Liam Howlett
    album title: 'Dirt Chamber Sessions Part 1'
    Track titles: The Charlatans' 'How High', Primal Scream's 'Kowalski',
    PE's 'Public Enemy Number One' mixed straight into 'Blow
    Your Head' by the JB's, Run DMC's 'Peter Piper'

    Eatimated release date: 1 February

    Liam: "Making this album was so fucking cool for me because after Mary Anne Hobbs asked
    me to do the original Breezeblock session (the album began as a radio set and has been
    radically reworked due to clearance problems) I went to my record collection and just
    listened to about 300 old tracks. That's something I haven't done for years, just listened
    to music for the sheer pleasure of it. Stuff like 'Big Apple Vol 1'. I found the whole
    thing really inspirational. It really got me thinking about different beats again and reminded
    me of why I loved the whole old-skool thing in the first place.

    "I suppose the main reason I did the mix was as an answer to all of the old-skool revial
    shit that's been going down. To me it was just shit, all these house DJs suddenly saying
    they were into hip hop. Most of those DJs aren't fit to tie phat laces let alone wear' em,
    you know what I mean?

    "When I first came to the dance scene I'd already been a hip hop DJ. I'd come first and third
    in a competition on the radio at the age of 15, so I could do all of the cutting and scratching
    and that dope shit. When I first heard dance DJs, I was like, "This is a joke, any fucker can
    beat mix," and most of these dudes weren't even doing that properly. It takes skill to scratch
    mix, I felt really over-qualified next to the dance DJs.

    "This session is just me on the decks. I did record some of it onto eight-track because I really
    wanted to get tons of tracks in like they sis with old-skool. I'd say that 95 per cent is just
    two turntables, which makes it different to most mix albums which are just done in the studio
    with no real skill. No disrespectto some of those guys, but it's just not real. My mix is real.
    I know that some people will diss me on the dance scene and still say I can't actually mix. All
    I say to that is, "Send the fuckers round!"

    "I'm keeping the artwork pretty low-key for the album. It's not supposed to be a full-scale Prodigy
    album and I don't want to people to think that it is. It's also not a stop-gap album or a cantractual
    obligation. It's more to do with my love for this music and style. The artwork is basic - a picture
    of petrol pump dials on the front and a shot of me in the studio on the back.

    "Since we played Reading, I've hardly seen Keeti or Leeroy. I only see them at parties like that
    MTV thing in Milan. Keeti's girlfriend is about to have a baby so he's not out that much just
    now. I see Keith about three times a week but I'm not surewhat he's up to... (sound of motorbike
    in the background). Actually that's Keith going past my window on his trials bike. He's always
    riding around his field on it.

    "The whole mix album has really got me fired up to record new material. I'm not saying anything
    about a new album yet, I'm just kicking a few beats around. The first thing that I want to do
    is record the ultimate '90s punk anthem - just to capture that spirit and energy - but on an
    electronic tip. I still don't think that I've achieved that. One thing I won't be working on is
    that 'Ghost Town' cover we played at Reading. It might be used on a film soundtrack, but that's it.

    "I suppose that I'll be spending Christmas and New Year with my mates partying. We're usually
    gigging over New Year so it'll be a different one this year. It's going to be pretty chilled.
    Will I be playing 'Tomb Raider 3'? Shit, I haven't had a change to play nember two yet. I'll
    never get any new stuff recorded!"
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