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Тема: Журнал Dazed & Confused: публикации на 20-летие Music For The Jilted Generation (Просмотрено 1060 раз)
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Журнал Dazed & Confused: публикации на 20-летие Music For The Jilted Generation
# 04 июля 2014, 14:50:19
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Статья про эпоху Music For The Jilted Generation
http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/20679/1/a-soundtrac...
Nineteen ninety-four. John Major’s Tory government is engaged in a shambolic parody of the party’s recent history. First there was Black Wednesday; then the rebellion over Europe; cash for questions; “sleaze” and record unemployment. Elsewhere, Damian Hirst is putting dead sheep in formaldehyde. A fine symbol of the times: static, complacent. To quote James Joyce, “a cracked looking glass for servants”. July momentarily shrugs off this malaise. A twenty-three-year-old from Braintree, Essex called Liam Howlett releases an album called Music For The Jilted Generation with his band, the Prodigy.
A classically trained pianist and former-hip-hop DJ, Howlett has turned his back on the ecstasy-inspired dance sounds that characterised his band’s 1992 debut, Experience, in favour of the dark, mechanical strains emanating from Berlin’s techno scene through labels like Tresor. Unlike the charts filled with pop house acts there’s are no funky baselines here, just frenetic beats, klaxons, and a pervasive atmosphere of doom. Unexpectedly, the nation warms to it, and the album goes straight to number one. How did this ever happen?
Clues are scarce and obvious symbols are misleading. In an interview with the NME from October 1994, Howlett denied the resonance the album title had with his disenfranchised cohorts and downplayed the politics of single, ‘Their Law’ – a track about the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act, the law that killed the free party scene.
“It was a friend who came up the title,” he said. “I had something like 'Music for the Cool Young Juvenile'. We were [even] going to call it 'Music for Joy Riders.’ We don't read anything into our music. So when someone says to us, 'Are you a political band?' I mean, we're not. OK we drop 'Their Law' because the Criminal Justice Bill is something we feel strong about. But dance music is just about the buzz. It's not about being depressed about politics.”
Major might have sounded the death knell for rave with his bill, but Howlett was tiring of it anyway. ‘‘I’d become bored, it was just so different to what it had been four years earlier,” he told me in our recent interview.
In truth, rave had lost momentum too. Beginning in the late 1980s, it started as an offshoot of acid house, aping the countercultural ethics of the 1960s with mass impromptu “happenings” in warehouses and fields rather than licensed clubs. The years 1988 and 1989 were affectionately known as “the second summer of love”, and it even partially inspired Beatnik-esque theoretical literature such as 1991’s The Temporary Autonomous Zone by the American anarchist, Hakim Bey.
Major might have sounded the death knell for rave, but Howlett was tiring of it anyway. ‘‘I’d become bored, it was just so different to what it had been four years earlier,” he told me in our recent interview.
In it, Bey argued that by suspending the normal state of relations, these non-hierarchical free parties represented a fundamental challenge to the status quo, and that their impermanence was their revolutionary strength since they refused to impose any structural restrictions on individuals. Of course, the reality with regards to rave was different. Rather than being run by radical autonomists, these parties were promoted by an increasingly small number of entrepreneurs such as Fantazia’s James Perkins, who became one of rave’s first millionaires.
By 1994, the scene had therefore strayed a long way from its idealistic roots. Elsewhere, the music started to divide on aesthetic lines too, with its signature sound of hardcore breakbeat separating into the dark, bass-laden noise of jungle on the one hand, and the crisp, analogue formula of house and techno on the other; a schism so deep that it remained unchanged until dubstep arguably reunited them in the early 2000s.
Nonetheless, dance culture was also turning against the Prodigy, too. Back in August 1992, Mixmag ran a feature arguing the group’s seminal anthem, “Charly Says” had finished rave off by making it mainstream. Enraged, Howlett sought his revenge by torching a copy of the offending issue at the end of the video to “Fire”. Arguably, this was a brave move for such a relatively new band at a time when print media was still powerful. Despite this, such sentiments only deepened their imposed exile from the scene that spawned them. They were out of the club.
A month later, however, Howlett was back for one last job. After the fallout of this quarrel, he’d been inspired to prove his detractors wrong by writing straight-up underground hit, ‘One Love’; the first from Music. Released as two singles, its conventional rave sound of sampled breakbeats, acid basslines and tribal choruses topped the white label charts and settled the score once and for all. As a stand-alone document from the period, it was nothing exceptional, and certainly gave no hint as to the band’s new direction. But as a gesture, its mimicry of rave’s formula bordered on satirical pastiche, and marked their departure from the movement rather than their return. No love lost, etc.
Music, on the contrary, was anything but an ironic statement. At seventy-eight-minutes long, featuring 13-tracks – four of which were hit singles – plus an ambient “narcotics suite”, it was a white whale of an album for a band from any background, let alone a banished dance act. The comparison to Moby Dick rings true. In 1947 the American poet Charles Olsen wrote a study of Herman Melville’s classic entitled, Call Me Ishmael, in which he contended that Moby Dick was not just one novel but two; one about Ahab’s pursuit of the whale, the other concerned with the narrator, Ishmael’s poetic meditations on whaling.
In much the same way, on Music, Howlett weaves two competing impulses to similar effect. First, there are the four singles, “One Love”, “No Good (Start the Dance)”, “Voodoo People” and “Poison”, which act as material studies on the music business. Much like “One Love”, “No Good” also has satirical urges, featuring a mock Eurodance vocal and a video in which dancer Keith Flint attends a warehouse rave and goes mad.
“Voodoo People” follows the same route. Using a guitar hook borrowed from Nirvana’s “Very Ape”, alongside a pumping rhythm, it posits dance music’s acolytes (“Voodoo, woodoo, what don’t dare do people”) as mystical practitioners, capable of transcending genre limitations imposed by shallow marketeers. Finally, there’s “Poison”, a half speed drum n bass track, spoofing jungle’s increasingly undanceable BPMs. “You’ve got the poison, I’ve got the remedy,” sings MC Maxim Reality, implicitly referencing the group’s stance.
Next, there’s the hunt narrative, created through tracks focused on movement such as “Break & Enter”, “Full Throttle”, “Speedway (Theme from Fastlane)”, and “The Heat (The Energy)”. Mostly cinematic, hardcore numbers that peak like Giorgio Morodor’s 1977 seminal From Here To Eternity, they climax in the inertia following the completion of the chase in the groggy, drugged-out weirdness of “3 Kilos”, “Skylined” and “Claustrophobic Sting” which form the album’s concluding “narcotics suite”.
When Howlett says the record wasn’t political despite the obvious provocation of its content and title, we should take him at his word; in 1994, politics in the conventional sense must have truly seemed redundant.
Much like Ahab’s search for Moby Dick, these tracks, seemingly about dance music’s ceaseless search for greater and greater highs, express the nullity of attainment in such pursuits; while Ishmael is the only one to survive Ahab’s violent obsession, the Prodigy were one of the few acts to walk away from the rave scene unscathed. In order for their to be an ending in Moby Dick, there must be a narrative beyond Ahab’s revenge; and in order for Howlett to make Music he had to have an awareness of a future beyond the scene he started in, hence the content of his singles which make the album a coherent statement rather than a free flowing mass.
[Above] The Bunker in 1992, one of the Berlin techno clubs that sprang up after the fall of the Wall and profoundly influenced Music For The Jilted Generation
Moreover, the overarching sentiment of Music expresses the frustrations of the period with unflinching detail. Not only had the idealism driving the free party scene faded, so too had the possibility of egalitarian politics. The Soviet Union had self-combusted in 1991, neoliberals were trumpeting the triumph of capitalism, and the end of Tory-rule was nowhere insight. Therefore, when Howlett says the record wasn’t political despite the obvious provocation of its content and title, we should take him at his word; in 1994, politics in the conventional sense must have truly seemed redundant.
Nevertheless, the dark, aggressive tone of this album symbolises the despair and ennui of living in a world where the notion of emancipatory social organisation is impossible. So too does the cover. Often compared to “The Scream” by Edvard Munch, it in fact has greater similarity to the self-portraits of German sculptor Franz Xaver Messerschmidt during the period of his madness in the late 18th century. Carved from black, metallic marble, these busts show Messerschmidt with his eyes closed or blank in various states of psychological excitement, introspection and anguish, his face often caught in an expression of unending horror; a horror that the for the Prodigy was the future transformed into a terminal present after the abandonment of any conceivable utopian ambition; a horror that nonetheless bore this magnificent album.
Liam Howlett chooses the tracks that inspired rave culture's most raucous album
http://www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/20675/1/the-prodigy-select-1...
Twenty years ago this month, provocative British dance act the Prodigy released their seminal album, Music for the Jilted Generation. The follow up to their 1992 debut, Experience, which was more or less a collection of their early singles including rave anthem ‘Charley Says’, Music was arguably their first album proper.
An eclectic mix of hardcore dance, grunge and industrial, it was at once an authentic expression of 1990s postmodernism and at the same time, a completely unique album written by a band in a school of their own.
‘We’d been known as a dance act but I wanted to go beyond that with this album,’ says songwriter and producer Liam Howlett. ‘I’d become bored of the rave scene; it had become something so different to what it had been four years earlier. I remember hearing Rage Against the Machine and The Chronic by Dr Dre while on tour in America and thinking, I want some of that raw energy. So I came home and started writing with that idea in my head. I was drawing from a real mix of influences.’
Recorded at The Strong Rooms in Shoreditch under surprisingly restrained conditions (‘I wasn’t really doing any drugs then, just weed, but I got fed up with that too,’ says Howlett), it went straight to number one in the album charts, galvanised the sound they would later develop to worldwide appeal on 1996’s Fat of the Land, and boasted four classic singles.
The first two, ‘One Love’, with its distended breakbeat rhythms and ‘No Good (Start the Dance)’ which uses heavy acid sounds and a skewed soul-sample choruses, marked a departure from their previous guise but were no less fascinated by rave. However the following two, ‘Voodoo People’, which features a riff based on ‘Very Ape’ by Nirvana, and ‘Poison’, a kind of half speed gothic breakbeat, indicated a desire to split with the past completely.
‘A lot of the tunes on Music were written as a reaction to what was going on in dance music,’ says Howlett. ‘For example, 'No Good' was a response to all that shit Eurodance stuff, and 'Poison' was a backlash against jungle which seemed to be getting faster and faster. We also started making better videos during that period as well. 'No Good' was filmed under Spitalfields market and 'Voodoo People’ was shot on location with a real witch doctor casting a spell.’
Two decades later the record seems as relevant as ever. Strong, dissonant, angry, its uniqueness is confirmed the band’s lack of imitators in the years hence. Speaking from his home in London, Liam Howlett tells Dazed about the ten records that were buzzing in his ears while making it for an extra-special anniversary playlist.
‘So What Cha ‘Want’ by the Beastie Boys
This tune has so much swagger. When I heard it I knew they were back. They're a band that's always in my head when I write.
‘Bombtrack’ by Rage Against the Machine
I could have picked any number of tracks from their debut album where this joint comes from, it has so much energy, raw funk power and groove. We were in LA when it came out and it had a big effect on me when I went into the studio to write ‘Poison’ and ‘Their Law’.
‘The Ecstasy of Gold’ by Ennio Morricone
This song just keeps soaring and lifting.
‘Halleluwah’ by Can
All about the drums and groove here.
‘Papua New Guinea’ by The Future Sound of London
The last great uplifting rave tune I liked from that era. Hearing it closed a chapter of my life.
‘Welcome to the Terrordome’ by Public Enemy
One of my all time favorite hip hop bangers, it’s got it all, rhyme, flow, the lyrics and chaos – a kind of violence that gives me a buzz.
‘The Chronic’ by Dr Dre
The whole album bangs, I couldn't pick just one track because I’ve always listened to it from start to finish album, it’s so good.
‘2000 Light Years From Home’ by The Rolling Stones
I remember my head being twisted when I first heard this. We’d been doing mushrooms on our tour bus and it was the perfect soundtrack. ‘Their Satanic Majesities Second Request’ where this track is from is probably the best Stones album in my opinion.
Territorial Pissings - Nirvana
I was never a grunge fan, but this tune carried the punk spirit and energy like nothing else that was around at that time.
‘Good Livin’ by Bernard “Pretty” Purdie
The groove is so heavy I had to sample it. You can hear it on ‘3 Kilos’. So ffffrrrresh!
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minaton
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Еще - интервью с автором обложки и автором рисунка
http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/20680/1/music-for-t...
Liam Howlett’s unique mixture of German techno and raw punk attitude isn’t the only thing that’s iconic about The Prodigy’s Music for the Jilted Generation; there’s the artwork too. The cover, designed by artist Stewart Haygartth, is a shrieking metallic face that’s often compared to ‘The Scream’ by Edvard Munch, but also looks like Han Solo frozen in carbonite from Star Wars: Return of the Jedi, and is one the most striking from the period.
Inside is no less impressive, the gatefold conceived to foldout into a landscape portrait of some ravers cutting a rope bridge back to a city full of riot police and industrial decay. Painted by famous British horror and fantasy illustrator, Les Edwards, it was a farewell to rave, the scene in which Liam had forged his and one had been killed off the year of Music’s release by the government’s Criminal Justice and Public Order Act. Speaking to Stewart from his studio in east London, and Les from his home in Sussex, they explained their part in this unique document.
So, Stewart, how did you get this gig?
Stewart Haygarth: Well, I'd been making covers for XL, and already done an album and three singles for The Dylans. The label liked them so they asked me if I'd like to do one for a band called the Prodigy. I was like, “Yeah, of course.” They said they had a very specific idea of what they wanted. I was more like technician, really.
Had you heard of them?
Stewart Haygarth: Yeah, but I hadn’t really listened to them. I was into other stuff, not really dance.
And what did they want?
Stewart Haygarth: Liam had purchased this sculpted head from a market and wanted to use it on the cover, as if it was breaking through. So I went away with some props and tried to model and photograph their ideas. They didn't pass on any specific notesor guidelines, and it was an unusually straightforward experience. I just handed over the film and everyone seemed happy.
"While it's a great album and I'm very proud of it, the artwork kind of makes me cringe because I never liked it." - Stewart Haygarth
How do you feel about the cover and the record?
Stewart Haygarth: I haven't listened to the record for a while, but they were a very unique band. They didn't really fit into one specific scene. And while it's a great album and I'm very proud of it, the artwork kind of makes me cringe because I never liked it. It's not an idea I'd come up with or can relate to - it's all a bit heavy metal. At the time XL shared offices with 4AD, who made covers for bands like Cocteau Twins, Pixies and Dead Can Dance, and these were the type of covers I wanted to do. Then there were the Blur covers that feature found imagery, like the swimming woman wearing a rubber cap. I just found that sort of stuff more original.
Did you get paid much?
Stewart Haygarth: I got £400 I think, and that was that. No royalties either!
You're a successful artist in your own right, now. Has any of this work informed it?
Stewart Haygarth: When I shot the Prodigy cover I was a photographer, then later I moved into illustration and then 10-years I started doing art and design, working in light mixed media. It's all helped. You have to try different things out. Doing commercial work helps your artistic work with structure.
Music for the Jilted Generation Les Edwards
So Les, how did you go from doing fantasy illustrations to the inside sleeve for a band like the Prodigy?
Les Edwards: Well, I'd done some covers before, one for Uriah Heep and another for Monty Python. There was a cover for Metallica for their single 'Jump in the Fire', but most of those were 'second rights' IE they'd be used somewhere else first like on a book jacket and then reused as a cover.
How did they approach you?
Les Edwards: They got in touch with my agent, and told them they wanted me to do it. I didn't really know about The Prodigy at the time because I was having one of my periods of not being into music. I'd heard of them but hadn't listened to them, and I didn't really know any thing about them until I went and met them at their recording studio, where they explained what they wanted.
How were they when you met them?
Les Edwards: They were a very polite bunch of young men. The only problem was that they kept describing what they wanted in street slang, so sometimes I had no idea what they were saying.
"I don't remember the 1990s as being a particularly repressive time, but if you were Liam and Keith's age, perhaps you felt differently." - Les Edwards
What do you think the artwork is about?
Les Edwards: I'm something of an old hippy, but it seems to me to be the same message you'd heard in the 1960s, people criticising governments for being tyrannical. I don't remember the 1990s as being a particularly repressive time, but if you were Liam and Keith's age, perhaps you felt differently. Rave culture was going on, and people just disapproved. There was a bit of concern about the drug culture, but in a lot of instances, the police were so heavy handed. Things haven't changed there.
Did they play you the record?
Les Edwards: No, they just sent me a copy when it came out. I had a rough idea of what it might sound like, but no concrete ideas. I had no idea it was going to be so successful!
How do you feel about image now? There's a heavy contrast between that and the cover.
Les Edwards: I think it's very striking when you open up the sleeve, but I've always found it slightly jarring, because it's so different from the cover. I suppose they're both quite dark in a way, but I always found the decision to put those together quite strange. Then again, people seemed to like it, so good.
And what do you think about the album now?
Les Edwards: I haven't heard it for a couple of years, so I'll have to dig it out and have a listen. I've still got in on the shelf. I go through cycles of listening to music, so I dare say it'll find its way onto my MP3 player.
And did they invite you to a rave afterwards?
Les Edwards: Haha, no! But that would have been good.
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minaton
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И еще - интервью с Лиамом
http://www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/20659/1/liam-howlett-lord-of...
The Prodigy vs Beastie Boys incident at Reading (1998)
Today, Liam Howlett and his bandmates celebrate the 20th anniversary of The Prodigy's Music for the Jilted Generation, the album that marked their transformation from pilled up Essex jokers to global electronic music icons. In the last two decades, the Braintree born producer has sold over 16 million records, made a cartoon cat into a rave demi-god, gone to outer space and back again, repeatedly set fire to charts across the world, and headlined the biggest festivals in the world – culminating in a big birthday party tonight at Sonisphere. To celebrate his masterpiece, we revisit a 2009 Dazed interview in which Howlett talks about his biggest beats, dodgiest fashion choices, and why Gene Simmons should never, ever, cover The Prodigy.
Who are you?
Liam Howlett: The Prodigy. 20 years old.
What did you do yesterday?
Liam Howlett: I took my kids to school. I pride myself on that because that’s real. Infact, I put eight of the teachers on the guest list for our gig at Brixton Academy, and the day after one of them came up to me and said, ‘I’m going to look at you in quite a different light now!’ because she’d never seen the band play before. That was quite funny. I reckon the school fees will go down now.
How have you changed since the early days?
Liam Howlett: Honestly, I don’t feel any different. I haven’t mellowed out. I’ve got a bit madder. It’s all intensified.
Do you reminisce a lot?
Liam Howlett: Not really. I’ve got a really terrible memory. When I do think about how we got here, it’s mad. I remember writing hip hop tunes and then a mate took me to a rave. After that first one I told all my mates about how amazing it was, and they all called me a wanker. Then I completely turned my back on hip hop because it just wasn’t right for me. It was too much attitude and not much fun. It was fine in Essex but as soon as you ventured up to London you were fucked. One time me and my mate came to a gig under the Westway and had all of our money taken off us. I was 15 or 16 and I just thought, fuck it.
How did clubbing change your approach to music?
Liam Howlett: Going to a drug scene and dropping acid just blew my mind. Suddenly I was going out listening to music that still had beats, it was just a bit quicker. It wasn’t like I was suddenly out listening to gay house music. It had similarities to things like Big Daddy Kane, so I was able to push my own music towards that and turn up the BPM.
Did you make such hectic beats because to match your heart rate?
Liam Howlett: I think we caned it before the band started and then the caning slowed down and the band sort of took over. We realised none of us could cane it and go on stage – it just didn’t work. The drug taking slowed down. 89 and 90 were my going out raving years. That was all the heavy ecstasy taking, acid and all that. After that I calmed down a bit I was always a heavy weed smoker but only took Es every now and then. That was what led to Experience, it reflected what was going on in the music at the time.
Some of the things you were wearing back then were atrocious!
Liam Howlett: We have no qualms with agreeing with you. We take full responsibility for all the shit we wore. We can laugh at that now and we do.
Who designed all that stuff?
Liam Howlett: We did. It was rough as nuts, what did you expect? No one else is to blame, if they were to blame they would have already got the sack. We did it ourselves. We were off our tits when we did it so that’s a good excuse, init?
So how did these blokes in bad shell suits end up conquering the world?
Liam Howlett: All we wanted to do was go to the parties we’d been to as ravers. If we made it to Raindance then we’d made it. Raindance was a proper East London rave with all the best DJs, but by the time we got there we’d released ‘Charly’, and already played in front of crowds of 15,000. It was almost like we bypassed the first stage of a band. But when the rave scene died, we entered the second phase and dropped the costumes. Thank fuck. We were like a different band. We literally started again and got into a transit van around England with no money. We toured colleges and universities. It was like a new band starting. That was fun and exciting.
"We take full responsibility for all the shit we wore. We can laugh at that now and we do. We were off our tits when we did it so that’s a good excuse, init?"
You just mentioned Charly. How much of you career do you owe to that cat?
Liam Howlett: He’s had his money’s worth out of me. I was a complete acid head when I wrote that shit. I made it to play in my car after a night out. We’d all be tripping and I’d stick it on and just watch their faces in the mirror. It would do their heads in. It was a wind up. I just did it to make my mates laugh but then it took off and went somewhere else. Americans tried to read some deep meaning into it. They didn’t get it because they didn’t know who Charly was. Americans didn’t get it until the third album. Clueless, fucking clueless.
Do you regard Jilted Generation as a masterpiece?
Liam Howlett: I haven’t listened to that album in its entirety since I made it. When they played it the other night I listened to it in my car and took a detour just to take all of it in. I just couldn’t believe how long it was! There are bits that I actually can’t remember how I did it. I obviously did, but I couldn’t remember how I made the sound. That record was a reaction to everything that was going on around us, even the jungle scene. The tempo was going up and up, so I thought fuck that we’ll go down and we wrote ‘Poison’, which was a hip hop track. ‘No Good’ was a reaction to the shit Euro dance thing that was going on. It’s an angry album.
Have you mellowed with age?
Liam Howlett: No. I was 25 when I made that album and I don’t know what it is with me but I’m just as angry. I think if I wake up content then I’ll just be lazy and lose what I’m about. I’m happy with the way things are but I couldn’t tell you what I’ve been angry about. It’s just the way I am since day one. I’m just angry at what goes on around me. Although if someone was to examine my head I’m sure they’d probably say I’m really happy.
Many of your songs came to define the 90s. Do you see that as a blessing or a curse?
Liam Howlett: That’s got to be a blessing man. Better have it done then not have it done. But I think we get overlooked because of the whole Blur versus Oasis thing. We were always more underground. We weren’t involved in anything to do with Britpop, which was good because we had something different going on.
Although you did have your own feud with the Beastie Boys at Reading in 1998
Liam Howlett: Yeah! Don’t forget I was a fan of those boys. I grew up with Ill Communication, and still think it’s amazing. But I was sitting at home a day before Reading and Ad-Rock rings me up. It’s all’s friendly to begin with, then he goes to me ‘we feel that if you play your song ‘Smack Your Bitch up’, we would have to say something about that.’ And I just felt myself going red with anger. Who the fuck are you, ringing me in my house and telling me what song I can’t play! And you’re in my fucking country as well! I was like ‘alright mate, see you tomorrow' I was ready for it, I was ready to bash. Then Mike D came up to me before the gig and it booted off, this row erupted. He tried to give me some story about how a friend of his was smacked up and abused and I was like, ‘you knob, aren’t you rapping about underage girls on your first album? But I didn’t I ring you up about that!’ They’re welcome to their view, but don’t fucking ring me up and tell me not to play my tune. They basically proved they were too old at that point to even be on that stage with us. So that was that really.
Did the fallout from that track and Firestarter piss you off?
Liam Howlett: That was just a few old women complaining because Keith looked a bit scary on TV. The thing about Smack my Bitch Up was the song wasn’t getting played so we thought we’d go and make the most wild video and that’s what we did.
You don’t personally do that much in Prodigy videos.
Liam Howlett: (laughs) That’s all I can do, stand there. I look good though. That’s the band joke. That’s all I ever do. I did get the hammer out and my top off in ‘No Good’ though. And for ‘Voodoo People’ we had to run down a spider infested field in St. Lucia. That was pretty insane.
How did it feel to have a number one album in 26 countries?
Liam Howlett: I thought I was Bono. It didn’t blow my brain at the time, I was really blasé about it – it just didn’t register because it wasn’t important to us. The only thing that was important to us was playing to all these different countries, but then the live thing became more important than recording and I stopped recording for years. The momentum stopped and it’s really important to keep on edge. It was impossible to get anything together so I got really fucked off with it in 2000 and just said I’ve got to stop right now, I can’t do this anymore, I’m fed up with you guys, I’ll see you later. So I stopped. When I came off the road I wasn’t ready to go back in the studio so it was a weird situation. I didn’t want to do Fat of the Land Part Two so I fell out with the record company as well.
"Madonna wanted us to do something with her album because we were signed to her label, but nah, I didn’t want to do that. Same with U2 and David Bowie, they didn’t mean anything to me when I was young."
Did you like Keith and Maxim’s solo albums?
Liam Howlett: I didn’t speak to Keith for a year while I made Always Outnumbered. I never had a problem with Maxim it was only really Keith. There was a bit of paranoia and drug use happening, but I just knew that it had to be a beats album. It actually freed my mind up. I knew it wasn’t going to be a big record but it was a process we had to go through and we came out of it. It’s a very confusing record for a lot of people, but it’s a record that I really enjoyed doing.
Why didn’t you just become a producer for hire?
Liam Howlett: Madonna wanted us to do something with her album because we were signed to her label, but nah, I didn’t want to do that. Same with U2 and David Bowie, they didn’t mean anything to me when I was young. If Terry Hall would have come up to me and said something maybe I would have said yeah, great. Bowie is a wicked guy, I like him and I’m into him more now than I was then, but through my youth I wasn’t listening to that so it didn’t mean anything. I don’t regret it, I don’t regret anything I’ve done.
Who has done the worst cover of Firestarter?
Liam Howlett: Gene Simmons. It was fucking awful. They carbon copied the music beat by beat. If you go on to YouTube you can check it out. It was a joke. My missus is a huge KISS fan, and I was more excited abut telling her than him actually doing it. She was like, ‘you’re joking, he’s the original firestarter’. I said ‘don’t be ridiculous, there’s no way he can kick that up a notch’. When we watched it, she said, ‘oh, that’s fucking shit.’ It’s so bad.
Do you all still cane it?
Liam Howlett: Keith’s giving up everything, he doesn’t drink or nothing. He used his party tokens up a year ago. He took way too much of everything. It was just fucking ridiculous – he couldn’t keep on staying up for five days and seeing people staring back at him that weren’t there. Ridiculous mad shit. He had to stop all that.
Have you chilled out on that side of things?
Liam Howlett: No. I still party the same amount but what I’ve discovered I also like is waking up in the morning and going for a run. I’m a bit of a schizophrenic. It sorts your head out. Do it at the same time and it gives you a heart attack. As soon as it gets dark I know my head is gone and I’ll go out now but in the morning I’ll be up and out again. I just buzz off it, I buzz off them both the same.
Do you feel old in this business?
Liam Howlett: It’s kind of weird. I see all these other bands like Primal Scream. I love Primal Scream, but I’m young compared with them. I don’t feel old. I’m just doing what I do naturally. We defy time.
Out of all your newer tracks, “Warriors Dance” is the one with a real old skool Prodigy vibe to it, were you tempted to go back to the Jilted Generation sound for Invaders Must Die?
Liam Howlett: I wouldn’t want anyone to think this is any kind of retro album because it’s definitely not. We’re really happy that we’ve written something that retains what the Prodigy were at the beginning without feeling like it’s just rehashing the old ideas. That track samples an old skool track called True Faith. I still get a buzz out of going to a record shop and looking at the covers. There’s a sample on every record. This has been a prolific writing time for me. Over the last two years I’ve written more music than I’ve written in the last 10 years. I don’t know what’s happened to me. I’ve suddenly just buzzed off it.
You previously said Firestarter set a new standard for British music do you think you’re still capable of doing that?
Liam Howlett: Yeah this band is more relevant than ever. If Blur can come back without any new tunes and get on covers then I’m going to stamp on Damon Albarn’s head to get on the front cover. I’m on a mission, we’re not going to be ignored. We should be protected like national heritage cos there ain’t many other bands around like us. Oasis are the same, they get respect and they deserve respect. Maybe it’s all gone to my head, but I believe we should be revered like The Specials, Oasis, and The Sex Pistols.
Are you angling for a knighthood or something?
Liam Howlett: No, I’m not interested in that. We just want respect.
"Over the last two years I’ve written more music than I’ve written in the last 10 years."
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