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Alternative 23/02/2005

San Antonio Band From 1950s Helped Pioneer Tex-Mex Rock'n'Roll And Pachuco Soul... Billy Gibbons From ZZ Top Among Fans

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NEW YORK www.ponderosastomp.com) - If the name of the rock band Mando & the Chili Peppers doesn't evoke the immediate glint of recognition of, say, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, join the club. They haven't played a gig since 1959.

This seminal Texas rock'n'roll band has chosen the occasion of the globally acclaimed roots music romp Ponderosa Stomp in which to reunite and show the world they can still rock � after more than 40 years off stage! Ponderosa Stomp is held on Tuesday & Wednesday, April 26 & 27, at Mid City Rock'n' Bowl in New Orleans, and will feature a host of blues, soul, garage rock, rockabilly, trad country, Zydeco and swamp pop originators. Details and tickets may be found at https://www.ponderosastomp.com .

Mando & the Chili Peppers have likely inspired more fantasy and fancy than anyone else in the hallowed halls where Ponderosa Stomp's Mystic Knights of the Mau-Mau dream up their doings. They've topped the wish list from day one; their shrine is bowed to daily in the Knights' Hall Of Fame; toasts are often seen raised to the glory of their sole long player, 1957's On The Road With Rock 'n' Roll. So the very idea that they're confirmed to play the 2005 Ponderosa Stomp is at once unbelievable and at the same time just as it should be.

If you're wondering what all the fuss is about, take into account that Mando & the Chili Peppers are no ordinary band. In fact, at times their very existence has seemed almost too good to be true. The aural evidence suggests a group of swamp pop fanatics (who also have a particular affinity for jazz, country & western and Little Richard) raised in a border town barrio recording at Cosimo's studio in New Orleans � with Crescent City session cats sitting in. And where did they disappear to after churning out that one great long player of the ages? Rumors that some of the band moved to Chicago and worked with Eddy Clearwater seemed at once too good to be true and yet...well, but of course!!

Led by one Armando Almendarez, nee Mando, the Chili Peppers originally came to life as San Antonio Alegre before changing their name to the slicker Mando & the Latineers. Texas guitarist Randy Garibay recalled the band's glorious beginnings for an article in the San Antonio Express News: "I'd go to these house parties with my brother and this guy Armando Almendarez and San Antonio Alegre would be playing. They'd do the standard polkas and boleros and then, all of a sudden, with Mando playing accordion, they'd break into 'Lucille' or 'Just Because' by Lloyd Price. It was amazing. That's when I first heard rock 'n' roll."

Inspired by Little Richard, Fats Domino, Gatemouth Brown and Clifton Chenier, when Mando began wielding his accordion for San Antonio's Rio Records in the mid-'50s, he blazed through breakneck renditions of Chenier's "Boppin' The Rock" and Chuck Berry's "Maybelline" alongside the usual crudely-recorded conjutos that the label specialized in. When Mando swapped his squeezebox for an electric bass and boyhood pal Jesse "Chucho" Perales traded his bajo sexto for an electric guitar, the Latineers were born.

By 1956, they had their own TV show on San Antonio's KCOR-TV appropriately titled "Rock 'n' Roll" and were the proud owners of a black Packard limousine which took them to engagements in Vegas and Denver, where Golden Crest Records boss man Clark Galehouse staggered upon one of their red hot stage performances in the middle of a snow storm. If the liner notes to On The Road With Rock 'n' Roll are to be believed, Galehouse, a Long Island plastics manufacturer who dabbled in big band recordings, was only in Denver due to the blizzard that had grounded his plane en route to a music convention in Idaho. Galehouse changed their name to the Chili Peppers and released their first single, a swampy, Fats Domino-esque treatment of the 1939 standard "South Of The Border" backed with the bayou-meets-barrio rocker "Don't Say Goodnight."

The results were magical. The band's insistent, triplet-infused back beat coupled with Mando's lilting, laid-back Tex-Mex vocalizing made "South Of The Border" the absolutely definitive rendition of an already great song, and it became a hit along the Gulf Coast, particularly in New Orleans. They followed it up was the frantic mambo-charged "I Love To Eat Chili in Chile," which sounded like Perez Prado cutting loose with a Crescent City R&B band.

On The Road With Rock 'n' Roll was a bold step for Galehouse, as LPs were a rare commodity for rock 'n' roll bands in 1957 (two years later, he'd roll out the red carpet for Tacoma, Washington's similarly rocking Fabulous Wailers, whose stunning debut LP was unleashed in 1959), but the album stands as one of the best ever, genres be damned. Not long after its release, the Chili Peppers drifted into rock 'n' roll's bottomless underground. By the time Ace Records reissued On The Road With Rock 'n' Roll in 1998 � with liner notes by Mando fan Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top -- the members' whereabouts were completely unknown.

Seven years of detective work later, the Tex-Mex rock 'n' roll pioneers are set to play their first gig in over 40 years -- at Ponderosa Stomp.

And Mando & the Chili Peppers are merely only one such story in the naked city. Ponderosa Stomp 2005 will also feature (in alphabetical order) The Bad Roads, Classie Ballou, Archie Bell, Eddie Bo, Blowfly, Lonnie Brooks as Guitar Junior, The Carter Brothers, Jay Chevalier, Joe Clay, Eddy Clearwater, Larry De Riuex, Deke Dickerson & the Eccofonics, Skip Easterling, Nokie Edwards (of the Ventures), Johnny Farina (of Santo & Johnny), H Bomb Ferguson, Henry Gray, Betty Harris, Dale Hawkins, Roy Head, Al Johnson, Johnny Jones, Little Freddy King, Eddie Kirkland, Lady Bo, Lazy Lester, Robert Jr. Lockwood, Matt Lucas, Barbara Lynn, Nathaniel Mayer, Scotty Moore, Phil Phillips, Freddie Roulette, Lil' Buck Senegal & the Top Cats with Stanley "Buckwheat Zydeco" Dural on Hammond B3 organ, Ray Sharpe, Warren Storm, Willie Tee, Travis Wammack, Barrence Whitfield (doubling as performer and emcee), Brenton Wood and Link Wray.






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