Palookaville

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  • Artist: Fatboy Slim
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: October 05, 2004
  • Type: Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Electronica

Review

Looking back on Fatboy Slim's discography, Palookaville is up against some stiff competition, which makes it the low point only because it isn't another beginning-to-end stunner. The Fatboy himself -- Norman Cook -- had given plenty of hints in the press before the album's release that this was going to be different. He went through marriage problems and declared a renewed interest in hip-hop over dance music, dance being a genre he sees as going through another dry period. Still, this isn't a "forget everything you know about..." album since the jittery "Slash Dot Dash" and "Jin Go Lo Ba" sound like old outtakes. They're the lesser tracks on an album that could have been tighter had Cook not played it safe by including them. There's so much more heart in the non-club numbers, with each one sounding inspired and full of that quirky Fatboy flair. A cover of Steve Miller's "The Joker" with Bootsy Collins on vocals is brilliant fun and the most direct example of the rolling along despite the nasty weather, naked hippy feel of the album. When Cook brings it down, he brings to mind the best of Tranquility Bass, just a lot more fun and approachable. For its hook, "Don't Let the Man Get You Down" uses the "long-haired freaky people" line from Five Man Electrical Band's "Signs" and guest singer Lateef's two appearances are nothing short of frolicsome. They offer the trippy ying to the marriage problem yang of "Put It Back Together" with Damon Albarn, and the intentionally maudlin "North West Three" (the first address where the recently patched-it-up Cook and Zoe Ball lived together). That "North West Three" samples from a husband-and-wife's record (John and Beverley Martyn's "Primrose Hill") is just one of Palookaville's deeper-than-before ideas. There are scars here, but with only hints of the specifics, you can apply Cook's heartbreak to any hurt of your own. Palookaville could stand one more trimming pass, but it gives Cook's canon the needed depth. Now there's a Fatboy Slim record for that rainy day and one the long-haired freaky people can enjoy. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Palookaville (album)

Top
Palookaville
Studio album by Fatboy Slim
Released October 4, 2004 (UK)
October 5, 2004 (US)
Genre Big beat
Length 53:27
Label Skint (UK)
BRASSIC29LP (LP)
BRASSIC29CD (CD)
Astralwerks (US) ASW 64748
Producer Fatboy Slim, Simon Thornton
Fatboy Slim chronology
Halfway Between the Gutter and the Stars
(2000)
Palookaville
(2004)
Here Lies Love
(2010)
Singles from Palookaville
  1. "Slash Dot Dash"
    Released: 2004
  2. "Wonderful Night"
    Released: 2004
  3. "The Joker"
    Released: 2005
  4. "Don't Let the Man Get You Down"
    Released: 2005
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic (53/100) [1]
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[2]
Entertainment Weekly (C+)[3]
Stylus Magazine (D−)[4]
Robert Christgau (choice cut)[5]
Pitchfork Media (4.6/10)[6]
Rolling Stone 2/5 stars[7]
Q Magazine 3/5 stars[8]
The Guardian 3/5 stars[9]

Palookaville is the fourth studio album by English big beat musician Fatboy Slim, released on 4 October 2004. It was also a temporary name of Brighton and Hove Albion F.C.'s Withdean Stadium, due to their sponsorship deal with Skint Records.

Background

The album, being the first Fatboy Slim album released in four years, represented a significant shift in style for Cook, with a reduction in the traditional Fatboy Slim reliance on vocal loops, and the introduction of real instruments (Cook himself returns to his Housemartins roots by contributing live bass on some tracks, with engineer/mixer/executive producer Simon Thornton also adding guitar) and more conventional song structures. More "traditional" Fatboy Slim tracks such as "Jin Go Lo Ba" co-exist with full-length vocal tracks such as a rendition of the Steve Miller Band's "The Joker" performed by Bootsy Collins. There are also many more vocal collaborations, including two with the rapper Lateef ("Wonderful Night" and "The Journey") and Brighton-based band Jonny Quality ("Long Way from Home").

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Don't Let the Man Get You Down"   Norman Cook, Les Emmerson 4:01
2. "Slash Dot Dash"   Cook 2:53
3. "Wonderful Night" (feat. Lateef) Cook, Deaumont 4:46
4. "Long Way from Home" (feat. Jonny Quality) Cook, Moody 4:44
5. "Put It Back Together" (feat. Damon Albarn) Cook, Damon Albarn 4:36
6. "Mi Bebé Masoquista"   Cook, Shel Silverstein, Settle 4:26
7. "Push & Shove" (feat. Justin Robertson & Sharon Woolf) Cook, Justin Robertson 4:27
8. "North West Three"   Cook, Beverley Martyn 4:30
9. "The Journey" (feat. Lateef) Cook, Deaumont 4:36
10. "Jin Go Lo Ba"   Olatunji 4:40
11. "Song for Chesh"   Cook 4:19
12. "The Joker" (feat. Bootsy Collins) Steve Miller, Ahmet Ertegün, Eddie Curtis 5:21

References

  1. ^ http://www.metacritic.com/music/palookaville
  2. ^ David Jeffries. "Palookaville - Fatboy Slim". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/album/r709797. Retrieved 15 September 2011. 
  3. ^ His party jams... feel half-cocked, like Cook can't quite commit to the moment. [8 Oct 2004, p.114]
  4. ^ http://www.stylusmagazine.com/reviews/fatboy-slim/palookaville.htm
  5. ^ Robert Christgau. "Fatboy Slim". robertchristgau.com. http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=fatboy+slim. Retrieved 15 September 2011. 
  6. ^ Johnny Loftus (5 October 2004). "Fatboy Slim: Palookaville". Pitchfork. http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/3011-palookaville/. Retrieved 15 September 2011. 
  7. ^ http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/palookaville-20040922
  8. ^ Essentially, Fatboy Slim is doing little more than repeating his past, but the quality here doesn't suffer for that. [Nov 2004, p.120]
  9. ^ Caroline Sullivan (1 October 2004). "Fatboy Slim, Palookaville". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2004/oct/01/popandrock.shopping8. Retrieved 15 September 2011. 

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