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Hollie Cook

Hollie Cook, born 1987 in London, UK in a musical family, is a British singer and keyboardist. She is a part of the recent lineup of all-female punk/reggae band The Slits. From 2010 Hollie also has a carrier as solo artist working with producer / songwriter Prince Fatty. In 2011 she released her first and self-titled reggae album Hollie Cook. She calls her own music “tropical pop”, and has a passion for reggae and female rocksteady / reggae singers as Janet Kay and Phyllis Dillon combined with classic 60s girl groups. Hollie Cook’s songs are a light but refreshing blend of modern pop and vintage reggae influences, ideally suited to Cook’s supple, sensuous voice. Cook certainly has the genes for a career in music — her father Paul Cook was the drummer for the Sex Pistols, while her mother Jeni Cook was a backing vocalist for Culture Club. (If that’s not enough, Boy George is her godfather, and David Bowie once babysat her for an afternoon.) Born in 1987, Cook left school when she was 16 to study art and make-up design, but she got pulled onto a new career path in 2006 when Ari Up, leader of the iconic all-female punk/reggae band the Slits, re-formed the group and recruited Paul Cook to produce and play on their new recordings. Paul introduced Hollie to the band, and after hearing her sing, Up asked her to join the group. Hollie sang backups and played keyboards for the Slits, appearing on the EP Revenge of the Killer Slits (2006) and the album Trapped Animal (2009), but the group disbanded in 2010 following Up’s death. Hollie began working with producer and songwriter Prince Fatty, and in 2011, they released her self-titled debut album. The effort won enthusiastic reviews, and in 2012, when the Stone Roses reunited for a handful of wildly anticipated British shows, vocalist Ian Brown invited Hollie to open one of them before an audience of 75,000. (In an interview with reporter James Lachno, Cook said of the experience, “The atmosphere was immense, and people didn’t boo or ignore us. I wanted to go anyway, so the fact I got to play was ridiculous.”) In 2012, Prince Fatty released an album of dub mixes of material from Hollie’s debut, and 2014 saw the release of her sophomore effort, Twice.

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