What Evil Lurks
1991
The fastest selling dance album in the UK, which sold a record 317,000 copies in its first week. In the USA it sold more than 200,000 in its first week. The album entered the chart at No. 1 in a total of 20 countries, including the USA, the United Kingdom, Canada, Austria and Norway.
UK chart position: 1
In the US Wal-Mart refused to sell FOTL because of the track names. So Prodigy's US record company Maverick agreed to censor them on the sleeve. Liam was very pissed about that ofcourse.
The Fat of the Land is the third studio album by the Prodigy, released on 30 June 1997 through XL Recordings. The album received critical acclaim and topped the UK Albums Chart and the US Billboard 200. It managed to reach number 1 in 22 countries in the first week including the UK where it is one fastest selling records ever.
The album has since gone double platinum, selling over 2 million copies in the U.S. In 1999, the album entered the Guinness World Records as the fastest-selling UK dance album and was also nominated for Best Alternative Music Album at the 40th Annual Grammy Awards 1998, but lost to Radiohead's OK Computer.
The album is included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. The album was also nominated for the 1997 Mercury Music Prize. It has sold over 10 million copies worldwide as of 2019.
While Liam Howlett is generally responsible for the compositions and Maxim is featured on two tracks, this is the first record to include contributions by Keith Flint, who provides vocals on four of the songs and co-wrote three songs, including the two biggest hits, both of which reached No. 1 on the UK singles chart. He is also the vocalist on a cover of the L7 song "Fuel My Fire" (from the 1994 album Hungry for Stink). The Fat of the Land album cover featured an image of a Blackback crab and a new logo, dropping "The" and adding an ant silhouette. The album title comes from the old English phrase 'living off the fat of the land', which means living well or being wealthy.
Among the most anticipated releases of 1997, The Prodigy's third full-length album is a bulldozing rock-techno hybrid. But while the guitar/samples/hyper-beats mosaic that made "Firestarter" an MTV breakout are found in every nook and cranny of this album, the overall building blocks are far more diverse, making it a tangible melting pot of pre-millennium pop styles.
There's a definite hip-hop element here. "Diesel Power," which features quality mic control by Kool Keith (of Ultramagnetic MCs and Dr. Octagon fame), is new-style hip-hop sculpture, applying techno and acid-house textures to apocalyptic ends. Both "Funky Shit" and "Smack My Bitch Up" are throbbing dance-floor ejaculations wrapped around, respectively, Beastie Boys and De La Soul refrains. Kula Shaker's Crispin Mills adds vocals to an Eastern-influenced trance workout called "Narayan. " All this adds up to proof positive that THE FAT OF THE LAND is just the tip of the iceberg.
The initial shock was a real surprise, you know. Definitely surprised. We were really happy because it just confirmed what we always thought. We knew it would work in the U.S. It worked everywhere else. There's no reason why it shouldn't. So we were just really happy. We were shocked, to be honest. We knew it was gonna go in to the top 10 and possibly in the top 5, judging on the amount of sales we did in that week and stuff. But, I mean, to go into #1, maybe people will take us seriously.
It was about one in the morning. Richard [Russell] from XL [XL-Recordings, the English label the group is signed to] phoned me up and he told me. I think I spent like about an hour phoning people around, just saying "Yeah, what'd you think about that?"
We want to distance ourselves from it, to be honest. We're wise to hype. We've been doing this for seven years now. We know if something's hyped up too much and it hasn't got any substance then it falls flat on its face. To be honest, after being at #1, I think this helps a lot. A lot of people will take us seriously now. It's almost like we had to have that to let people realize that we're not about hype.
The Chemical Brothers did pretty well to get to #14 in the American charts. But at the end of the day when you actually look at the quantity of records sold, it isn't a great deal, to be honest. It's like 200,000 the first week. We sold twice as many in England in the first week. It's like not that many records, to be honest.
We were really pleased to be at #1. We were surprised. Everyone in England gets the impression that in the American market you need a million records to be at #1. The market isn't like what it used to be; it isn't the same. Two hundred thousand records [in one week] is not that many. You don't expect it to be #1. Number one in itself helps us, you know.
- Liam Howlett
Ever wondered why 'The Fat Of The Land' was delayed? Liam has admitted in a several interviews that the main cause of the late arrival of Fat Of The Land was due to the game 'Tomb Raider'.
The fastest selling dance album in the UK is The Fat of the Land (1997) by Prodigy, which sold a record 317,000 copies in its first week. In the USA it sold more than 200,000 in its first week. The album entered the chart at No. 1 in a total of 20 countries, including the USA, the United Kingdom, Canada, Austria and Norway. Source: 'The Guinness 1999 Book of World Records'
For introducing Kool Keith to Liam.
In the album booklet the following text was spread over its pages.
Steel?
We have no butter,
but I ask you
Would you rather have butter or guns?
Shall we import lard or steel?
Let me tell you
Preparedness makes us powerful.
Butter merely makes us fat.
Lard?
The booklet doesn’t mention it, but the text is taken from a 1936 speech by Nazi official Hermann Göring. It was the introduction of his 5 year economic plan, resulting in Nazi Germany’s transformation to a huge military force.
Of course, this raised lots of controversy. Liam Howlett had this to say:
Do you know where that came from? This is actually like a Nazi quote. It’s like Hermann Goering, Hitler’s right hand man. This is the quote he made during the war. Now a lot of people have picked up on this in England. You can imagine what the press have been like, “Oh the Prodigy are Nazis…” All this crap, you know. To simply answer that question: yes, the quote is a Nazi quote and no, we’re not Nazis. Obviously we’ve got two black guys in the band. So to even suggest that is totally brainless anyway. To be honest, that quote is like me using a sample. I look upon that quote as like a sample. I take it out of its original context, put it in my own context and it means something completely different. I look at that quote and that’s like a b-boy quote. That’s like someone out of a hip-hop scene could have said that. And that’s the reason I used it ’cause it’s a totally different context. It’s like a completely different thing. And it just works well. It has power and it has the right message for what we want. It has nothing to do with what it’s originally about.
Originally, the cover was going to be a doner kebab being roasted on a stick and branded with the name of the album. XL designer Alex Jenkins shot the image, then Howlett changed his mind at the last moment, forcing Jenkins to source the dancing crab photo, which he faxed to Howlett to approve. The claw was increased in size, making it look like the crab is sticking two fingers up to the world.
Included in Rolling Stone's Essential Recordings of the 90's.
Rolling Stone (05/13/1999)
Included in Q Magazine's 50 Best Albums of 1997.
Q (01/01/1998)
Ranked #20 on Spin's list of the Top 20 Albums Of The Year.
Spin (01/01/1998)
Ranked #29 in the Village Voice's 1997 Pazz & Jop Critics' Poll.
Village Voice (02/24/1998)
3.5 Stars (out of 5) - ...packs all the visceral punch of rock at its incendiary best....populist electro punk that serves as a perfect Brit counterpart to the industrial noir of Trent Reznor or the jittery soundscapes of Wu-Tang Clan's RZA...
Rolling Stone Magazine (08/07/1997)
7 (out of 10) - ...maybe the best fusion of pseudo-rap and pseudo-punk since Rage Against The Machine...
Spin (09/01/1997)
...the first block rockin' post-Oasis amyl-techno-punk album....as well as reaffirming their position as head-warping slam-kings of the pop underground, [FAT OF THE LAND] seems set to be the ultimate party soundtrack both sides of the ocean...
New Musical Express (06/28/1997)
...Prodigy leader and beat master Liam Howlett has made THE FAT OF THE LAND harder, more subterranean, more diverse, and more vocal-oriented than previous Prodigy records....This is dance music not about release but aggression, making it ideal party music for the end of the century... - Rating: B
Entertainment Weekly (07/11/1997)
12 Jun 2023 | NME
The Prodigy announce 2023 UK tour and tell us what the future holds
01 Jul 2022 | The Independent
Firestarters not welcome: How The Prodigy’s The Fat of the Land fell out of favour
30 Jun 2020 | Mix Mag
10 iconic The Prodigy moments
06 Mar 2019 | Kerrang!
Their Law: How The Prodigy Breathed New Life Into Rock
04 Mar 2019 | Billboard
Keith Flint of The Prodigy Was the Face and Voice of America’s ’90s Electronic Boom
30 Jun 2017 | Loud and quiet
We were so busy being scared by The Prodigy’s ‘The Fat of The Land’ that nobody noticed how utterly corny it was
18 May 2015 | MusicTech magazine
Landmark Productions: The Prodigy – The Fat of the Land
04 Jul 2014 | Dazed
Liam Howlett: Lord of the Dance
04 Dec 2012 | MTV Hive
Dissecting the Prodigy: 25 Samples Behind 'The Fat of the Land'
01 Jul 2002 | BPM
Prodigy Unauthorized
15 May 1999 | Toronto Sun
Decline of the Jedi Knights
01 Jan 1999 | Select
Liam Howlett, Chief Spokesman For The Jilted Generation
01 Jan 1999 | Power On
Catching Up With The Prodigy
01 Dec 1997 | Q Magazine
Essex Boys Come First
01 Oct 1997 | CPYU
IN THE HOTLIGHT: The Prodigy - Making music for the new millemnium
01 Sep 1997 | Select
This is dangerous
21 Aug 1997 | The Rolling Stone
Hot Phenom Prodigy
14 Aug 1997 | Metro
High-Fat Content: Can the Prodigy reignite America's passion for rock & roll?
01 Aug 1997 | VOX
Crash and Burn!
01 Aug 1997 | Soundi
Likaista musiikkia puhtaalta maaseudulta
31 Jul 1997 | The Independent
The Prodigy: How we plan to destroy ourselves
26 Jul 1997 | Kerrang!
Prodigy Take on the World
19 Jul 1997 | Electronic Telegraph
We don't want to be liked
10 Jul 1997 |
Take America - Take The World
05 Jul 1997 | Kerrang!
Crop Killers
30 Jun 1997 | Mojo
Burning Down the House
28 Jun 1997 | NME
Funky Shit Happens
28 Jun 1997 | NME
Selected LP, The Fat of The Land
01 Jun 1997 | Rockin' On
The Fat Of The Land advert
21 May 1997 | NME
Never Mind The Bullocks!
01 Jan 1997 | The Guardian
About The Fat Of The Land!
01 Jan 1997 | Hot Press
Keith Flint interview
20 Nov 1997 | Toronto Sun
Prodigy's Land breaks new ground
01 Nov 1996 | Future Music
Favourite 50 - 1 Korg Prophecy
01 Jan 1996 | NME
Prodigy Plump Up The Volume!
01 Dec 1999 | Rock & Folk
The Fat of the Land review
13 Aug 1997 | Citypages.com
Rave Right - Fascist Firestarters?: Prodigy's rock & roll revolution.
01 Aug 1997 | Rock & Folk
Le grand débat techno
05 Jul 1997 | Electronic Telegraph
Rock Records: Prodigy The Fat of the Land (XL).
01 Jul 1997 | Mix Mag
In Fat Of The Land - Mixmag Album of The Month
01 Jul 1997 | Jam! Showbiz
Fat of the Land
01 Jul 1997 | The Rolling Stone
The Fat Of The Land review
01 Jul 1997 | Keskisuomalainen
Megaa & anarkiaa
01 Jan 1997 | Spin Magazine
Review: Prodigy – Fat of the Land
What Evil Lurks
1991
Charly
1991
Everybody In The Place
1991
Fire
1992
Experience
1992
Out of Space
1992
WInd It Up
1993
One Love
1993
No Good (Start The Dance)
1994
Music For The Jilted Generation
1994
Voodoo People
1994
Poison
1995
Firestarter
1996
Breathe
1996
Smack My Bitch Up
1997
Prodigy Present: The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One
1999
The Prodigy Experience - Expanded: Remixes & B-sides
2001
Baby's Got A Temper
2002
Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned
2004
Girls
2004
Hotride
2004
Spitfire
2005
Their Law: The Singles 1990–2005
2005
Voodoo People / Out Of Space
2005
Back To Mine
2006
More Music For The Jilted Generation
2008
Invaders Must Die
2009
Omen
2009
Warrior's Dance
2009
Take Me To The Hospital
2009
Invaders Must Die EP
2009
The Added Fat EP
2012
Nasty
2015
Wild Frontier
2015
The Day Is My Enemy
2015
Ibiza
2015
The Night Is My Friend EP
2015
Need Some1
2018
No Tourists
2018
Light Up The Sky
2018
The Fat Of The Land 25th Anniversary - Remixes
2023
World's on Fire
2011
Big set of The Prodigy stickers. 15 different designs (2 of each) and total of 30 stickers. Sticker sizes vary from 9 cm to 3,5 cm. Order here >