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The Prodigy - Fat of the Land (CD)

Album Details: Fat of the Land

Release Date:07/01/1997
Label:Maverick
UPC:093624660620

Other Available Formats: Fat of the Land

User Reviews: Fat of the Land

  • Overall:

    A true hard dance music

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Nov 13, 2001

    There is no word to inteprete your feeling to this album. So far, I only manage to say that:" This is the album of the year 97". Sensation & heartbeating. Cool man! They are entitled as Master of Future Dance.

  • Overall:

    A must have!

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jan 31, 2000

    This is an album you must have!
    there is no words which can describe the impacts this album (and all other material of The Prodigy) has on me.
    for more info please check my site: www.nekosite.co.uk

Pro Reviews: Fat of the Land

  • All Music Guide

    Few albums were as eagerly anticipated as The Fat of the Land, the Prodigy's long-awaited follow-up to Music for the Jilted Generation. By the time of its release, the group had two number one British singles with "Firestarter" and "Breathe," and had begun to make inroads in America. The Fat of the Land was touted as the album that would bring electronica/techno to a wide American audience; in Britain, the group already had a staggeringly large following that was breathlessly awaiting the album. The Fat of the Land falls short of masterpiece status, but that isn't because it doesn't deliver. Instead, it 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 "Firestarter," especially when Flint is singing. Still, Howlett is an inventive producer, and he can make empty songs like "Smack My Bitch Up" and "Serial Thrilla" kick wi...th a visceral power, but he is at his best on the funky hip-hop of "Diesel Power" (which is driven by an excellent Kool Keith rap) and "Funky Shit," as well as the mind-bending neo-psychedelia of "Narayan" (featuring guest vocals by Crispian Mills of Kula Shaker) and the blood-curdling cover of L7's "Fuel My Fire," which features vocals by Republica's Saffron. All those guest vocalists mean something -- Howlett is at his best when he's writing for himself or others, not his group's own vocalists. "Firestarter" and all of its rewrites capture the fire of the Prodigy at its peak, and the remaining songs have imagination that give the album weight. The Fat of the Land doesn't have quite enough depth or variety to qualify as a flat-out masterpiece, but what it does have to offer is damn good. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Prodigy

The Prodigy navigated the high wire, balancing artistic merit and mainstream visibility with more flair than any electronica act of the 1990s. Ably defeating the image-unconscious attitude of most electronic artists in favor of a focus on nominal frontman Keith Flint, the group crossed over to the mainstream of pop music with an incendiary live experience that approxima... Read more