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Prodigy: The Fat Of The Land 12"
Few albums were as eagerly anticipated as The Fat of the Land, the Prodigyâs long-awaited follow-up to Music for the Jilted Generation. The Fat of the Land was touted as the album that would bring electronica/techno to a wide American audience; and indeed it went on to sell 2.8 million copies in the US. The Fat of the Land delivers exactly what anyone would expect: intense hip-hop-derived rhythms, imaginatively reconstructed samples, and meaningless shouted lyrics from Keith Flint and Maxim.
Half of the album does sound quite similar to âFirestarter,â especially when Flint is singing. Still, Liam Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make songs like âSmack My Bitch Upâ and âSerial Thrillaâ kick with a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of âDiesel Powerâ (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and âFunky Shit,â as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of âNarayanâ (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7âs âFuel My Fire,â which features vocals by Republicaâs Saffron.
All those guest vocalists mean something, Howlett is at his best when heâs writing for himself or others. âFirestarterâ and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at their peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land is damn good! Double vinyl reissue from XL Recordings.
Half of the album does sound quite similar to âFirestarter,â especially when Flint is singing. Still, Liam Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make songs like âSmack My Bitch Upâ and âSerial Thrillaâ kick with a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of âDiesel Powerâ (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and âFunky Shit,â as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of âNarayanâ (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7âs âFuel My Fire,â which features vocals by Republicaâs Saffron.
All those guest vocalists mean something, Howlett is at his best when heâs writing for himself or others. âFirestarterâ and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at their peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land is damn good! Double vinyl reissue from XL Recordings.
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Prodigy: The Fat Of The Land 12"
Prodigy: The Fat Of The Land 12"
Few albums were as eagerly anticipated as The Fat of the Land, the Prodigyâs long-awaited follow-up to Music for the Jilted Generation. The Fat of the Land was touted as the album that would bring electronica/techno to a wide American audience; and indeed it went on to sell 2.8 million copies in the US. The Fat of the Land delivers exactly what anyone would expect: intense hip-hop-derived rhythms, imaginatively reconstructed samples, and meaningless shouted lyrics from Keith Flint and Maxim.
Half of the album does sound quite similar to âFirestarter,â especially when Flint is singing. Still, Liam Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make songs like âSmack My Bitch Upâ and âSerial Thrillaâ kick with a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of âDiesel Powerâ (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and âFunky Shit,â as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of âNarayanâ (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7âs âFuel My Fire,â which features vocals by Republicaâs Saffron.
All those guest vocalists mean something, Howlett is at his best when heâs writing for himself or others. âFirestarterâ and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at their peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land is damn good! Double vinyl reissue from XL Recordings.
Half of the album does sound quite similar to âFirestarter,â especially when Flint is singing. Still, Liam Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make songs like âSmack My Bitch Upâ and âSerial Thrillaâ kick with a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of âDiesel Powerâ (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and âFunky Shit,â as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of âNarayanâ (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7âs âFuel My Fire,â which features vocals by Republicaâs Saffron.
All those guest vocalists mean something, Howlett is at his best when heâs writing for himself or others. âFirestarterâ and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at their peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land is damn good! Double vinyl reissue from XL Recordings.
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Description
Few albums were as eagerly anticipated as The Fat of the Land, the Prodigyâs long-awaited follow-up to Music for the Jilted Generation. The Fat of the Land was touted as the album that would bring electronica/techno to a wide American audience; and indeed it went on to sell 2.8 million copies in the US. The Fat of the Land delivers exactly what anyone would expect: intense hip-hop-derived rhythms, imaginatively reconstructed samples, and meaningless shouted lyrics from Keith Flint and Maxim.
Half of the album does sound quite similar to âFirestarter,â especially when Flint is singing. Still, Liam Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make songs like âSmack My Bitch Upâ and âSerial Thrillaâ kick with a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of âDiesel Powerâ (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and âFunky Shit,â as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of âNarayanâ (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7âs âFuel My Fire,â which features vocals by Republicaâs Saffron.
All those guest vocalists mean something, Howlett is at his best when heâs writing for himself or others. âFirestarterâ and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at their peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land is damn good! Double vinyl reissue from XL Recordings.
Half of the album does sound quite similar to âFirestarter,â especially when Flint is singing. Still, Liam Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make songs like âSmack My Bitch Upâ and âSerial Thrillaâ kick with a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of âDiesel Powerâ (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and âFunky Shit,â as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of âNarayanâ (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7âs âFuel My Fire,â which features vocals by Republicaâs Saffron.
All those guest vocalists mean something, Howlett is at his best when heâs writing for himself or others. âFirestarterâ and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at their peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land is damn good! Double vinyl reissue from XL Recordings.











