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Fatboy Slim plays at Hot Box Live fundraiser in Chelmsford

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Fatboy Slim pictured performing behind the decks at Hot Box Live in ChelmsfordImage source, Leigh Milner/BBC
Image caption,
Fatboy Slim, pictured on Wednesday night, said it was a "joy" to perform at an intimate venue

Legendary DJ Fatboy Slim performed to a crowd of about 120 people as he helped raise vital funds for a music venue.

The internationally acclaimed artist, real name Norman Cook, played the sold-out gig at Hot Box Live in Chelmsford on Wednesday evening.

Venue owner David Hughes said it was in about £80,000 of debt, which mainly stemmed from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cook said Hot Box had "a little piece of my heart in it" and gladly accepted an offer to perform for free.

Hot Box is based under one of the arches of the railway viaduct in Chelmsford city centre.

'Lifeblood of the industry'

"Britain produces so much great music and venues like that are the breeding ground where everybody cuts their teeth, where everyone learns their chops," the DJ told the BBC.

"Every Adele, every Radiohead - they need venues like this to start out in. It's the lifeblood of the music industry, so it's worth preserving.

"Anything I can do to help small venues stay in business or thrive, I will gladly do to give something back."

Image source, Jamie Niblock/BBC
Image caption,
Hot Box Live owner David Hughes said costs were "spiralling" for many venues across the country

A total of 90 tickets for the hotly-anticipated gig were released and sold out in less than a minute, with 1,200 people left in limbo on a waiting list. About 120 people were at the gig, when including staff and friends.

It was not the first time Cook, whose hits include Right Here Right Now, The Rockafeller Skank and Eat Sleep Rave Repeat, had performed at Hot Box, having played at two private parties previously.

The DJ said he "gladly" agreed to perform for a third time after being asked by Mr Hughes if he could help raise lifeline funds for the venue.

"Every time I go to venues like the Hot Box, I remember the days 40 years ago when I was playing venues like that - they've all got that same vibe and that same smell about them," he added.

"It's great fun. At my end of my career, I don't get to play intimate venues so much, but it's a joy."

Image source, Leigh Milner/BBC
Image caption,
Norman Cook rose to fame in the 1990s and had a string of chart hits

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