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“Milk & Honey is the lead single from the forthcoming Prince Fatty album…A good time bubbler with horns so
warm that the track will need to be stored in a cool box, this is an exceptional slice of soulful reggae that is
blowing up in all the right spots at the moment” – One Week To Live
“…A succulent slice of reggae tinged jazz pop with dollops of fruity bass” – Crack Online
“…A producer led outfit put together by Mike Pelanconi (Lily Allen, Little Barrie)…featuring vocals from Little
Roy and Hollie Cook from the Slits, this is a beautiful oasis in a desert lacking fine rhythm and roots. Milk and
Honey and Curious are beautiful, but it’s the dub work that draws you in.” - Music Week review
“Survival of the Fattest" is the late 1970’s skanking afternoon beach party soundtrack of today…rendering
listeners so chilled if you’re not already horizontal you’re falling over.” - New Noise review
“…The Prince Fatty sound is designed to dub your feet with rock steady beats and stimulate brain waves in a
jazz-like way, all delivered in an upbeat, positive, and organic funk fashion” - UrbanPlanet.co.uk
“Fatty is back, back, back and this time that same said gutbucket has got Lily Allen Producer Mike Pelanconi to
oversee a diet of silky smooth organs, crooning brass instruments, crisp rim-shots and honey dew vocals.”
- Crud Magazine review
Prince Fatty, a group melded for a one off project by producer/engineer Mike Pelanconi (recent credits include Lily Allen’s smash “Alright Still” and Little Barrie’s “Stand Your Ground”) that gained such significant momentum in underground reggae circles that recording a full length
album together seemed to be the next logical step. Hitting the recording studio, Pelanconi’s “dream team” worked on tracks, the result being “Survival of the Fattest”.
The Prince Fatty sound is truly unique. It is designed to dub your feet with rock steady beats and
stimulate your brain waves in a jazz like way. Delivered in an up beat, positive and organic funk
fashion and mixed in an analog haze of vintage spring reverbs, tape echoes and custom hi-grade
mixing console, Prince Fatty won’t disappoint the lovers of the early ‘70s sound but will entice
listeners of modern day dub to groove to its beats.
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