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Fatboy Slim Concert Tickets

Fatboy Slim is a pseudonym of Quentin Leo Cook (b. 31 Jul 1963 in Reigate, Surrey - aka Norman Cook), an English big beat musician. Quentin Leo Cook was educated at Reigate Grammar School. Check our available Fatboy Slim concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Fatboy Slim Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

To some, it seemed a peculiar moment during the Olympic closing ceremony when Norman Cook popped out of a bus in a giant inflatable octopus, bringing his giddy rave action to proceedings. He belonged there, though. Fellow performers the and may've sold more in the 90s; but you'd be a fool to forget Norman's role as the go-to party-starter from the latter half of the decade. After a second coming with chart-toppers Beats International followed his stint in , Cook had an acid house epiphany...
- www.bbc.co.uk
It would be too easy to underestimate Fatboy Slim. Despite his unquestioned success and near-universal appeal, there is also a perception of disposability that has dogged his most successful releases and, at least in America, willfully relegated him to the status of a "one-hit wonder"...
- www.popmatters.com
This is the only Fatboy Slim album you will ever need and, for the purposes of summer drivin' and drinkin' (though not concurrently, kids), the only album I'm going to need. Period...
- www.hour.ca
Twelve years on from the release of this second album, some things have inevitably changed. A lifetime away from hard-partying origins, Norman Cook's raised two kids, celebrated a celebrity marriage, reconciled a celebrity marriage, hit the bottle, beat the bottle and, when he had the time, released heady collections of genre-defining anthems. At times, Cook's life has played out replete with typical DJ clichés. But his place in the dance music annals as Fatboy Slim has long been confirmed...
- www.bbc.co.uk
Much has been said about the current state of dance music, that it is dying, not as good as it used to be and has lost its popularity etc etc. What those people forget is that there was a time when the only dance worth listening to was the underground stuff anyway, the type of stuff you heard at clubs IN NYC, while the likes of CC Peniston and Alex Party dominated the charts and crap suburban nightclubs. Fatboy Slim changed all that...
- www.gigwise.com
Something to remember: Before there was Fatboy Slim the DJ, there was Norman Cook the bassist for breezy politi-pop '80s band The Housemartins. Never has it been more evident that these two are one and the same than on this fourth Fatboy album release, Palookaville. Live instrumentation (lots of guitars!) and vocals (we're talking actual verses and choruses) mark out the identified song structures, supplanting the heavy sampling and linear, layered repetition of yesteryear...
- www.hour.ca
You don't need to be a huge fan to enjoy this 20-track video anthology, including four rare and unreleased vids as well as the now-classic, Spike Jonze-directed Weapon of Choice starring Christopher Walken. As intended, almost all stand on their own as short movies, video art capsules that function independent of the music - ironic considering Norman Cook's initial aversion to videos...
- www.hour.ca
This particular release is part of a series presented by Skint records in which various artists produce remixes of famous Fat Boy Slim records. This example features the work of '...big-room hero: Riva Starr' and '...the up and coming Ronario' where Fat Boy Slim's hits 'Praise You' and 'Star 69' see the transformation of modern remixs. 'Praise You' (Riva Starr Remix) has a fairly basic sound with minimal effects used...
- hangout.altsounds.com
After enjoying a few years of relative popularity, it seems big-beat's appeal and relevance are waning. Like a designer club drug that delivers heady waves of euphoria before cutting out, leaving the brain depressed and deprived of seratonin, this hip-hop/breakbeat/techno (with a dash of rock n' roll) hybrid is rapidly fading...
- pitchfork.com
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