Original video locatedhere. Accessed 27th May 2019
Song title: Obsessed
Artist: Hatchie
Year: 2019
Why I like this song:
The promise of Hatchie's early releases finally delivers. It may have tips of the hat to New Order and nineties dream pop but it does it so well. It also helps that Hatchie has a charismatic presence.
Spike vs The Prodigy: Round 3 Album: The Fat of the Land Year: 1997
Well here we are: I've been mentioning this album and it's big hit (Firestarter) but really there's no escaping it. Firestarter was a huge hit, Fat of the Land was a monumental seller and, for a lot of people, it was the beginning for the Prodigy - just as it was the end of the Prodigy for just as many people.
When i was a teenager I listened to a lot of punk rock. When i entered adulthood I flirted with metal - the reason I mention this is because both are music genres that thrive on freaking people out. Thus one listen to the Fat of the Land indicates that this is an attempt to freak people out with electronic/dance music - not a genre one would associate with freaking people out (seems the dangers posed by raves and rave culture weren't enough).
Even when faced with the challenge of divorcing the Prodigy from their image of 'freaky guys and equally freaky videos' this album does come across as being the odd one out when compared to it's predecessors: there are more guests, more samples, more Keith and less of this being the sound of one guy messing about with a whole lotta electronic gear. That being said, whereas the previous albums seem more pure in electronic, Fat of the Land seem more anarchic. Booming beats, scary noises and the late Keith Flint selling his 'madman' persona for all it's worth. Are there times when Liam was trying to replicate the lightning in the bottle success of Firestarter? Perhaps but you can't deny there is certainly some muscle behind this album.
And so concludes this experiment. I have to say it has certainly been a challenge stepping out of my comfort zone and experiencing a band I have had little interest in prior and - oh wait, the Chemical Brothers have a new album out? I'm there!
Spike vs The Prodigy: Round 2 Album: Music for the Jilted Generation Year: 1994
Nothing sells a product quite like having a story attached and the one this album is a doozy: Incensed by the government crackdown on raves, Liam Howlett decided to take his music into a more angrier and intense direction. And seeing as it expanded the Prodigy's audience and silenced critics who dismissed them as a lightweight, it's clear the move paid off in spades. This album always marks the point where I had my first experience with The Prodigy: it was sometime in the mid-nineties and I turned on my TV to early morning rage and caught the video to Voodoo People. At first I didn't know what to think of the (admittedly freaky) video but it prove helpful when I realised that the guys who did Firestarter were the same guys who did that song with the distorted flutes, frenzied violin and that keyboard sample that goes URNK URNK.
Much like Experience, this album sounds like the work of a different band when compared to their future triumphs. It's fast, inventive, exciting and, when compared to Experience, a sizable bearing of teeth. And yet it still manages to retain the fun (read: approachable) aspect of it's predecessor - This album may be flexing some muscle but it still has the DNA that traces it to previous album. So in the end, this is a damn good album and a prime example of mid-nineties rave music.
One final thought: Considering the year of this album's release, I wonder who many people used it to soundtrack a game of Doom?
Original video locatedhere. Accessed 22nd April 2019
Song title: Out Of Space
Artist: The Prodigy
Year: 1992
Why I like this song:
Spike vs The Prodigy: Round 1 Album: Experience Year: 1992
Like a lot of people I became aware of the Prodigy through the monumental hit that was Firestarter. Needless to say,. I was surprised that they already had two albums released. I was even more surprised, years later, to learn that their first album, Experience, is not liked by some Prodigy fans. As is my understanding, it's due to the fact it sounds very removed from the ferociousness Liam and his cohorts would build a career out of. Indeed, I knew of Out of Space and yes, it did indeed sound completely different from what was to follow. Still, maybe there was more to this band than being a punkin' instigator?
The first thing that strikes me about Experience is that it's..... well....... fun. The beats are fast, the samples are used well and the use of melodies work. It sounds like a rave and a real euphoric one at that. And, if anything it seems to be influential: I can see a lot of electronic artists since trying to replicate the sounds on this album (whereas compared to the next two albums, no one would dare try to copy). So all in all, a decent album revealing a side to The Prodigy that isn't seen/acknowledged much and indeed capable of stepping out of the shadow of it's successors. However even if some critics labelled this effort as 'lightweight' little did they know what was to follow.....
Original video locatedhere. Accessed 19th April 2019
Song title: Firestarter
Artist: The Prodigy
Year: 1996
Why I like this song:
Spike vs The Prodigy: Introduction (Round 0)
I've decided to set myself a challenge: Listen to the first three albums from The Prodigy. It's something I've been meaning to do for a while (and totally not inspired through Keith Flint's recent passing)/ What this means is that I will spend the next few weeks doing this challenge, exploring new territory with my musical tastes and posting my progress as I go (as well as sharing some of own experiences with these nutters).
I was in high school when the Prodigy hit big: First with the Jilted Generation album in 1994 and going from strength to strength and finally hitting monumental heights with Fat of the Land in 1997. And like most people, they came, to my attention with the success of Firestarter. I thought Firestarter was great but otherwise, The Prodigy always struck me as a band who i didn't know what to make of. Was I more into the Chemical Brothers? Was the ferocity that The Prodigy became known for a turn off? Was the interest in this band based around the fact that they looked and sounded like they came from the rough side of Electronic/Dance town, where songs about robots and Autobahns decline to tread out of fear of being curb-stomped?
Regardless, the journey starts here. Stay tuned....
Original video locatedhere. Accessed 5th April 2019
Song title: Weather With You
Artist: Crowded House
Year: 1991
Why I like this song:
So there's this new anime film coming out this July called Weathering With You. And the first thought that comes to mind is walking 'round the room singing Stormy Weather, at 57 Mount Pleasant street....