The Prodigy have returned this week with their sixth studio album 'The Day Is My Enemy', a record that's loud, ferocious and up for a fight. Annoyed with electronic music being hijacked by pop stars and fakers, they're back with what could very well be their strongest work since the seminal 'Fat Of The Land' nearly 18 years ago. "It's our job to come up with a rebel soundtrack" said Liam Howlett when he spoke to Steve Lamacq on BBC 6Music this afternoon. Away from the urgent pace of much of the record, the penultimate 'Invisible Sun' delves into something hypnotic, intense and unlike anything The Prodigy have ever done before, creeping along with something that's oddly close to a Depeche Mode vibe...
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