The Scotsman

Keith Flint

Prodigy singer who funded racing team and owned village pub

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Keith Charles Flint, singer, musician and dancer. Born: 17 September 1969 in Redbridge, London. Died: 4 March 2019, Great Dunmow, Essex, aged 49

As the lead singer of The Prodigy, Keith Flint carried the sound of British rave music from an insular community of party-goers to an internatio­nal audience – selling 30 million records worldwide in the process.

The explosive frontman – known for his energetic and deranged performanc­e style, shocking green hair and tattoos – has died aged 49.

Keith Charles Flint was born on 17 September 1969 in Redbridge, East London. As a child he moved to Braintree, Essex, where he met The Prodigy cofounder Liam Howlett at a nightclub.

They discussed music and realised they shared a taste for harder, club-ready sounds.

Originally a dancer for the group, Flint was promoted to singer after he provided the vocals on the band’s song Firestarte­r, a track which propelled them into the mainstream.

When the band released the video for the 1996 single, Flint’s performanc­e was deemed too scary for children – meaning that many music TV stations would not play it until after 9pm. Alongside bandmates Howlett and the mononymed Maxim, Flint became the face of British rave.

While the group were spoken of as bedfellows with other commercial dance acts like The Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim, they pioneered a harsher, more abrasive sound. They reached number one in the singles charts with tracks Firestarte­r and Breathe in 1996, and went on to score seven number one albums.

But these songs were not usual dance pop fodder, instead drawing from sonic sounds inspired by the UK’S illegal rave scene.

Known for their overt antiestabl­ishment stance as much for their music, The Prodigy were vocal critics of the UK’S Criminal Justice And Public Order Act 1994, which banned the raves popularise­d following the so-called second summer of love in 1988 and 1989.

And despite being accepted by the mainstream, they never submitted to the whims of passing musical fashion.

The Essex band has never wholly belonged to any genre. Whether it was the emergent rave scene at the start of the Nineties, Britpop later in the decade through to more recent dubstep and EDM (electronic dance music), they were lurking, all the time selling millions of records and just as many tickets for their incendiary live shows.

During this time, Flint became known for his extremetat­tooandbody­piercing regime. In an interview, he 2 Keith Flint in 2009, left, and performing in Perth, Australia, that same year revealed that his most painful tattoo was the word Inflicted across his stomach, designed by Howlett.

Flint said the pain felt like he was on an altar being ritualisti­cally scarred by a Satanic beast.

He was also a keen motorcycli­st.

Flint rode 1,500 miles from Britain to southern Spain to attend the Spanish motorcycle grand prix in 2007 and took part in club competitio­ns.

His regular riding partner was Lee Thompson, of the skapunk band Madness.

He took his interest further, creating his own racing team, Team Traction Control, which competes in the British Supersport Championsh­ip as part of the British Superbike Championsh­ip package.

In 2014 Flint bought and renovated The Leather Bottle pub in the Essex village of Pleshey.

He reportedly had a jar that customers had to put a pound into every time they made a “firestarte­r” joke when he lit the pub’s fire.

The group released their seventh consecutiv­e number one album in November 2018.

All but one of their studio albums hit the top spot in the UK charts, as did a singles collection released in 2005.

This placed them alongside such musical legends as Sir Elton John, Coldplay, Sir Paul Mccartney and George Michael, each with seven number one records.

 ??  ?? ALEX GREEN
ALEX GREEN
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