Fatboy Slim celebrated his 100th Glastonbury appearance this summer but he’s admitted he isn’t sure how many times he’s actually performed there.
Fatboy Slim has admitted it is only a “guestimate” that he has played Glastonbury 100 times.
The Praise You hitmaker has performed at the festival under various guises every year since 1996 and he celebrated the milestone at this year’s event.
However, the former Housemartins bassist – whose real name is Norman Cook – admitted he doesn’t “actually know” the true number of times he’s graced the stages at Glastonbury.
He told BANG Showbiz and other media: “The first time was 1986. We celebrated my 100th show there this year but we don’t actually know. The nature of a lot of Glastonbury gigs is that there’s no paper trail. None of us can run it back.
“I’m going on the fact that I’ve done every single one since 1996 and I play at least twice but up to six times. So we kind of guestimated 100.
“I know people like Billy Bragg and there’s a dude out of Hawkwind who have been to more but they make the mistake of only playing one gig, whereas if I played six I’ve probably overtaken them.
“But I’m not claiming that one. It’s unofficial.
“When we claimed the 100th gig at this Glastonbury I was waiting for someone to go, ‘Are you sure?’ The thing is I can’t prove it anymore than they can disprove it.”
The 62-year-old DJ’s favourite moment at the festival saw him play a song backwards in a bid to get the audience moving backwards – and he was delighted that they did.
He said: “I played Sunday Best with Rob Da Bank and I think The Cuban Brothers. There’s a photo of me watching The Cuban Brothers. This is Sunday tea time so we’ve been there since Thursday probably, maybe Wednesday, so I’ve lost my marbles, my scruples, whatever intelligence I’ve had.
“I distinctly remember deciding that if I play a record backwards the audience might dance backwards. An interesting theory and one that I thought I should try out on one of the major stages.
“I thought, ‘It’s got to be something fairly well known so they might recognise it backwards and be more likely to dance.’ It was a Chemical Brothers track, probably, Hey Boy, Hey Girl.
“I was playing it religiously backwards and to my joy at least half the audience started dancing backwards. Then Ed from Chemical Brothers went, ‘What are you doing?’ I said, ‘I was playing the record backwards to see if people would dance backwards.’ Ed went, ‘Oh brilliant, oh look they are!’
“That was probably my favourite set. That’s as far removed from reality as you can be but still beautiful that you can experiment with life the way you experiment with drugs.”







