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Tony Wilson, Hot Chocolate Bassist and Songwriter, Dead at 89

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CitrixNews Staff
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Tony Wilson, Hot Chocolate Bassist and Songwriter, Dead at 89

By Kory Grow

Kory Grow

Contact Kory Grow on X View all posts by Kory Grow April 30, 2026 British soul band Hot Chocolate pose with English romance novelist Jackie Collins (1937 - 2015), UK, 7th June 1974. Collins is presenting the group with silver discs for the sale of their single 'Emma'. From left to right, the band are keyboard player Larry Ferguson, singer Errol Brown, bassist Tony Wilson and drummer Patrick Olive. (Photo by Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) Tony Wilson, 1974 Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Tony Wilson, the former Hot Chocolate bassist and vocalist who co-wrote the hit “You Sexy Thing” and had a solo hit with “I Like You Style,” died Friday at his home in Trinidad, according to the BBC. A cause of death was not reported. He was 89.

“Words don’t do justice to the admiration I have for him as a human being or for his dedication to make his dream of getting the songs he wrote be heard,” his son, Danny, wrote on Facebook. “It wasn’t until my mum dug out some old diaries of his from 1970 and ’71 that I realised just how hard he had to work to achieve this dream.”

Wilson’s legacy lies in the fusion of soul, disco, reggae, and funk that formed the bedrock of Hot Chocolate’s multicultural hits. Hot Chocolate’s first hit, “Love Is Life,” felt like reggae, dance music, and rock all at once, a feat for 1970. The sound reached its apex with the infectiously catchy “You Sexy Thing.”

Born in Trinidad, Wilson cut his teeth in groups like the Flames, the Souvenirs, and the Corduroys. Hot Chocolate, whose roots were both Caribbean and British, formed in London in the late Sixties and found its footing with a reggae-inflected cover of John Lennon’s “Give Peace a Chance,” which they sent to Lennon. “Amazingly, a week later I got a call to say John Lennon approved it and wanted to sign the band to the Apple record label,” Brown told the BBC in 2009. “And that’s how we began.”

The song came out credited to Hot Chocolate Band via the Beatles’ Apple label in 1969. The B side was “Living Without Tomorrow,” the first songwriting collaboration between singer Errol Brown, who was born in Jamaica, and Wilson. Wilson was credited as producer for both sides. Neither song charted but a 1970 follow up single, “Love Is Life,” made it up to Number 6 in the U.K. That same year, producer Mickie Most recorded a Brown-Wilson song, “Bet Yer Life I Do,” with Herman’s Hermits, leading him to want to work with Hot Chocolate.

Within a few years, they became one of the first Black British groups whose songs would become hits in the United States. In 1973, their “Brother Louie,” which was a Top 10 hit in England, became a hit in the U.S. when Stories, featuring singer Ian Lloyd, recorded it. They released their debut album, Cicero Park, in 1974 and the album’s single, “Emma,” became a Number Eight hit in the U.S. The album’s “Disco Queen” would also become a hit the following year.

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Their next album, Hot Chocolate, was an even bigger success thanks to “You Sexy Thing,” which Wilson wrote with Brown and hit maker Mickie Most produced. With a buoyant guitar line, expressive orchestral strings, and Brown’s smooth vocals, it made it up to Number Two in the U.K.  and Number Three in the U.S., where it was certified gold. Decades later, the song would get second and third lives thanks to its inclusion on the soundtracks for Boogie Nights, The Full Monty, and a Burger King commercial.

Wilson left the group that year and returned with a solo album, I Like Your Style, in 1976. He released two more albums, Catch One (1979) and Walking the Highwire (1988), but never equaled the success he achieved in Hot Chocolate, who continued on without him making hits. A Wilson song, “Everyone Can Rock and Roll,” became the title track of Bill Haley and the Comets’ final album.

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