The claustrophobic confines of a west London attic hideaway.
Walls, covered in heavyweight purple curtains seem to bring the dimly lit
room's parameters collapsing in as a huge computer screen’s wallpaper radiates
the green glow of long hot summer. Its pastoral image of feudal tranquility is
the room’s only window on the world. Look closer and there's a twist in this
Constable painting. In the middle of the painter's rustic overtures sits a
stolen burnt out car. It's an urban blight on England's countryside, a twisted
interruption on this green and pleasant land.
More than just a screen saver though, the image, one of Banksy's
infamous reworkings of old masters, is the perfect visual accompaniment to the
aural assault that is pounding from the room's speakers. Sweat soaked b-lines
thunder with adrenalised breakcore attitude; rushing keyboard hooks come on
like a futurebound flashback; guitars crack and vocals snap.
It's the sound of The Prodigy mixing up genres, contorting the
past and rewiring the future. The Prodigy ramraiding through the tranquility of
music's status quo like a blot on the landscape of England's dreaming. The
Prodigy with a short, sharp and brutal declaration of intent. Still underground
after all these years. Still true to the dream.
Invaders Must Die is the fifth album from a band long synonymous with bringing
urban disruption to the countryside. Like uninvited guests dirtying up the
landscape they've long trodden paths supposedly to them.
On debut album Experience, their rough-around-the-edges, renegade-break psychosis
soundtracked rave's free party antics at a time when dance artists weren't
supposed to release albums. The follow up Music for the Jilted Generation
dragged guitars from rock's bloated grasp, fused metal to dysfunctional beat
alchemy and stormed the heartland of rock music's venues at a time when dance
acts were only supposed to play raves.
With 1998's The Fat of the Land and it's brace
of radio and MTV hogging singles ('Firestarter', 'Breathe', 'Smack My Bitch Up')
The Prodigy stormed the world's festivals, headlined stages usually reserved
for rock's establishment and walked like Gods where other press-friendly
artists failed to tread - and dance artists were previously uninvited.
/cont’d …
With 2004's Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned
the vibe turned its back on live shows and arena exposure and took the music
back to an underground that had tried to turn its back on them. Gatecrashers
once more, The Prodigy answered nay sayers with an astounding set of dumb ass
electro punk classics. A DJ beats album that couldn't be played out live, from
an act that had taken the live gig by the scruff of its neck, redefined it and
made it its own. This wasn’t what The Prodigy were meant to do.
Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned acted as much as a catharsis for Liam Howlett as it was a chance
to reset the Prodigy programme. The following year's greatest hits package Their
Law not only came as a timely reminder as to just how epoch defining
the band were, but also reintroduced the world to the greatest live show on
earth. In the arena tour that followed Their Law the band played voodoo
with their rave classics, reworked and rewired their smouldering best and
reminded old ravers and young rockers alike just how potent a force they
actually are. And if that wasn't all, it reminded The Prodigy how important it
is to rock it live.
The tour provided some of the greatest performances of their
career and gave the inspiration for their next set - an album designed to play
live, an album of short, succinct tracks with none of the over indulgent frills
normally associated with electronic dance music. A set of tracks that arrive
like an unwanted carbuncle on the over designed veneer of contemporary culture
and go out like glorious victors in a war against the negativity of outsiders.
Once again The Prodigy aren't playing to the script others have written for
them.
The first thing you notice about Invaders Must Die is how
complete it sounds. Previous albums have always had weak moments, tracks that
don't quite fit, or even the feeling that the set was a couple of tracks short
of its goal. Invaders Must Die though
is all there, a consistent collection of bangers firing from the same canon.
The next thing you notice about Invaders Must Die is just
how melodic it is. Not just melody in the vocal sense (although both Keith and
Maxim both turn in their finest vocal performances to date), but in the
heyday-of-hardcore keyboard-hookline sense. Oh yes, if The Prodigy had learned
anything from the Their Law tour it was that those old skool rave anthems still
rock hard - and are every bit as iconic to their generation as punk was to the
nation's forty-somethings.
So Invaders Must Die then
is awash with references to the free party generation. It thunders like the
mother of all E-rushes, all hairs tingling, spine jumping and lips buzzing. But
it ain't no retroactive arms-in-the-air, water-sharing nostalgia trip. This set
is fuelled by the dog-thunder of punk's saliva-dripping rabid snarl. In fact its canines are so thoroughly bared
that it's more likely to snap at your jugular and steal your water. Laughing
all the while. In fact, the often overlooked dumb-assed humour that has always
been at the heart of the band is has a full force presence here.
/cont’d …
Take 'Colours', the first tune The Prodigy recorded for this set
with its 1992 polysynth riffing that sounds like The Stranglers' 'No More
Heroes' parachuted into the middle of a Perception rave. Or 'Thunder',
the bastard child of the Devilish threesome of 'Out of Space', Studio
1's finest roots rockers and switchblade ambience.
'Take Me to the Hospital' finds Keith and Maxim flexing over a vintage Prodigy riff.
Suitably rusted, distorted and in need of urgent medication it bites like the
soundtrack to Dante's Inferno. While the
live favourite (and band website download) 'Worlds on Fire' resurrects a
'flaming' theme and applies it to a groove straight out second album 'Music
for the Jilted Generation' and slices it down the middle with a sample
of R&S classic rave tune 'Vamp' by Outlander. It's the kind of fucked up
twist that you quickly come to expect on this album. 'Omen' is beamed straight
into the moshpit from rave central, while 'Piranha' rips the threads from the
back of 60's garage and pussy whips it into the scumbag guttercrawl of modern
urban life.
Any old skool bon homie
floating around the riffs of this album are quickly slaughtered by 'Run
with the Wolves' where The Prodigy's self assured, gang-minded campaign
turns into a maniacal, nose bleeding, heads-against-the-wall warzone. Added
pounding energy here supplied by Dave Grohl.
“There's no collaborations on this album as such.” says Liam “But
toward the end of recording Dave Grohl called me and said he was thinking about
laying down some drums for me to use. Soon after this hard drive arrived with
loads of drum tracks. I hadn't asked him for them, it was his idea, but when I
put his drums on this track and used a Keith vocal that we'd done it seemed to
give the album a focus. Nothing about this album was planned in terms of what I
wanted it to sound like. We just recorded stuff and then looked at it at the
end. I really wanted to have fun with it.”
After 40 minutes of having your head battered by future
nostalgia, serotonin levels twisted by feel-good horrorcore and your synapses
snapped by whiplash attitude, Invaders Must Die delivers its
final, brilliant twist - a horn drenched sunrise anthem that aches with the
positivity of a new dawn. That track, 'Stand Up' laughs aloud like a
victor, spreads its arms around its comrades (the unit, the family) and walks
the line of a burning horizon with the swaggering look of satisfaction that
only comes when you instinctively know you've achieved what you set out to do.
Cocky? Sure - but wouldn't you be if you'd seen off all of the
invaders with your most complete album yet, the first for your own record
label?
Invaders Must Die is the unique sound of The Prodigy, still trespassing after all
these years, walking the path they've created for themselves. And with that
free party attitude still breaking and entering where other's can only dream of
following.
/cont’d …
“We represent all that is great about Britain, and we should be
protected like a national heritage,” laughs Liam as 'Stand Up' fades into the
distance. He may well be right! The question is, are the established overlords
of our green and pleasant land ready for this particular juggernaut to be
jetisoned into the middle of Constable’s finest.
© Martin James, November 2009