This is definitely The Prodigy. I first heard it on a free cassette in the mid 90s. It was supposed to be on Jilted Generation but they couldn't fit it in. He spent a lot of time cutting up drum loops and splicing them together to create this.
Jilted was a perfect prodigy album. No removing or changing any tunes. But I do love Rhythm Of Live but it still got a release on the B side to One Love in 1993. I know still no We Eat Rhythm release but the other tracks were better.
Well, It is my fav, but I'll agree with Liam himself, that One Love and Full Throttle could've been removed and swaped for other track, or two, like Scienide, or We Eat Rhythm as One Love had to be edited, while Liam wanted the full version and a bit different mix of it and with Full Throttle he had to reverse titular sample
I've been a fan my whole life and I never heard this before now. Thank you. It's not a really good Prodigy track (the Jungle Mix is much better), but it is lovely to hear an old track for the first time in 2021... Even if it is all over the place :)
@@8mu- Oh, fancy to see you here B) The proper quality mix of it would be great on Jilted in the place of Full Throttle with Scienide in the place of One Love, as Liam claims, that nowadays he would just remove those two as they were already released together in their full glory instead of edited mixes B)
"When Liam Howlett came to the cutting room for the final phase in the album production he realised that all the tracks he had originally planned for wouldn't fit onto a CD, so "One Love" had to be edited which resulted in a cut of approximately 1 minute and 41 seconds, "The Heat (The Energy)" was slightly cut, and the track called "We Eat Rhythm" was left out. "We Eat Rhythm" was later released on a free cassette with Select magazine in October 1994 entitled Select Future Tracks. Liam Howlett later asserted that he felt the edit of "One Love" and "Full Throttle" could have been dropped from the track listing." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_for_the_Jilted_Generation#Content
The maddest thing is that Liam did this track with 2 x Roland W30's and hardware samplers. No Ableton, no computer screens etc...
Just another reason Liam Howlett is the prodigy
This is a rare Prodigy song. It's from the mid nineties and was released on a free tape on a magazine.
This is definitely The Prodigy. I first heard it on a free cassette in the mid 90s. It was supposed to be on Jilted Generation but they couldn't fit it in. He spent a lot of time cutting up drum loops and splicing them together to create this.
Jilted generation could’ve been a double album with all the material he had.
original version, which this is, was released in '95 as part of a free cassette that came with the NME, still have the cassette 😁
Yes, I had that tape and magazine, it's still around somewhere. Think there might have been a Jonny L tune on it also
❤️👍
I’ve got it on Future Tracks. Free cassette with Select magazine.
Jilted was a perfect prodigy album. No removing or changing any tunes. But I do love Rhythm Of Live but it still got a release on the B side to One Love in 1993. I know still no We Eat Rhythm release but the other tracks were better.
Well, It is my fav, but I'll agree with Liam himself, that One Love and Full Throttle could've been removed and swaped for other track, or two, like Scienide, or We Eat Rhythm as One Love had to be edited, while Liam wanted the full version and a bit different mix of it and with Full Throttle he had to reverse titular sample
beautiful driving conga-sounds. smashing!! ;)
never heard this before, thanks for the upload
2:49 Best part
можно слушать вечно
good track :)))) thanks a lot :)))
@sebazzzian This is a genuine Prodigy track
I've been a fan my whole life and I never heard this before now. Thank you. It's not a really good Prodigy track (the Jungle Mix is much better), but it is lovely to hear an old track for the first time in 2021... Even if it is all over the place :)
Not a good track? Mate it’s a belter!
@@8mu- Oh, fancy to see you here B)
The proper quality mix of it would be great on Jilted in the place of Full Throttle with Scienide in the place of One Love, as Liam claims, that nowadays he would just remove those two as they were already released together in their full glory instead of edited mixes B)
@@YershJRSZ I like Full Throttle 😅 One Love can go though, always felt that had a b-side vibe to it anyway, and dont tell Liam, but I often Skip it 🤫
I agree, the track is simply bad. It sounds like a B side Chemical Brothers remix from 1993. Jungle remix is much much better.
Ну вот где ты ее достал!? Крутбл!!!!!!1
Согласен что раритет
is it legal to call track prodigy when it is not a prodigy track ?
"When Liam Howlett came to the cutting room for the final phase in the album production he realised that all the tracks he had originally planned for wouldn't fit onto a CD, so "One Love" had to be edited which resulted in a cut of approximately 1 minute and 41 seconds, "The Heat (The Energy)" was slightly cut, and the track called "We Eat Rhythm" was left out. "We Eat Rhythm" was later released on a free cassette with Select magazine in October 1994 entitled Select Future Tracks. Liam Howlett later asserted that he felt the edit of "One Love" and "Full Throttle" could have been dropped from the track listing."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_for_the_Jilted_Generation#Content
you dont even know anything about the prodigy....
TBH I realy want to se what if he will remove full throttle and one love and put Rhythm of Life and We eat rhythm instead :D
Atomic Elbow I can see why but wasn’t rhythm of life an unofficial remix of their everyone feel love remix?
I wuda had this over speed way, maybe with the base abit heavier, but yeah
FAKE
It's not
Okay.... If you say so.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_for_the_Jilted_Generation#Content ;)
You don't know anything about Prodigy :D
Dumbass
Goofball, Liam at his most creative is all over this track!!