After writing and producing the groundbreaking album by Gina X Performance “Nice Mover”, (followed by three more Gina X albums), his first UK production credits were with Fashion and Dead or Alive, he produced Pete Wylie's "Sinful" album and an LP by Men Without Hats for Polygram US which yielded a number one in many European countries and a US Top 20 hit with "Pop Goes The World".
Pete Seeger | Pete Rose | Pete Townshend | Pete Wilson | Pete Best | Pete Sampras | Pete Doherty | Pete Brown | Pete Tong | Pete Waterman | Wylie transliteration | Pete Rugolo | Wylie | Pete Yorn | Pete Weber | Pete Thomas | Pete Sears | Pete Murray | Pete Ross | Pete Rock | Pete Conrad | Philip Wylie | Pete's Dragon | Pete Rozelle | Pete | The Adventures of Pete & Pete | Pete Droge | Pete Campbell | Pete and Gladys | Pete Postlethwaite |
Sal Paradise was also the name of an indie rock band on Tooth & Nail Records in the mid 1990s, and he is mentioned in a song, "The Story of the Blues (part 2)", by singer-songwriter Pete Wylie, who quotes, "The city intellectuals of the world are divorced from the folk-bodied blood of the land and are just rootless fools." (In fact the quotation is from another of Kerouac's characters, Jack Duluoz - also based on Kerouac himself - in his 1968 novel Vanity of Duluoz).
The musicians are from various well-known Liverpool-based bands such as The Christians, Pete Wylie and Maudlin Rich.