
The
Prodigy - Invaders Must Die (Take Me To The Hospital)
Published:
musicOMH,
February 2009
Original
article:
http://www.musicomh.com/albums/prodigy-3_0209.htm
With
Keith Flint and Maxim gone, a lukewarm reception for 2004's
Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned, their record deal with
XL over and a greatest hits compilation and tour that often
forms the final nail in the coffin of many artists' careers,
it seemed that the Prodigy's star may have been fading.
Perhaps
this is an overly bleak take on matters as both Always...
and the singles compilation hit Number 1 and the tour saw
a band that were clearly still at the peak of their powers
as a live act. But you couldn't help feeling that while
Liam Howlett is the creative force, or indeed the prodigy,
behind the music, the Prodigy had lost something when it
became a one-man band.
But
it was on that reuniting live tour that the three core members,
who'd started out raving together as mates in Essex nearly
20 years ago, found their spark was rekindled to collaborate
again. Invaders Must Die is the result and if there are
those out there that think the Prodigy are a spent force
then this energetic, acerbic assault on the senses will
serve as a timely denial of such notions.
The
Fat Of The Land may have given the band their greatest commercial
success but creatively what had gone before on both Experience
and Music For The Jilted Generation was far more varied,
enriching and challenging. Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned
may have had its moments and is far from a poor album, but
Invaders Must Die sees the Prodigy returning to what they
do best: hard, aggressive dance music that is guaranteed
to grab a crowd by the throat and force them to move.
The
title track gets it all going. Its granite-like beats, squealing
hook and grinding guitar riff kick off an album that is
unrelenting, hard as nails and unwilling to bend to expectation
or convention. Lead single Omen follows and even has a singalong
chorus, but that is placed in the midst of nosebleed-inducing
beats thundering down and the kind of manic synth sounds
the Prodigy first made their name with.
The
album contains flashbacks to every phase of the band so
far, from the rave stabs and helium skat of the fantastic
Take Me To The Hospital and the old skool breaks and speaker
destroying bassline of Warriors Dance to the rock heavy
riffs of Colours and Keith Flint's trademark sneering on
headbanger Run With The Wolves. The sampling of Outlander's
Vamp on World's On Fire will give many an old white-gloved
raver cause to grin, but rockers and ravers should be equally
pleased with the album overall. One criticism could be that
there really is no let-up to the aural onslaught, but if
you prefer more sedate sounds you probably wouldn't buy
a Prodigy album, would you?
The
psychedelic big band finale of Stand Up exemplifies above
all that even after almost two decades, this is a band still
willing to plough their own furrow, try out new ideas and
flick the finger to anyone who expects them to retread old
ground.
As
a distillation of the pure energy, passion and dancefloor
destroying that has always run through Howlett's productions,
Invaders Must Die could possibly be the Prodigy's best album
yet. A full on party album guaranteed to appeal to fans
of any phase of the band's evolution and proof that there's
more than just life in the old dog yet, there's a full-on
warehouse rave.
A
statement for all of the limp new rave pretenders to pack
up and fuck off, a return to form rarely sounded or felt
so exciting.
-
Ian Roullier |