Information about Hot Chocolate

For the beverage, see Hot chocolate.

Hot Chocolate was a British pop band of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s formed by Errol Brown (a Briton who was born in Jamaica). They were originally named 'The Hot Chocolate Band' by Mavis Smith, who worked for the Apple Corps press office. This was quickly shortened to just Hot Chocolate.

Career

Brown started their recording career making a reggae version of John Lennon's "Give Peace A Chance", but he was told he needed permission. Much to Brown's surprise, he was contacted by Apple Records, and discovered that John Lennon liked his version, and they subsequently signed to Apple Records. The link was short-lived, as The Beatles were starting to break up, and the Apple connection soon ended.

In 1970 Hot Chocolate, with the help of ace record producer Mickie Most, began releasing tracks that became hits, such as "Love Is Life", "Emma", "You Could Have Been A Lady", and "I Believe in Love". All their releases were on the RAK record label, owned by Most. Brown and bassist Tony Wilson wrote most of their original material, and also provided hits for Herman's Hermits, "Bet Yer Life I Do", and Mary Hopkin, "Think About Your Children".

Gradually the five piece, Brixton, London based, outfit started to become UK Singles Chart regulars. "Brother Louie", which featured a guest spoken vocal from Alexis Korner, and "Emma", were even more successful as singles, and introduced their distinctive sound.

It was in the disco era of the mid-1970s onwards, that Hot Chocolate became such a big success, and when they became indelibly identified with 'funky disco'. A combination of high production standards, the growing confidence of the main songwriting team of Wilson and Brown, and tight harmonies, enabled them to secure further big hits, like "You Sexy Thing" and "Every 1's A Winner". After Wilson's departure, Brown assumed songwriting duties.

Between those two well-loved tracks, came Hot Chocolate's only UK chart topper. In 1977, after scoring 15 previous hits, they finally reached Number One with "So You Win Again". Oddly, it was one of the few of their recordings that was not penned, at least partly, by Brown. The track was a Russ Ballard composition.

The band became the only group, and one of just three UK chart acts, that scored a hit in every year of the 1970s. Considering the other two acts to do so were Elvis Presley and Diana Ross, that achievement put Hot Chocolate in very elevated company. The success did not stop there, and they eventually had at least one hit, every single year, between 1970 and 1984. Critically they were often lambasted, or simply ignored, and apart from compilations, their albums, like Cicero Park, sold modestly. But, their string of successes points to the indisputable fact, that they were well-loved and cherished by the bulk of the UK record buying public.

Whilst their longevity had its highs and lows, they continued well into the 1980s, and clocked up another big hit record: "It Started With A Kiss", in 1982. In all, the group charted no less than 25 UK Top 40 hit singles. Their epic - "You Sexy Thing" - seemed to have a life of its own. It appeared in various guises to become the only track that made British Top Ten status in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. Its renewed appreciation can be perhaps credited in part to its appearances in a string of successful films, starting with the 1997 male stripper comedy, The Full Monty. In one of the most memorable scenes in the film, the male lead, Gaz (played by Robert Carlyle) performs an unintentionally hilarious and awkward "striptease" with a cigarette dangling from his mouth, to the music of "You Sexy Thing". The song is later heard over the closing credits. The film was not only a huge success in the UK, but it became a surprise smash hit in the United States as well, and was nominated for Best Picture. The film's success thrust "You Sexy Thing" and Hot Chocolate back into the spotlight. "You Sexy Thing" has also been heard in myriad other films, including Boogie Nights, Bicentennial Man, Rat Race, and . Another U.S. resurgence in 1999 can be credited to a Burger King television commercial, in which "You Sexy Thing" played while the camera examined a Double Whopper.

When Hot Chocolate finally disbanded in 1986, Errol Brown did not have much solo success, although two singles of his did make the UK Singles Chart - "Personal Touch" - a Number 25 hit in 1987, and "Body Rockin'" the same year. Their enduring popularity was verified when two compilation albums both reached #1 in the UK Albums Chart (see below).

In 2003, Errol Brown received the MBE; and in 2004, the Ivor Novello Award for his outstanding contribution to British music.

Discography

Albums

  • Cicero Park (1974)
  • Hot Chocolate (#34) (November 1975)
  • Man To Man (#32) (August 1976)
  • 14 Greatest Hits (#6) (November 1976)
  • Every 1's A Winner (#30) (April 1978)
  • Going Through the Motions (1979)
  • Class (1980)
  • 20 Hottest Hits (#3) (December 1979)
  • Mystery (#24) (September 1982)
  • Love Shot (1983)
  • The Very Best Of Hot Chocolate (#1) (February 1987)
  • Their Greatest Hits (#1) (March 1993)

Singles

  • "Give Peace A Chance" (October 1969)
  • "Love Is Life" (#6) (August 1970)
  • "You Could Have Been A Lady" (#22) (March 1971)
  • "I Believe (In Love)" (#8) (August 1971)
  • "Mary-Anne" (February 1972)
  • "You'll Always Be A Friend" (#23) (October 1972)
  • "Brother Louie" (#7) (April 1973)
  • "Rumours" (#44) (August 1973)
  • "Emma" (#3) (March 1974)
  • "Cheri Babe" (#31) (November 1974)
  • "Blue Night" (1975)
  • "Disco Queen" (#11) (May 1975)
  • "A Child's Prayer" (#7) (August 1975)
  • "You Sexy Thing" (#2) (November 1975)
  • "Don't Stop It Now" (#11) (March 1976)
  • "Man To Man" (#14) (June 1976)
  • "Heaven Is In The Back Seat Of My Cadillac" (#25) (August 1976)
  • "So You Win Again" (#1) (June 1977)
  • "Put Your Love In Me" (#10) (November 1977)
  • "Every 1's A Winner" (#12) (March 1978)
  • "I'll Put You Together Again" (#13) (December 1978)
  • "Mindless Boogie" (#46) (May 1979)
  • "Going Through The Motions" (#53) (July 1979)
  • "No Doubt About It" (#2) (May 1980)
  • "Are You Getting Enough Of What Makes You Happy" (#17) (July 1980)
  • "Love Me To Sleep" (#50) (December 1980)
  • "You'll Never Be So Wrong" (#52) (May 1981)
  • "I'm Losing You"/"Children Of Spacemen" (1981)
  • "Girl Crazy" (#7) (April 1982)
  • "It Started With A Kiss" (#5) (July 1982)
  • "Chances" (#32) (September 1982)
  • "What Kinda Boy You Looking For (Girl)" (#10) (May 1983)
  • "Tears On The Telephone" (#37) (September 1983)
  • "I'm Sorry" (1983) (#89) (November 1983)
  • "I Gave You My Heart (Didn't I)" (#13) (February 1984)
  • "Heartache No. 9" (1986) (#76) (March 1986)
  • "You Sexy Thing (Ben Liebrand remix)" (#10) (January 1987)
  • "Every 1's A Winner (Groove Mix)" (#69) (April 1987)
  • "No Doubt About It (remix)" (1987)
  • "Heaven Is In The Backseat Of My Cadillac (remix)" (1988)
  • "Never Pretend" (1988)
  • "It Started With A Kiss" (#31) (re-issue March 1993)
  • "You Sexy Thing" (#6) (re-issue November 1997)
  • "It Started With A Kiss" (#18) (second re-issue February 1998)

Band Personnel

For the bulk of the group's career, they were served by the following individuals :-

References

  • Guinness Book of British Hit Singles - 16th Edition - ISBN 0-85112-190-X
  • Guinness Book of British Hit Albums - 7th Edition - ISBN 0-85112-619-7
  • Guinness Rockopedia - ISBN 0-85112-072-5
  • The Guinness Book of 500 Number One Hits - ISBN 0-85112-250-7

External links








Hot chocolate, hot cocoa or drinking chocolate is a beverage, usually served hot, typically consisting of chocolate or cocoa powder, milk, and sugar. While nomenclature varies, drinks described as hot cocoa generally do not contain cocoa butter, while drinks described as hot chocolate may contain cocoa butter.

The beverage became popular in Europe after being introduced from what is now Mexico in the New World.

When made with white chocolate, the beverage is referred to as white hot chocolate.

Hot chocolate may sometimes be served with whipped cream on top.

History

Further information: History of chocolate

Origins

The name chocolate most likely comes from the Nahuatl language, indigenous to central Mexico, although it may have been influenced by the Mayan languages. One popular theory is that it comes from the Nahuatl word xocolatl (IPA /ʃo.ko.latɬ/) derived from xocolli, bitter, and atl, water.[2] Chocolate is made from Cocoa, the dried and partially fermented seeds of the cocao tree (Theobroma cacao), a small (4–8 m tall (15-26 ft)) evergreen tree native to the deep tropical region of the Americas. Recent genetic studies suggest that the plant originated in the Amazon and was distributed by man throughout Central America and Mesoamerica. The scientific name Theobroma means "food of the gods". The fruit, called a cacao pod, is ovoid, 15–30 cm (6-12 in) long and 8–10 cm (3-4 in) wide, ripening yellow to orange, and weighs about 500 g (1 lb) when ripe. The pod contains 20 to 60 seeds, usually called "beans", embedded in a white pulp.

The chocolate residue found in several jars from the site of Puerto Escondido in Honduras, from around 1100 B.C. is the earliest evidence to date of the use of cacao. Slightly later, around 600-400 B.C. there are traces from jars in Belize. An early Classic (460-480 A.D.) period Maya tomb from the site of Rio Azul, Guatemala, had vessels with the maya glyph for cacao on them and had residue of a chocolate drink. The Maya ground coco seeds into a paste, and mixed it with water, cornmeal, chile peppers, and other ingredients. They then poured the drink back and forth from a cup to a pot until a thick foam developed. Maya of all social classes enjoyed chocolate, although the wealthy drank chocolate from specially decorated, elaborate vessels.[3]

By the 1400s, the The Aztecs gained control of a large part of Mesoamerica, and adopted cacao into their culture. They associated chocolate with Xochiquetzal, the goddess of fertility. The Aztecs consumed a bitter, frothy, spicy drink called xocoatl, made much the same way as the Aztec chocolate drinks. It was often seasoned with vanilla, chile pepper, and achiote, (which we know today as annatto).[3] Xocoatl was believed to fight fatigue, a belief that is probably attributable to the theobromine content. Because cacao would not grow in the dry central Mexican highlands and had to be imported, chocolate was an important luxury good throughout the Aztec empire, and cocoa beans were often used as currency.

Moctezuma introduced Hernán Cortés to his favourite drink, "chocolatl", which he served in a golden goblet. "The chocolatl was a potation of chocolate flavored with vanilla and spices, and so prepared as to be reduced to a froth of the consistency of honey, which gradually dissolved in the mouth and was taken cold."[5] Moctezuma's court reportedly drank about 2000 cups of chocolate per day, 50 of which were consumed by Montezuma himself.[3] He supposedly drank the beverage in goblets before entering his harem, leading to the belief that it was an aphrodisiac.

The xocolatl was said to be an acquired taste. Jose de Acosta, a Spanish Jesuit missionary who lived in Peru and then Mexico in the later 16th century, wrote of it:

Loathsome to such as are not acquainted with it, having a scum or froth that is very unpleasant taste. Yet it is a drink very much esteemed among the Indians, where with they feast noble men who pass through their country. The Spaniards, both men and women, that are accustomed to the country, are very greedy of this Chocolate. They say they make diverse sorts of it, some hot, some cold, and some temperate, and put therein much of that "chili"; yea, they make paste thereof, the which they say is good for the stomach and against the catarrh.[7]


Like many other New World foods, Spanish explorers soon introduced chocolate to Europe.

European Adaptation

Enlarge picture
Hot chocolate with marshmallow
Enlarge picture
White hot chocolate.
After defeating Montezuma’s warriors, and demanding that the Aztec nobles hand over their valuables, Cortés returned to Spain in 1528 with galleons loaded with cocoa beans and chocolate drink making equipment. The court of King Charles V soon adopted it, and "chocolate" became a fashionable drink popular with the Spanish upper class. Additionally, cocoa was given as a dowry when members of the Spanish Royal Family married other European aristocrats. It took nearly a century for chocolate to achieve popularity throughout Europe, as the Spanish kept the delicacy secret.

The first recorded shipment of chocolate to the Old World for commercial purposes was in a shipment from Veracruz to Sevilla in 1585. It was still served as a beverage, but the Europeans added sugar to counteract the natural bitterness and removed the chilli pepper, replacing it with vanilla, cinnamon, and other spices. Sweet, hot chocolate was born.[3] Changes to the taste meant that by the 17th century it was a luxury item among the European nobility.

In the late 17th century, Hans Sloane, president of the Royal College of Physicians visited Jamaica. There he tried chocolate and considered it "nauseous," but found it became more palatable when mixed with milk [9] When he returned to England, he brought the recipe with him, introducing milk chocolate to Europe. By the 18th Century, so-called "Chocolate Houses" were as popular as coffee houses. The first "Chocolate House" opened in London in 1657. Because it was so expensive, hot chocolate was considered a drink for the elite.

"Hot chocolate" is a retronym and the drink was originally simply called "chocolate". The subsequent popularity of the "chocolate bar" forced the invention of the term "hot chocolate" to distinguish it from "chocolate" which now means solid chocolate.

By 1828, the first cocoa powder producing machine had been developed in The Netherlands, which generated a less acidic, more processed cocoa, now known as dutch-process cocoa. The new form of cocoa was easier to blend with warm milk or water.

Terminology

Some people use the terms hot chocolate and hot cocoa interchangeably, while others make a distinction between the two terms. Hot cocoa is made from a powdered mix of cocoa, sugar and thickeners, without cocoa butter. Hot chocolate is made directly from bar chocolate, which already contains cocoa, sugar and cocoa butter. Thus the major difference between the two is the cocoa butter, which makes hot cocoa significantly lower in fat than chocolate, while still preserving all the intrinsic health-giving properties of chocolate [1].

Hot chocolate can be made with dark, semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, chopped into small pieces and stirred into milk with the addition of sugar. American hot cocoa powder often includes powdered milk or other dairy ingredients so it can make a drink without using milk. A modern American concept is the addition of marshmallows to hot chocolate. Some packaged hot cocoa mixes come with small dry marshmallows.'''

In the UK, "hot chocolate" is a sweet chocolate drink made with hot milk and powder containing chocolate, sugar, and powdered milk. While "cocoa" usually refers to a similar drink made with just hot milk and cocoa powder, then sweetened to taste with sugar.

In some cafes in Belgium, one who orders a "warme chocolade" or "chocolat chaud" would receive a cup of steamed white milk and a small bowl of bittersweet chocolate chips to dissolve in the milk. The beverage is usually accompanied with a complementary piece of yellow cake, speculaas, or Belgian chocolate.

Place in modern society



Today hot chocolate is consumed throughout the world. It is especially popular in Europe, where it is very thick, made directly from chocolate (such as Italy's cioccolata densa, ubiquitous in their bars and restaurants).The Germans are also known for very thick, heavy chocolate. With the influence of restaurant pastry chefs and chocolatiers, this style is creeping into American culture, where hot chocolate is traditionally a winter drink, associated in folk images with snowstorms and sledding. Usually made instant with hot water or milk from a packet containing mostly cocoa powder, sugar, and dry milk, it is much thinner and usually topped with marshmallows. It is not usually drunk throughout the year, as are other hot beverages such as coffee and tea. A study has shown that hot chocolate contains more antioxidants than wine and tea therefore reducing the risk of heart disease[2].

In Spain, hot chocolate and churros was the traditional working-man's breakfast. This Spanish style of hot chocolate is very thick, having the consistency of warm chocolate pudding. Today, in cities like Madrid, Spaniards mark the traditional end to a night out by dipping churros into this very thick hot chocolate.

New research claims that drinking hot chocolate before bedtime promotes better sleep.

See also

References

1. ^ Silver Chocolate Pot. Metalwork. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved on 2007-08-18.
2. ^ The Online Etymological Dictionary gives this origin.
3. ^ The Field Museum, "All About Chocolate" [3]
4. ^
5. ^ Hickling, William (1838). History of the Conquest of Mexico. ISBN 0-375-75803-8.
6. ^
7. ^ [4]
8. ^
9. ^ Natural History Museum, "About Hans Sloane" [5]
  • Turback, Michael (2005). Hot Chocolate, Ten Speed Press. ISBN 1-58008-708-6.

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Errol Brown MBE (born November 12 1948, Kingston, Jamaica) is the singer, songwriter, and frontman of the successful British band, Hot Chocolate. Amongst their biggest chart hits were "You Sexy Thing" and "Brother Louie".
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British people, or Britons,[8] are a nation[9][10][11][12][13] or inhabitants of Great Britain[14][15]
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Mickie Most, born Michael Peter Hayes (June 20, 1938–May 30, 2003), was a successful English record producer, notably with a string of Number One hit singles with his own RAK Records, and with acts such as The Animals, Herman's Hermits, Donovan, and Suzi Quatro.
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"You Sexy Thing" is a song recorded by the UK group, Hot Chocolate. It was written by Hot Chocolate lead singer Errol Brown, and produced by Mickie Most. It reached number 2 in the UK Singles Chart in 1975.

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