25
Feb
09

Album Review: The Prodigy – Invaders Must Die

Artist: The Prodigy
Album: Invaders Must Die
Genre: Electronic / Dance
Label: R.E.D. Distribution
Year: 2009
Rating: 70%

To understand the significance of Invaders Must Die, one must first consider The Prodigy’s relationship with its many imitators. The UK act’s first three albums literally changed the landscape of electronic music and did so in completely different ways. Prodigy’s debut album, Experience, was a funky collection of rave anthems while the sophomore LP, Music for the Jilted Generation, provided a more mature and diverse collection of electronic tracks unafraid to draw on cinematic and rock influences. Fat of the Land broke with the underground to appeal to American audiences through the techno-punk styling of tracks like “Firestarter” and “Breathe” while keeping funky with tracks like “Diesel Power”.

The Prodigy - Invaders Must Die

Each of Prodigy’s first LP’s spawned copy-cat acts who thought they could recreate or better composer Liam Howlett’s magic by stringing together a few repetitive female vocals over some crunchy, saturated beats and fat sliding analog bass lines. Sure, all the sonic elements of Experience/Jilted/Fat were present but the outcomes were typically mechanical and uninspired, typically aspiring to no better than being background music on b-grade action movies geared to teenage boys.

So, ignoring the catastrophe that was Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned, Prodigy are back to show the rest of the boys how it’s done right? Somewhat. In a strange twist of fate, the imitators seem to have become The Prodigy’s inspiration, as the majority of the tracks on Invaders Must Die are structurally indistinguishable from the electronic generica that emerged in Howlett’s shadow during the 1990’s.

Each track essentially consists of the following: kick ass buzzing bass line, rah-rah vocal samples, a standard dance drum beat popularized at least a decade ago and a one signature old school stab/sample. The latter, so legend has it, was an attempt to recreate the anthem-rave vibe from Experience that first put Prodigy on the map. All the earmarks are present, for sure: the opening title track starts with a fuzzed guitar over a building bass line then hits hard with an aggressive electro-guitar wall of club-friendly energy. “Omen” keeps the energy high by superimposing Keith’s foreboding chants onto xylophone-accented analog breaks, while “Thunder” initially lulls the listener with a dub-influenced intro that quickly gives way to what is essentially the same high octane breakbeats as the last two tracks (albeit with ragga vocals).

The album highlight is “Warrior’s Dance” which easily lives up to its online buzz by recreating the 1992 rave breakbeat vibe with hardcore stabs and infectious female vocals.
The closing track, “Stand-Up” is a distinguishingly down-tempo track written in the style of “Molotov Bitch”. It is also the only track where Howlett truly takes a risk by sampling an R&B horn section for the head-nodding hook.

As expected, the production is top notch – neatly sampled, immaculately mixed and without any sharp diversions in its sequencing. Paradoxically, Invaders Must Die suffers from its mechanical perfection and predictability. Apart from Warrior’s Dance and Stand-Up, there is very little separating these tracks sonically from each other, though elements from Prodigy’s ground-breaking work can be found randomly distributed in all of them. Coming from the standard Myspace sensation producer with a copy of FL Studio, this album would be an A- effort. Coming from the creator of “Poison” and “Weather Experience”, Invaders Must Die sounds recycled and overly conservative. Worth your money for the nostalgia, but don’t expect to be blown away.

Track Listing:

1. Invaders Must Die
2. Omen
3. Thunder
4. Colours
5. Take Me To The Hospital
6. Warrior’s Dance
7. Run With The Wolves
8. Omen Reprise
9. World’s On Fire
10. Piranha
11. Stand Up

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2 Responses to “Album Review: The Prodigy – Invaders Must Die”


  1. 1 mike Feb 25th, 2009 at 11:15 am

    duh u cant make shit like that is FL Studio! and its supposed to be nostalgic!

  2. 2 b-psycho Feb 28th, 2009 at 11:06 pm

    Spot on, basically. It does sound like they’re following their own imitators. Kind of reminds me of how those George Clinton / P-funk all-stars albums that went double wood in the 90′s sounded like they were influenced by Dr Dre as much as he was influenced by their old stuff.

    Also, a couple songs sound like whoever mixed/mastered them has a problem hearing high frequencies, because they’re hyped to ridiculousness. I have to turn down the 16k range in Winamp to listen to the title track w/o my ears hurting.

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