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Palookaville
DJ extraordinaire Fatboy Slim (aka Norman Cook) delivers
his fourth studio LP, 'Palookaville' this month. Four
years in the making it's the sensational follow up to
'Halfway Between The Gutter And The Stars'. Inspired by
his work on Blur's critically acclaimed 'Think Tank'
album last year, Fatboy has used real musicians on the LP
including vocal contributions from Blur front man Damon
Albarn, Bootsy Collins Lateef from Latyrx and more.
CD Album
Don't Let The Man Get You Down
Slash Dot Dash
Wonderful Night
Long Way From Home
Put It Back Together
Mi Bebe Masoquista
Push And Shove
North West Three
The Journey
Jin Go Lo Ba
Song For Chesh
The Joker
Release Date: 11.10.04
Catalogue: 5178842000
With Fatboy Slim albums the clue is always in the title,
and Norman Cook's third outing is no exception. While
"You've Come A Long Way, Baby" was one long
whoop of triumph, "Halfway Between The Gutter And
The Stars" is the sound of taking stock.
Norman was staying at the Chateau Marmont, LA's celebrity
hotel, when the title came to him. Brad Pitt and Jennifer
Aniston had come along to see him DJ the night before,
Bill Murray said hello in the lobby and the pop star life
was his for the taking. But as for Norman himself?
"I was wandering around sweating and shaking, not
having been to bed for about two days," he remembers
with a wry grin. "And I was thinking, 'You can take
the boy out of the gutter but you can't take the gutter
out of the boy'."
When you remember that the whole Fatboy Slim alias
started out as a fun side project to help launch Skint
and have a laugh making party records to DJ with, no
wonder Norman has found the last couple of years surreal.
"You've Come A Long Way Baby" wasn't just a
great record, it was a pop phenomenon that made him the
world's biggest dance artist and redefined the concept of
the superstar DJ. He was the biggest British artist in
the US last year.
During those two rollercoaster years, everyone from
Madonna to Robbie Williams was bidding for his remixing
talents, his kitchen shelf groaned with trophies and
virtually every weekend found him jetting off to major DJ
gigs and award ceremonies. In the midst of all this, he
fell in love with, and married, Zoë Ball. A personal
high, but one that made the couple reluctant tabloid
material.
"I'm not moaning about it but I definitely had pop
star fatigue," he reflects. "The pressure of
being in the limelight all the time was beginning to take
its toll. For about three months my job was to go to
awards ceremonies. When that was all I did, and I wasn't
making any music I was getting hacked off with what my
life had become. I'm not very good at being a celebrity."
In 1999 he played two defining events - the boxing-themed
face-off with Armand Van Helden and a show with The
Chemical Brothers at Red Rocks, Colorado - which
effectively closed a chapter in his career. Time to move
on.
As the new year dawned Norman ventured back into his home
studio in Brighton to make the most emotional, innovative
album of his career. Norman explains the progression by
pointing out that "Rockafeller Skank" was the
first track he recorded for his last album, and "Right
Here Right Now" was the last.
"I thought, 'Actually maybe I can do something with
a bit more power and soul rather than just thrills and
spills'. When I started this album I just sat there for
about a month thinking what I didn't want it to sound
like. It took ages to work out what I did want it to
sound like."
Helpful advice came from longstanding friends The
Chemical Brothers, who suggested he work with guest
vocalists. Reluctant at first, Norman drew up a wish list
of possible collaborators and the first name on it was
charismatic soul diva Macy Gray.
They recorded two songs together in LA at the beginning
of the year: the hormonal funk of "Love Life"
and the glorious breakbeat gospel of "Demons",
which Norman describes as the album's pivotal track.
Macy, meanwhile, calls it the best thing she's ever done
and she's right, too.
"She was lovely," Norman reports. "She's
very eccentric but really beautiful. And she smells great.
That was the first thing I noticed when I met her!"
After that the album had found its heart and everything
else fell into place. First single "Sunset (Bird Of
Prey)" is adapted from an ambient track that Norman
wrote several years ago. It takes one of the less
pretentious moments from Jim Morrison's "American
Prayer" poetry album and blazes into the
stratosphere, borne aloft on whirling beats and soaring
chords.
Another key track is "Song For Shelter", a
heady hymn to house music with preacher man vocals from
Urban Soul's Roland Clarke. Norman debuted it to a
rapturous response at Glastonbury 2000 and describes it
as going back to his roots in club culture.
"Sometimes over the last two years I've found myself
doing things I don't really enjoy and forget why I'm
doing this," he explains. "And I'm normally in
a nightclub when I remember why. Every foray I've had
into the pop world has been based on support and respect
from the dance community. I didn't want to end up just
pop."
Thus, the thunderous "Star 69" has the kind of
crunching dancefloor momentum you'll recognise from
Norman's remixes of Underworld and Mike & Charlie
last year (along with Groove Armada's "I See You
Baby" his only recent remixing jobs), while "Ya
Mama" and "Mad Flava" are deliberately
'old skool Fatboy' floor-fillers. "I was allowed to
have a couple," he jokes. "Because most people
have dropped the big beat thing it's long enough ago that
people are nostalgic."
There are four more tracks, including collaborations with
P-Funk legend Bootsy Collins on "Weapon Of Choice"
and the sublime bluesy opener, "Talking 'bout My
Baby". None of them sound quite like you'd expect,
but all of them sound as good as you'd hope.
If "You've Come A Long Way, Baby" jumped and
shouted with manic glee, its successor sounds no less
happy but a lot more content. When Norman first asked
friends for feedback they used words like 'loved up',
'soulful' and 'uplifting'. It's a work of widescreen
emotion, psychedelic soul and the best dance music you've
heard all year.
So Norman Cook's back, but he doesn't want to get any
bigger, just better. He's ignored any pressure to repeat
himself and instead made the album he wanted to make,
with fresh ideas and pinpoint production values that
outclass anything he's done before. He's halfway between
the gutter and the stars and that's just the way he likes
it. |