Electronic Sound May 2015 (Regular Edition) | Page 16

THE PRODIGY of old school rave, dub reggae and punk. In many ways, ‘The Day is My Enemy’ is the angry twin to the ‘Invaders Must Die’ party. It sounds very much a part of the Prodigy canon, a logical next step in their story.  Indeed, the album reveals a clear sonic development. The tracks are more inherently experimental and that rock edge has become enveloped into the electronic warfare. Interestingly, listening to the band’s back catalogue, the only album that seems out of place now is ‘The Fat Of The Land’. It’s almost too laboured, as if Liam knew what he was after but couldn’t quite get there.  ‘The Day is My Enemy’ is that album, the one he was aiming for back in 1997, a record on which all those opposing sounds and ideas, the contradictions between the studio producer and the live band, the conflicts between rock and rave, finally, fully, come together. A sum of the whole that is significantly more than its parts. And it’s a bloody angry whole at that. “It’s not me personally that’s angry, it’s just that’s how I like our music to be,” he laughs. “I see music as a form of attack, but it has to attack in the right way. It has to drop into some kind of dopeness for it to be The Prodigy. I hate manufactured anger. I didn’t try and make it like that, it’s just what it is. “It’s like with ‘Invaders’, that had a kind of a party vibe. It was more old school sounding because I guess it was a sonic representation of where we were at that time. I guess us getting back together had a positive vibe. The majority of the tunes on this album, even the old school ones, have an urgency about them. They really sum up the band perfectly for me.” From the fox on the record cover and its connotations of outsiderness to the way that the production flies in the face of the contemporary dance music climate of EDM, ‘The Day Is My Enemy’ is a totally cohesive statement that comes with an ideology of opposition. The clearest and heaviest assault is ‘Ibiza’, a track that finds Liam collaborating with Sleaford Mods and pointing the finger at the single-minded hedonism of the EDM generation. “People have got lazy,” explains Liam. “It’s all presets on a synth plugin. This album is us saying, ‘We know what’s going on and we’ve got something to say’. But it’s not like us saying that we’re better than anyone, it’s done with a fucking punch and a wink. Why should we keep quiet? We have to speak our minds.  “Thing is, we cannot be put in the same category as those fucking EMD twats. I need to have a very clear separation so no one can be confused. We’ve got our own form of electronic music, we always have done. We’re nothing to do with the EDM thing because that’s just about going out and partying without anything else. There’s much more to The Prodigy. I think you can dive into any of the tracks on this album and go, ‘Yeah, that’s The Prodigy’, but these EDM divs are all the same. How long can it keep going? Same old bollocks over and over again. You can’t tell some of ‘em apart.” Liam’s frustration at the EDM scene runs deep. To him, it is the product of a lack of ambition in musical terms. He believes a lot of EDM producers don’t have the ability to step beyond the confines of the genre and the limitations of a world of presets and plug-ins. “People don’t push it enough,” he continues. “It annoys me when you know what a new electronic record is going to sound like before you’ve heard it. It has to be authentic in the analogue input.