Constantinou began as a bass guitar player with Diz Watson until the late 1970s when he formed Drill, who worked extensively with Chas Chandler and then Adam Ant, who he joined in 1982.
This led to a song writing partnership with multi-Ivor Novello winner Guy Chambers, before Constantinou took centre stage with post-punk outfit Jackie On Assid, releasing two albums (2001's 4Play and 2002's Zip Me Up), touring extensively, soundtracking award-winning British filmmaker Paul Hills' 2003 movie The Poet and supporting Iggy Pop.
By the time they came back together to form the Wolfmen, Pirroni had added co-writing and performing credits with Sinéad O'Connor to his CV, as well as releasing the acclaimed SEX: Too Fast To Live Too Young To Die and Biba: Champagne and Novocaine albums on his own label, Only Lovers Left Alive.
"Kama Sutra"/"TV's On John Wayne's Been Shot Again" became iTunes' Rock Pick of the Day and won rave reviews including Metro and Mojo which said: "...Marco and Chris do growing old disgracefully moves with style.
With thumping Suicide-alike beatbox and glam-rockabilly guitars, the A-side is exuberant filth…" As part of the promo for the single, the band visited the United States, where they appeared on Jonesy's Jukebox, hosted by ex-Sex Pistol Steve Jones and the CMJ Music Marathon where Pirroni was a guest speaker.
Immediately selling out its vinyl run, the single generated a double-page spread in Word magazine and reached number one in Mojo's Playlist chart.
"Marco Pirroni and fellow ex-Ant Chris Constantinou do a fine mix of ESG beats and old school glam that holds a knife to the throat of pretenders," said Teletext.
In spring 2007, the Wolfmen first collaborated with Daler Mehndi and Pirroni provided guitar for Primal Scream's cover of Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "I Put A Spell On You", a special commission for an Alexander McQueen fashion show.