The Scotsman

Fatboy Slim

Hydro, Glasgow

- DAVID POLLOCK

HE MIGHT not like the descriptio­n “nostalgia show,” but in a certain respect that’s what Norman “Fatboy Slim” Cook’s huge, in-the-round arena experience is. It’s been 15 years since he released the most recent of his four albums, and the bulk of his chart success arrived in the 1990s. However, Cook has maintained his reputation as a first-class DJ of wide tastes and ability.

Before an audience which stretched from teenagers to nostalgic ravers of Cook’s own age (late fifties), this show recreated a nightclub ambience. The lights were down, the air full of stage smoke and the lighting shifted above the crowd, while Cook’s DJ booth was sited on a revolving podium in the middle of the room.

The set was both an uninterrup­ted DJ performanc­e and a greatest hits

show, with a cylindrica­l video screen above Cook’s dais projecting sophistica­ted but somehow old-school club visuals – including digitally manipulate­d images of his own face, morphing images of diverse heroes of his, from Cheguevara­tobrucefor­syth, and live footage of Cook’s own performanc­e.

No song was simply played in its entirety, with inventive mixes and edits adding diversity and invention to snippets of Daft Punk and Run DMC as well as favourites from his own catalogue, notably Right Here, Right Now, Sunset (Bird of Prey) and The Rockafelle­r Skank (the finale, fused with the Rolling Stones’ (I Can’t Get No) Satisfacti­on). Rarely has nostalgia felt more timeless.

 ??  ?? Cook has maintained his reputation as a first-class DJ
Cook has maintained his reputation as a first-class DJ

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