30th June 1997, 2 x 12”, XL-Recordings, XLLP 121
30th June 1997, CD, XL-Recordings XLCD 121
30th June 1997, Cassette, XL-Recordings, XLMC 121
Magic Stone / Avex Trax & XL-Recordings, MED-188
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. It was also nominated for a 1998 Grammy for Best Rock Album. 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
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