Prodigy
"G Force (Energy Flow)" from "Kaos Theory Volume 1" compilation excerpt
(.
It was officially released as "One Love" later that year, and went on
to chart at #8 in the UK.
In 1994, the Prodigy's second album, Music for
the Jilted Generation, displayed a wider spectrum of musical
style. Heavyweight dancefloor tunes still abounded, but were
complemented by more unusual tracks such as the concept piece The
Narcotic Suite, and rock-oriented inclinations ("Their Law",
featuring Pop Will Eat Itself).
The album was nominated for a Mercury
Music Prize. In the sleevenotes, however, Howlett reaffirmed his
dedication to the rave music scene.
The international success of Music for the
Jilted Generation meant that touring beyond the UK was now a
viable prospect. The band augmented their line-up with guitarist Jim Davies
(who, later, joined the group Pitchshifter) in 1995 for tracks such
as Their Law, Break And Enter 95,
and various live-only interludes and versions. The 1996 release of Firestarter,
featuring vocals for the first time courtesy of a new-look Keith Flint,
helped the band break into the U.S. and other overseas markets, and
reached number one in the UK. In this year the Prodigy also headlined
the prestigious Lollapalooza festival. The Prodigy have
toured all over the world, including Beirut and Moscow's Red Square.
The third Prodigy album, The
Fat of the Land, was released in 1997. Like its
predecessors, the album represented a new milestone in the development
of both the band and the wider mainstream dance scene. Featuring
simplified melodies, sparser sampling, and more sneering, punk-like
vocals (supplied by a shockingly madeover Flint), the album
nevertheless retained the bone-jarring breaks and buzzsaw synth so
idiomatic of the band. The album cemented the band's position as one of
the most internationally successful acts in the hard dance genre,
entering the British and American charts at number one. The best
selling single, Breathe (1996), was taken from this
album, as was Firestarter, the group's first UK
number one.
The Prodigy have been nominated twice for the Mercury
Music Prize, in 1994 with Music for the Jilted
Generation, and again in 1997 with The
Fat of the Land, however they failed to win both times.
"Smack My Bitch Up"
controversy (USA)
Prodigy was getting a lot of airplay on rock stations with
their track, "Smack My Bitch Up," and were getting even more negative
backlash for the song. Time-Warner, Prodigy's parent company,
was feeling the heat from the National
Organization for Women (NOW) over the track. Although the song's lyrics
are few but repetitive (in their entirety, the lyrics are "Change my
pitch up, smack my bitch up"), NOW stated that the lyrics are a
"...dangerous and offensive message advocating violence against women."
Howlett responded to the attacks by claiming that the song's lyrics are
being misinterpreted: (the song means) "...doing anything intensely,
like being on stage – going for extreme manic energy." The band did not
write the lyric, but rather sampled it from the classic Ultramagnetic
MCs' track "Give The Drummer Some" which also appears on the Dirtchamber
Sessions (they had also sampled another
Ultramagnetic MCs song "Critical Beatdown" on their earlier "Out of
Space" single).
Several radio stations defended the song, yet only played the track at
night. The music video (directed by Jonas
Åkerlund) featured a first-person point of view of someone going
clubbing, indulging in large amounts of drugs and alcohol, getting into fist fights with men, abusing women and
picking up a prostitute. At the end of the video the
camera pans over to a mirror, revealing the subject to be a woman. MTV only aired the video
between 1 and 5 a.m. in order for mature viewers to see the
"groundbreaking" images. The director got the inspiration for contents
of the video after a night of drinking and partying in Copenhagen.
During a performance at the Reading
Festival (August 29th, 1998) The Prodigy and the Beastie
Boys had an onstage disagreement over the track - with the Beastie Boys
requesting the song should be pulled from their set as it could be
considered offensive to those who had suffered domestic abuse.
Choosing to ignore the Beastie Boys plea, Maxim introduced "Smack My
Bitch Up" with the declaration "They didn’t want us to play this
fucking tune. But the way things go, I do what the fuck I want". The
incident has since become part of festival folklore, and was voted one
of the greatest ever live moments by the now defunct Select
Magazine.
Wal-mart
and Kmart
later announced they would pull The Fat of the Land
off their shelves. Even though the LP
had resided on their store shelves for over 20 weeks, the two stores
found the marketing campaign for the new single release offensive.
In mid-2002, the complete, unedited video was aired on MTV2 as part of a
special countdown showing the most controversial videos ever to air on
MTV. This countdown was only shown late at night because of the graphic
imagery of "Smack My Bitch Up" and several other videos on the
countdown. This video in particular was deemed the "Most Controversial
Video" by MTV and showed at the #1 spot on the countdown.
Later works
1999 saw the release of The Prodigy's Dirtchamber Sessions
Volume 1, a DJ mix album by Howlett, produced
as an official record of a successful guest appearance on the British Radio 1.
In 2002, after a break from touring and recording, the
single "Baby's Got a Temper" was released to critical disappointment.
The song was written by Keith Flint's sideband, Flint,
and also featured Jim Davies. Howlett produced it. Once again, the band
courted controversy by including references to the so-called "date rape"
drug Rohypnol
in the song lyrics,
although it is unclear whether or not the band "glorifies" or presents
the drug in a negative light. In the same year, however, Q
magazine named The Prodigy as one of the "50 Bands To See Before You
Die".
The Prodigy's fourth studio album, Always
Outnumbered, Never Outgunned was released on 23 August 2004 (14
September 2004
in the USA.) A precursory and experimental single, "Memphis Bells", was
released in very limited numbers, followed by the traditional release
of the single "Girls". The U.S. version of the studio album contained a
bonus track; a remix of "Girls" entitled, "More Girls".
5,000 digital copies of "Memphis Bells" were sold over the
Internet.
Each copy was a combination of customer-chosen instrumental, rhythmic,
and melodic options, of which 39,600 (of 660,000 total) choices were
available. Five mixes were sold in three file formats, WAV, two audio mixes in MP3, and a 5.1 DTS surround
sound mix and all were free of Digital rights management.
The experiment was a success, with the 5,000 copies being sold in just
over 36 hours in spite of server problems from the demand.
In 2005, they released a compilation, Their Law: The
Singles 1990-2005, which spawned a single
containing new remixes of the songs "Out of Space" (the "Audio Bullys
Remix") and "Voodoo People" (the "Pendulum Remix"). The
latter was also followed by a music video which featured on the DVD
release of the compilation. Sharky, the group's only female member, is
shown running and winning the race depicted in the video.
Their work has been featured in several video
games, TV
shows and movies.
For instance, the video game Need For Speed: Most
Wanted featured the song "You'll Be Under My
Wheels", which was also used in an advert for the BMW 1 Series as well as
the closing credits for the film The Fast and
the Furious: Tokyo Drift. As from the album The
Fat of the Land, songs like "Firestarter" appeared in its
instrumental version in the videogame Wipeout
2097, while "Mindfields" appeared in the film The Matrix,
and the track "Funky Shit" in the closing scene and end credits of Event
Horizon. The title "Voodoo People" and "One
Love" appears in the soundtrack of the movie Hackers
and also in the French movies Wasabi
and Dobermann.
In 2006, "Spitfire" from Always
Outnumbered, Never Outgunned appeared in the
opening scenes of an episode of Las Vegas
on the NBC network in the USA. It also appeared in the movie House
of Wax. The song "Breathe" was also
featured in a FLIP skateboard companies video entitled "Sorry" and was
used by Rune Glifberg. Interestingly, the film Charlie's
Angels: Full Throttle made extensive use in its soundtrack of
the controversial track "Smack My Bitch Up" which was also used on the
successful film Scary Movie 2.
The 2007 film Smokin' Aces
used "First Warning" as the soundtrack to its violent climax.
Development
The Prodigy are a difficult band to classify, because they
have developed significantly with time. Each of their albums represents
a distinct stage in the band's musical development. From their initial
inception as a psychedelic rave band with scene staples such as "Your
Love" and "Out of Space", to the much more mainstream dance of "No
Good", to the rock-oriented "Their Law" to punk tracks such as the L7 cover
"Fuel My Fire" in more recent years, the Prodigy continue to innovate
and surprise. The Prodigy have had the ability over the years to appeal
to widely varying cross-sections of music fans; from the purist dance
festival Creamfields, to the more general appeal of T In The Park, to
the heavy metal oriented Download Festival.
Because of their broad appeal to fans across several
genres, The Prodigy have been described as "A rock band that plays
dance music,"
2005–2007 recording sessions
During the Always
Outnumbered, Never Outgunned tour the band debuted two new songs,
"Warning" and "Dead Ken Beats". "Warning" features Keith
Flint on vocals and consists of heavy basslines and guitar riffs,
whilst Dead Ken Beat contains a sample of the Dead
Kennedys song "California Uber Alles" that
features prominently throughout, and has Maxim
doing vocal duties.
Both these tracks have undergone significant development
during the recent tour, and on at least one occasion Liam
Howlett has confirmed that Dead Ken Beats would feature on
the next Prodigy record,
- "Dead ken beats will definitely be on that record, we
were talking about it tonight. Dead ken is a track we really like, we
like the groove and the beat and it’s really fucking tough. its still
developing. It’s a different groove; it’s really kind of fresh
sounding. It’s a track I'm really going to have to go and find the
right vocal for, which is one of the things I am doing right now."
A track that mixed "Spitfire (Nitebreed Remix)" with "Wake
Up Call" has been played frequently live by The Prodigy, and was
released in January 2006 as "Wake The Fuck Up" on Liam's Back
To Mine compilation.
Another new track was played during the 'Their Law'
tour, which was printed on a setlist as being called "Heatwave". It is
thought that it has been renamed "Heatwave Hurricane", due to Liam
listing it as this among his current favourite songs for a recent
interview. It has been described as "something like a cross between
Hotride (live version) & the Firestarter remix". A short clip
can be seen on YouTube,
revealing that the song includes a sample of "I'm Five Years Ahead Of
My Time" by The Third Bardo, a song which is also featured on Liam's Back
To Mine compilation. The new album was set to
be released in summer 2007, however in a recent interview Liam Howlett
quoted "The album will be first quarter of next year ,with 1 single
before. It is going well and we are luving it. There are a lot of
ideas, maybe 25 ,we are now starting to finish the best tunes and
getting vocals written". It will be released on their own Ragged
Flag record label in association with Cooking
Vinyl Records.
Recently, The Prodigy released a new track "First
Warning", which is available on Smokin'
Aces soundtrack.
In September there will be an new track tentatively titled
"Shadow" on the Xbox
360 videogame Project Gotham Racing 4.
This is their first recording under the new label. This track has also
appeared in a slightly different form as "Shadow of the Devil" played
over the end credits to the British horror movie Reverb.
A third possible variation of the track titled "The Shadow" is included
on the soundtrack to the Japanese anime Vexille
released on the 8th of August.
The Castbreeder
Castbreeder
In 1998 an album being passed off as a Prodigy release
began circulating, entitled The Castbreeder.
However, it was not an official Prodigy album, nor did it have anything
to do with The Prodigy or their record label XL Recordings. Many
believed it to be a real release due to the high quality and
craftmanship, but it is actually nothing more than a bootlegged
compilation of various live and studio recorded tracks from the fellow
big beat artists Junkie XL and Lunatic
Calm. In fact, the music on the album is similar enough in style to The
Prodigy's to have fooled quite a few people, however there were a few
dead giveaways that the album was fake. The "thanks to" section was
taken directly from the cover of Music for the Jilted
Generation, and the wrong font for the XL Recordings clearly
proved it to be a fake.
The tracks are listed on the album cover as follows:
| Fake name on album cover |
Real name |
| "Castbreeder (Single Version)" |
"Dealing With the Roster" by Junkie XL |
| "Collapse" |
"War" by Junkie XL |
| "144" |
"No Remorse" by Junkie XL |
| "Many, Many, Many, Many, Many People (Live At
Noorderslag)" |
"Fight (Live At Noorderslag)" by Junkie XL |
| "Castle Road" |
"Leave You Far Behind" by Lunatic Calm |
| "Fuzz Fucking" |
"X-Panding Limits" by Junkie XL |
| "Junky's Cinder" |
"Mulu" by Junkie XL |
| "Disco to Face" |
"Bustin' Like This" by Junkie XL |
| "Bungalow's Island" |
"Def Beat" by Junkie XL |
| "Aluminium Jazz" |
"The Sound" by Lunatic Calm |
| "Abnormal Bunx" |
"Underachievers" by Junkie XL |
Members
Current members
- Liam Howlett – keyboards,
programming (1990 - )
- Keith Flint – Dancer, Vocalist (1990 - )
- Maxim – MC, Vocalist (1990 - )
Ex-members
- Leeroy Thornhill – Dancer, very
occasional live keyboards (1990 - 2000)
- Sharky
– Vocalist, dancer (1990)
Live members
Former live members
- Brian ? - Drummer, was playing on drums on 2 The
Prodigy concerts in 2007 (May 2007 - June 2007)
- Kieron Pepper – Drummer and occasional guitarist,
he is playing guitar with Victory Pill (December 1997 - May 2007)
- Rob Holliday – Guitarist, now he is
bass player for Marilyn Manson (2005 - May 2007)
- Gizz Butt – Live Guitarist
- Jim Davies – Live and studio guitarist,
he has his own band Pitchshifter & Victory Pill (1995 - 1996, 2002 - 2004)
- Alli Maclnnes – Live Guitarist (four
gigs in summer 2001)
Discography
The Prodigy have sold more than 16,000,000 records
worldwide. The British Phonographic Industry sales: 2,200,000+ albums,
1,400,000+ singles.
-
Main article: The Prodigy discography
Notes and references
External links
- The Prodigy -
Official website.
- Prodigy.Com.UA -
Ukrainian fansite.
- TheProdigy.nl -
Frequently updated fansite.
- Nekozine - Features
interviews, news, tour dates, concert reviews, information, some
visuals, and a forum.
- Juge's Prodigy Site -
Contains most of the stuff you would ever like to know about the band.
- Brainkiller - The
site features news, downloads, concert reviews, pictures, discography
and a forum.
- The Prodigy at Discogs -
Detailed discography website
| The
Prodigy |
| Liam Howlett | Keith
Flint | Maxim |
| Sharky | Leeroy
Thornhill |
| Discography |
| Albums:
Experience
| Music for the Jilted
Generation | The
Fat of the Land | The Dirtchamber
Sessions Volume One | Always
Outnumbered, Never Outgunned | Their Law: The
Singles 1990-2005 | Untitled 5th
Album |
| Singles:
"What
Evil Lurks" | "Charly" | "Everybody in the Place" | "Fire/Jericho"
| "Out of Space" | "Wind
It Up (Rewound)" | "One Love" | "No Good (Start the Dance)"
| "Voodoo People" | "Poison" | "Firestarter"
| "Breathe" | "Smack
My Bitch Up" | "Baby's Got a Temper" | "Girls/Memphis
Bells" | "Girls" | "Hotride" | "Spitfire"
| "Voodoo
People (Pendulum Remix)/Out of Space (Audio Bullys Remix)" |
|
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