'Eat, sleep, rave, repeat': Fatboy Slim lights up Radio 1's Big Weekend
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'Eat, sleep, rave, repeat': Fatboy Slim lights up Radio 1's Big Weekend stage on dance-focused first day 14 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleNaomi ClarkeandMitch Mansfield,BBC Newsbeat, at BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend in SunderlandBBCThousands gathered at the main stage at Fatboy Slim reeled out non-stop hitsFatboy Slim has closed out the dance-focused opening day of BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend with a nostalgia-fuelled headline set.The veteran DJ had thousands of festivalgoers at Sunderland's Herrington Country Park chanting and bouncing along to non-stop hits. He wasted no time in showing the extent of his four decade-long catalogue by teasing his classic track Praise You before sampling Queen's iconic Don't Stop Me Now. The 62-year-old later awarded the crowd's patience by delivering a full run of the club anthem, but it was of course mixed to a host of cleverly intertwined samples. Fatboy Slim told BBC Newsbeat he was 'looking forward to enjoying my songs without any swear words'This was a theme throughout the set, with his hit, The Rockafeller Skank, getting an added dash of Eminem's Slim Shady.And if there's one way to get a UK crowd going, it's cracking out The Killers' Mr Brightside, and the crowd at the main stage thanked him by chanting back every lyric.He later took a sharp 180-degree turn into an acid house mix up, and "eat, sleep, rave, repeat" could be heard ringing out across the field. Before his set, Fatboy Slim told BBC Newsbeat he was "looking forward to enjoying my songs without any swear words"."I've spent the last week just basically taking my set apart" for the live BBC broadcast, he joked.Real name Norman Cook, Fatboy Slim gained some recognition in the 1980s with bands The Housemartins and Beats International, before enshrining himself as a mainstay of the dance music scene during the 1990s.Alongside artists like the Chemical...





