak experimented with genres outside of traditional funk music including [[reggae]] and [[speed metal]].<ref name="Kiedis 204">Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 204</ref> His guitar riffs would often serve as the basis of the group's songs, with the other members writing their parts to complement his guitar work. His melodic riff featured in the song "Behind the Sun" inspired the group to create "pretty" songs with an emphasis on melody.<ref name="Kiedis 204"/> Kiedis describes the song as "pure Hillel inspiration".<ref>Slovak, 1999. p. 12</ref> Slovak also used a [[talk box]] on songs such as "Green Heaven" and "Funky Crime", in which the sounds of his amplified guitar would be played through a tube into his mouth and then back into a microphone, creating psychedelic, voice-like effects.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 112</ref> Slovak helped to incorporate new sounds in the group's work, including adding occasional [[drum machine]]s. Despite the fact that the group billed itself as "The Organic Anti-Beat Box Band", Kiedis states that Slovak showed the group that drum machines could be used as artistic instruments.<ref>Mullen, 2010. p. 35</ref>

Slovak's work was one of the major contributing factors to Red Hot Chili Peppers' early sound. When Kiedis and Flea were searching for a new guitarist to replace Slovak, Kiedis likened the experience to "shopping for a new Mom and Dad" because of his influence over the band.<ref>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 126</ref> Flea, who originally listened exclusively to [[jazz]], added that Slovak introduced him to a new genre of music, saying that "it was Hillel who first got me into hard rockin{{'"}}.<ref name="MullenHillel"/> He was also a huge influence on a young [[John Frusciante]], who would later replace him as guitarist in the band.<ref name=raw1>{{cite web|url=http://johnfrusciante.com/articles.php#raw01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011180908/http://johnfrusciante.com/articles.php#raw01|archive-date=October 11, 2007|author=Nelson, Artie|date=November 23, 1994|title=Space Cadet|access-date=August 31, 2007|publisher=Raw Magazine, Issue #163}}</ref> Frusciante based a lot of his playing style on Slovak's work, and explained, "I learned everything I needed to know about how to sound good with Flea by studying Hillel's playing and I just took it sideways from there."<ref name=apter181>Apter, 2004, p. 181.</ref> Just like Slovak before him, Frusciante developed a heroin addiction. Unlike Slovak, Frusciante eventually managed to break and defeat the habit. The songs "[[Knock Me Down]]" (from ''[[Mother's Milk (album)|Mother's Milk]]''), "My Lovely Man" (from ''[[Blood Sugar Sex Magik]]''), "This is the Place" (from ''[[By the Way (album)|By the Way]]''), and "Feasting on the Flowers" (from ''[[The Getaway (Red Hot Chili Peppers album)|The Getaway]]'') were written about or as tributes to Slovak.<ref name="allmusic.com"/><ref name=p273>Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 273</ref> The title of the song "[[Otherside]]" (from ''[[Californication (album)|Californication]]'') is also a tribute to Slovak.<ref name=411Mania>{{cite web|url=http://411mania.com/music/the-8-ball-5-18-14-top-8-red-hot-chili-peppers-music-videos/|title=411MANIA - The 8 Ball 5.18.14: Top 8 Red Hot Chili Peppers Music Videos|work=The 8 Ball 5.18.14: Top 8 Red Hot Chili Peppers Music Videos|access-date=March 23, 2015|archive-date=April 2, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402092738/http://411mania.com/music/the-8-ball-5-18-14-top-8-red-hot-chili-peppers-music-videos/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The band's 1987 cover version of [[Jimi Hendrix]]'s song "[[Fire (Jimi Hendrix song)|Fire]]", recorded with Slovak and previously only released on the "[[Fight Like a Brave]]" single and ''[[The Abbey Road EP]]'', was included on 1989's ''Mother's Milk'' along with an image of one of Slovak's paintings inside the album's booklet. In 1999, a book titled ''Behind the Sun: The Diary and Art of Hillel Slovak'' was published. The book was authored by Slovak's brother, James Slovak, and features writings from his brother's diaries, paintings, photos and hand-written notes from Kiedis and Flea.

On December 7, 2011, Red Hot Chili Peppers were announced as 2012 inductees to the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]]. Slovak's brother James accepted the award on his behalf and gave a speech honoring his brother. In an interview with ''Rolling Stone'', Kiedis expressed his excitement with Slovak's induction, explaining "He's a beautiful person that picked up a guitar in the 1970s and didn't make it out of the 1980s, and he is getting honored for his beauty".<ref>{{cite magazine|author=Andy Greene |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/anthony-kiedis-on-rock-and-roll-hall-of-fame-induction-my-dad-cried-when-i-told-him-20111207#ixzz1fvVArFOt |title=Anthony Kiedis on Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction: 'My Dad Cried When I Told Him' |magazine=Rolling Stone |date=December 7, 2011 |access-date=February 14, 2012}}</ref> Flea echoed those comments on the same day: "Hillel grew up loving rock and roll so much, he hasn't been here for some time, but I know how much it would mean to him. It's a powerful thing."<ref>{{cite news| url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/music_blog/2011/12/red-hot-chili-peppers-rock-hall-fame-flea.html | work=Los Angeles Times | title=Pop & Hiss | date=December 7, 2011}}</ref>

==Discography==
;With Addie Brik
*''Wattsland – EP'' – (1984)

;With What Is This?
*''[[Squeezed (what is this?)|Squeezed – EP]]'' – (1984)
*''[[What Is This?]]'' – (1985)
*''3 Out Of 5 Live – EP'' – (1985)

;With Red Hot Chili Peppers
*''[[The Red Hot Chili Peppers (album)|The Red Hot Chili Peppers]]'' – (1984)
**Co-wrote "[[Get Up and Jump]]", "Green Heaven", "Out in L.A.", and "Police Helicopter"
*''[[Freaky Styley]]'' – (1985)
*''[[The Uplift Mofo Party Plan]]'' – (1987)
*''[[The Abbey Road E.P.]]'' – (1988)
*''[[Mother's Milk (album)|Mother's Milk]]'' – (1989)
**Performs on only one track, "[[Fire (The Jimi Hendrix Experience song)|Fire]]"
*''[[What Hits!?]]'' – (1992)
*''[[Out in L.A.]]'' – (1994)
*''[[Under the Covers: Essential Red Hot Chili Peppers]]'' – (1998)
*''[[The Best of Red Hot Chili Peppers]]'' – (1994)

==References==

===Notes===
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}}

===Sources===
* {{cite book
| last = Apter
| first = Jeff
| title = Fornication: The Red Hot Chili Peppers Story
| year = 2004
| publisher = [[Omnibus Press]]
| isbn = 1-84449-381-4
}}
* {{cite book
* {{cite book
| last = Kiedis
| last = Kiedis
| first = Anthony
| first = Anthony
| authorlink = Anthony Kiedis
| author-link = Anthony Kiedis
| coauthors = Sloman, Larry
|author2=Sloman, Larry
| title = [[Scar Tissue (book)|Scar Tissue]]
| title = [[Scar Tissue (autobiography)|Scar Tissue]]
| publisher = [[Hyperion (publisher)|Hyperion]]
| publisher = [[Hyperion (publisher)|Hyperion]]
|date= [[October 6]], [[2004]]
| date= October 6, 2004
| isbn = 1-4013-0101-0 }}
| location =
* {{cite book
| pages =
| last = Mullen
| url = http://www.amazon.com/Scar-Tissue-Anthony-Kiedis/dp/1401301010/sr=8-2/qid=1158771212/ref=pd_bbs_2/104-1939100-9487941?ie=UTF8&s=books
| doi =
| first = Brendan
| title = An Oral/Visual History by the Red Hot Chili Peppers
| id = ISBN 1-4013-0101-0 }}
| publisher = It Books
| date= October 19, 2010
| location = Los Angeles, California
| page = 256
| isbn = 978-0-06-135191-4 }}
* {{cite book
| last = Slovak
| first = James
| title = Behind the Sun: The Diary and Art of Hillel Slovak
| publisher = Slim Skinny Publications
| date= August 1, 1999
| location = Los Angeles, California
| page = 116
| isbn = 978-0-9673956-0-9 }}


{{Red Hot Chili Peppers}}
{{Red Hot Chili Peppers}}
{{2012 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame}}


{{Authority control}}
[[Category:1962 births|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:1988 deaths|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:WikiProject Red Hot Chili Peppers]]
[[Category:Deaths by heroin overdose|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:American rock guitarists|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:Israeli-Americans|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:Jewish American musicians|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:Naturalized citizens of the United States|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:What Is This? members|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:Red Hot Chili Peppers members|Slovak, Hillel]]
[[Category:Israeli musicians|Slovak, Hillel]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Slovak, Hillel}}
[[cs:Hillel Slovak]]
[[de:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:1962 births]]
[[es:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:1988 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American musicians]]
[[fr:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:American funk guitarists]]
[[it:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:American lead guitarists]]
[[he:הלל סלובק]]
[[Category:American male guitarists]]
[[lt:Hilelis Slovakas]]
[[Category:American people of Croatian-Jewish descent]]
[[hu:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:American people of Polish-Jewish descent]]
[[nl:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:American rock guitarists]]
[[no:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:Israeli musicians]]
[[pl:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:Israeli guitarists]]
[[pt:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:Fairfax High School (Los Angeles) alumni]]
[[simple:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:Israeli emigrants to the United States]]
[[fi:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:Israeli people of Croatian-Jewish descent]]
[[sv:Hillel Slovak]]
[[Category:Israeli people of Polish-Jewish descent]]
[[Category:Jewish American musicians]]
[[Category:Musicians from Haifa]]
[[Category:Red Hot Chili Peppers members]]
[[Category:Sitar players]]
[[Category:What Is This? members]]
[[Category:Deaths by heroin overdose in California]]
[[Category:Burials at Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery]]
[[Category:Jews in punk rock]]
[[Category:Jewish heavy metal musicians]]
[[Category:20th-century American guitarists]]
[[Category:20th-century American male musicians]]

Latest revision as of 15:31, 2 May 2024

Hillel Slovak
הלל סלובק
Slovak performing in 1985
Slovak performing in 1985
Background information
Also known asSlim, Pick Handle Slim, The Israeli Cowboy, Mr. Huckleberry
Born(1962-04-13)April 13, 1962
Haifa, Israel
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedJune 25, 1988(1988-06-25) (aged 26)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • songwriter
Instrument(s)
  • Guitar
  • vocals
  • sitar
Years active1976–1988
Labels
Formerly of

Hillel Slovak (Hebrew: הלל סלובק; April 13, 1962 – June 25, 1988) was an Israeli-American musician, best known as the founding guitarist of the Los Angeles rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers, with whom he recorded two albums. His guitar work was rooted in funk and hard rock, and he often experimented with other genres, including reggae and speed metal. He is considered to have been a major influence on Red Hot Chili Peppers's early sound.

Born in Israel, he later moved to the United States. Slovak met future bandmates Anthony Kiedis, Flea, and Jack Irons while attending Fairfax High School in Los Angeles. There, he formed the group What Is This? with Irons, Alain Johannes, and Todd Strassman; Flea later replaced Strassman.

Slovak, Flea, Kiedis, and Irons founded Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1983, gaining popularity in Los Angeles through their energetic stage presence and spirited performances. Slovak eventually quit to focus on What is This?, which had been signed to a record deal, leaving the Red Hot Chili Peppers to record their 1984 debut album without him, including five songs he co-wrote. Slovak rejoined the Chili Peppers in 1985 and recorded the albums Freaky Styley (1985) and The Uplift Mofo Party Plan (1987) with them.

During his career, Slovak developed a serious heroin addiction. He attempted to rehabilitate several times but died of an overdose on June 25, 1988, at age 26. Several Red Hot Chili Peppers songs have been written as tributes to Slovak, including "Knock Me Down", "Otherside" "My Lovely Man", and "Feasting on the Flowers". In 1999, his brother James published a book, Behind the Sun: The Diary and Art of Hillel Slovak, which features Slovak's diaries and paintings. Slovak was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Red Hot Chili Peppers on April 14, 2012, with his brother accepting the award on his behalf.

Life and career[edit]

1962–80: Early life and Anthym[edit]

Hillel Slovak was born in Haifa, Israel, to Jewish parents who were survivors of the Holocaust. His mother was originally from Poland while his father grew up in Yugoslavia.[1][2][3][4] They settled in the Queens borough of New York City, then in 1967 relocated to Southern California. As a child, Slovak developed an interest in art, and often spent time painting with his mother, Esther.[5] He attended Laurel Elementary School in West Hollywood and Bancroft Jr. High School in Hollywood, where he met future bandmates Jack Irons and Michael "Flea" Balzary.[6] Slovak received his first guitar at age 13 as a bar mitzvah present, and regularly played the instrument into the late hours of the night.[7] During this time, he was highly influenced by hard rock music such as Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, and Kiss.[2]

As a freshman at Fairfax High School, Slovak formed a band with Irons on drums and two other high school friends, Alain Johannes and Todd Strassman. They called their band Chain Reaction, then changed the name to Anthem after their first gig. After one of the group's shows, Slovak met audience member Anthony Kiedis, and invited him to his house for a snack.[8] Kiedis later described the experience in his autobiography Scar Tissue: "Within a few minutes of hanging out with Hillel, I sensed that he was absolutely different from most of the people I'd spent time with ... He understood a lot about music, he was a great visual artist, and he had a sense of self and a calm about him that were just riveting."[8] Slovak, Kiedis and Flea became best friends and often used LSD, heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine recreationally.[9]

The original bassist for Anthem, which renamed to Anthym, was deemed unsatisfactory, so Slovak began teaching Flea to play bass.[9] Following several months of commitment to the instrument, Flea developed proficiency and a strong musical chemistry with Slovak. When Strassman saw Flea playing Anthym songs on his equipment he quit the band, with Flea quickly replacing him.[10] Shortly afterwards Anthym entered a local Battle of the Bands contest and won second place.[9] Anthym started to play at local nightclubs, despite the fact that the members were all underage. After graduating from high school, the band changed their name to What Is This?. Around the same time, Flea left the band to accept an offer to play bass in the prominent L.A. punk band Fear. What Is This? continued on and performed many shows along the California coast.[11]

1980–82: Red Hot Chili Peppers formation[edit]

Slovak, Kiedis, and Flea began to create their own music after finding inspiration in a punk-funk fusion band called Defunkt.[12] The three formed a band with former Anthym-drummer Jack Irons called Tony Flow and the Miraculously Majestic Masters of Mayhem. The band had only one song, entitled "Out in L.A.", and was formed for the purpose of playing the song once.[13] The song was based on a guitar riff that Slovak wrote while "jamming" with Irons, and was not meant to become a real song until Kiedis decided to rap over the music.[14] Following the group's first show at The Rhythm Lounge, the owner of the bar asked them to return, but with two songs instead of one. After several more shows, and the addition of several songs to their repertoire, the band's name was changed to Red Hot Chili Peppers.[15]

After the band started to gain popularity amongst the L.A. club scene, Kiedis began writing more lyrics. The lyrics would eventually become songs such as "Green Heaven" and "True Men Don't Kill Coyotes", and the band's concert repertoire quickly grew to nine songs as a result of months of playing local nightclubs and bars.[16] Over the course of the next six months, the Red Hot Chili Peppers played many shows in L.A. clubs and became something of an underground hit. Slovak, Kiedis, and Flea moved into a small house in a high-crime area in Hollywood where they collaborated musically and continued their drug addictions.[17] The threesome traveled to New York City to perform more shows and to "spread Chili Pepperdom".[18] Shortly after the trip, Slovak moved out of the group's shared house to live with his girlfriend.[19]

1982–88: What is This? stint, Freaky Styley, and The Uplift Mofo Party Plan[edit]

The Red Hot Chili Peppers entered Bijou Studios to record a demo tape and subsequently secured a record deal with EMI.[20] Flea left Fear to pursue the Red Hot Chili Peppers. At the same time, What Is This? had also gotten a record deal. Since Slovak considered the Chili Peppers to merely be a side project and not a serious commitment, he left them to concentrate on What Is This?.[21] Flea ultimately respected the decision, but felt the band would suffer musically without him and Irons. He and Kiedis hired drummer Cliff Martinez and guitarist Jack Sherman to fill Irons' and Slovak's places, respectively.[21] During the recording of the second What Is This? album, Slovak became frustrated with the band and contacted Flea about rejoining the Red Hot Chili Peppers. This came at an opportune time, as the group was dissatisfied with Slovak's replacement, Jack Sherman. Kiedis felt that Sherman's guitar work "didn't have the same spirit" that Slovak contributed to the band's sound.[22] When Flea asked Kiedis how he felt about Slovak rejoining the band, Kiedis responded by saying, "I'd give my firstborn son to get him back in the band."[23] After the culmination of the promotional tour for their first album, Sherman was fired and Slovak rejoined the band.

Slovak returned to the Chili Peppers for their second album, Freaky Styley, which was released on August 16, 1985. What Is This? had finally disbanded, and Irons returned to the Chili Peppers in mid 1986 after Martinez was fired. The relationship between Flea, Slovak and Kiedis began to deteriorate as a result of excessive heavy drug use and addiction. Flea recalled that "it began to seem ugly to me and not fun; our communication was not healthy".[24] Kiedis became dependent on heroin, leaving the rest of the group to work on much of the album's material by themselves. The band lived in Detroit for a portion of the recording of the album, where Kiedis and Slovak indulged in heavy cocaine use. When Slovak was under the influence, he would often wear brightly colored clothing and dance in a "shuffling" fashion, which became the inspiration for the song "Skinny Sweaty Man" from the band's next album.[25] After Kiedis completed a stint in rehab, he rejoined the Red Hot Chili Peppers in Los Angeles to record their third album The Uplift Mofo Party Plan. Slovak felt a deep connection to the album; he reflected in his diary "It was so fun. I'm so extremely proud of everybody's work—it is at times genius."[26] Slovak was the subject of the songs "Skinny Sweaty Man", "Me and My Friends", & "No Chump Love Sucker".[27] He was nicknamed "Slim Bob Billy", "Slim", or "Huckleberry", and throughout the albums Kiedis calls him by these nicknames before he starts a guitar solo. On The Uplift Mofo Party Plan, Slovak experimented with different musical styles, playing the sitar on the song "Behind the Sun".

Health decline[edit]

Slovak and Kiedis became addicted to heroin early on in their careers, and Slovak often attempted to conceal his addiction from his friends and family.[28] At first, the band were more concerned about Kiedis' addiction, which had become more apparent to the other members due to his willingness to openly discuss his issues. Kiedis was more upfront about his problems while Slovak according to Kiedis was "much more subtle and much more cunning in his disguise."[28] During the tour in support of Freaky Styley, Slovak's health began to deteriorate. Slovak and Flea would wrestle regularly on tour, but Slovak became too weak to participate. Kiedis commented on the situation: "I could tell that Hillel had no inner core of strength; he had been robbed by his addiction of the life force that allows you to at least defend yourself. It was a sad moment."[29] A roadie of the band who was concerned for Slovak's health contacted his brother, James, who had been unaware that Slovak had ever used heroin.[30]

Deciding to give sobriety a chance, both Kiedis and Slovak stopped using drugs prior to their European tour in support of The Uplift Mofo Party Plan, and decided to help each other "steer clear" of heroin.[31][32] An entry from Slovak's diary on January 21, 1988, discusses his attempts to "begin a new drug-free phase of life".[33] During the tour both experienced intense heroin withdrawal, with Slovak much more unstable than Kiedis. His withdrawal symptoms took a toll on his ability to play his instrument; at one point Slovak had a mental breakdown and was unable to play a show, leaving the rest of the band to play an entire set with no guitar.[34] He recovered a few days later, but was briefly kicked out of the band and replaced by DeWayne McKnight for a few shows.[35] After a few days with McKnight, the band decided to give Slovak another chance, and he rejoined for the European leg of the tour. Kiedis attempted to take Slovak to drug addiction counseling, but Slovak had difficulty admitting that his addiction was serious enough to require medical help.[36]

Death[edit]

Hillel was a huge influence on my life. Were it not for him, I would never had begun to play the bass ... Hillel is always with me and my love for him only grows stronger with time.

Flea on Slovak's death[37]

Upon returning home, Slovak isolated himself from the rest of his bandmates, and struggled to resist drug abuse without the support of his friends, and Kiedis in particular.[12][38] He stopped painting and writing in his diary during this time, and little is known about his life during the weeks following the tour, aside from a phone call to his brother on June 24, in which Slovak told him that he was having difficulty staying clean despite his desire to stop taking heroin.[39] A few weeks after the band returned from the tour, the members attempted to contact Slovak, but were unable to do so for several days.[40] Slovak died in his Hollywood apartment on June 25, 1988 although his body was not discovered until two days later.[41][42] On June 27, 1988, Slovak's body was found slumped over the painting he had been working on at the time of his death, he was found holding a cigarette which had burnt a hole in the canvas of the painting. After completion of the autopsy, authorities confirmed that the official cause of death was due to an accidental heroin overdose.[43] He is interred at Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in Hollywood Hills, California.[39]

Following his death, Kiedis fled town and did not attend the funeral, considering the situation to be surreal.[44] Although he found the death to be a shock, he was not initially "scared straight" and continued to use heroin.[45] However, a few weeks later, his friend convinced him both to check into rehab and visit Slovak's grave, which inspired him to get clean.[46] Irons was unable to cope with his death and subsequently left the band, saying that he did not want to be part of something that resulted in the death of his friends. Irons has suffered from severe depression since his death.[47] This did not end Irons' musical career, however, as he would work with Johannes on several projects, including the band Eleven, and would join Pearl Jam for a period in the 1990s after initially declining to join the band upon its founding. Kiedis and Flea decided to continue making music, hoping to continue what Slovak "helped build".[48] They hired DeWayne McKnight and D.H. Peligro as replacements, who were later replaced by Chad Smith and John Frusciante.

Musical style and legacy[edit]

Slovak was primarily influenced by hard rock artists such as Jimi Hendrix, Santana, and Led Zeppelin.[11] His playing method was markedly based on improvisation, a style commonly used in funk music.[6] He was also noted he would often play with such force that his fingers would "come apart."[6] Kiedis observed that his playing evolved during his time away from the group in What Is This?, with Slovak adopting a more fluid style featuring "sultry" elements as opposed to his original hard rock techniques.[49] On Uplift, Slovak experimented with genres outside of traditional funk music including reggae and speed metal.[50] His guitar riffs would often serve as the basis of the group's songs, with the other members writing their parts to complement his guitar work. His melodic riff featured in the song "Behind the Sun" inspired the group to create "pretty" songs with an emphasis on melody.[50] Kiedis describes the song as "pure Hillel inspiration".[51] Slovak also used a talk box on songs such as "Green Heaven" and "Funky Crime", in which the sounds of his amplified guitar would be played through a tube into his mouth and then back into a microphone, creating psychedelic, voice-like effects.[52] Slovak helped to incorporate new sounds in the group's work, including adding occasional drum machines. Despite the fact that the group billed itself as "The Organic Anti-Beat Box Band", Kiedis states that Slovak showed the group that drum machines could be used as artistic instruments.[53]

Slovak's work was one of the major contributing factors to Red Hot Chili Peppers' early sound. When Kiedis and Flea were searching for a new guitarist to replace Slovak, Kiedis likened the experience to "shopping for a new Mom and Dad" because of his influence over the band.[54] Flea, who originally listened exclusively to jazz, added that Slovak introduced him to a new genre of music, saying that "it was Hillel who first got me into hard rockin'".[11] He was also a huge influence on a young John Frusciante, who would later replace him as guitarist in the band.[55] Frusciante based a lot of his playing style on Slovak's work, and explained, "I learned everything I needed to know about how to sound good with Flea by studying Hillel's playing and I just took it sideways from there."[56] Just like Slovak before him, Frusciante developed a heroin addiction. Unlike Slovak, Frusciante eventually managed to break and defeat the habit. The songs "Knock Me Down" (from Mother's Milk), "My Lovely Man" (from Blood Sugar Sex Magik), "This is the Place" (from By the Way), and "Feasting on the Flowers" (from The Getaway) were written about or as tributes to Slovak.[2][57] The title of the song "Otherside" (from Californication) is also a tribute to Slovak.[58] The band's 1987 cover version of Jimi Hendrix's song "Fire", recorded with Slovak and previously only released on the "Fight Like a Brave" single and The Abbey Road EP, was included on 1989's Mother's Milk along with an image of one of Slovak's paintings inside the album's booklet. In 1999, a book titled Behind the Sun: The Diary and Art of Hillel Slovak was published. The book was authored by Slovak's brother, James Slovak, and features writings from his brother's diaries, paintings, photos and hand-written notes from Kiedis and Flea.

On December 7, 2011, Red Hot Chili Peppers were announced as 2012 inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Slovak's brother James accepted the award on his behalf and gave a speech honoring his brother. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Kiedis expressed his excitement with Slovak's induction, explaining "He's a beautiful person that picked up a guitar in the 1970s and didn't make it out of the 1980s, and he is getting honored for his beauty".[59] Flea echoed those comments on the same day: "Hillel grew up loving rock and roll so much, he hasn't been here for some time, but I know how much it would mean to him. It's a powerful thing."[60]

Discography[edit]

With Addie Brik
  • Wattsland – EP – (1984)
With What Is This?
With Red Hot Chili Peppers

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "The Red Hot Chili Peppers heat up the Holyland". October 4, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c Prato, Greg. "Hillel Slovak Biography". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  3. ^ Peterson, Robert (July 21, 2009). "Dead Too Soon: Musicians Who Died Before Age 30". Yahoo!. Yahoo.com. Archived from the original on December 14, 2009. Retrieved November 12, 2010.
  4. ^ Bloom, Nate (December 15, 2011). "Jewish Stars 12/16". Cleveland Jewish News.
  5. ^ Slovak, 1999. p. 37
  6. ^ a b c Sayers, Blaine (July 23, 2008). "Icons of Rock: Hillel Slovak". Consequence of Sound. Archived from the original on June 29, 2010. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  7. ^ "Behind the Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers". Behind the Music. 7:52 minutes in. VH1.
  8. ^ a b Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. p. 64.
  9. ^ a b c Apter, 2004. pp. 40–45
  10. ^ Kiedis, Sloman, 2004. pp. 72–73
  11. ^ a b c Mullen, 2010. p. 21
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