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Ethnic Intro This "Ethnic Intro" is actually a Pink Floyd sample - it was sampled from 'New Machine, Pt. 1'. The intro was in Prodigy's set for a long time, since 1992. It was sometimes played as the first song of the set but it sometimes also appeared in the middle of the set. Live Beats Also known as 'Brown'. Uses the same Nasa sample taken from 'Hello Earth' by Kate Bush that is in 'Hyperspeed (G-Force Part 2)'. This song was in their set in 1994. Now Hear This A jam track which came to their set in 1993. Contains an unknown vocal sample. The song is available on 'Electronic Punks' video. Goodbye Jam Also known as 'Goodbye Rap', 'Maxim's Rap' or 'Good Night Rap' etc. The song was a jam rap tune with Maxim rapping on it. It was one of the last songs of their set. Lose Your Mind Also known as 'Acid Break'. Came into Prodigy's set in 1994. Rock'N'Roll Contains a sample from 'Poppa Large' performed by Ultramagnetic MC's. This song came to Prodigy's set in 1994 and it's still in their set though it's has been re-mixed several times. In 94-96 Liam played drums during the song. Available on 'Electronic Punks' video. Eventually Liam used the same vocal sample on 'You'll Be Under My Wheels' which is available on Prodigy's 'Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned' album. Gabba The final song in the set. Gabba came to their set in 1994 and stayed till 1997. There's a rumour that the song would contain a sample from Ramone's song. The '95 Vibe Liam's remix of CJ Bolland's version of 'No Good (Start The Dance)'. Break & Enter '95 The live version of 'Break & Enter' was harder than the LP version. The live version had a guitar in it and the Baby D sample was changed. The '95 version is available on 'Electronic Punks' video but it's also available on a freebie cassette 'Unheard Plaesures'. We Eat Rhythm (Jungle Mix) The jungle remix of 'We Eat Rhythm came into Prodigy's set in 1995 but its offical title is unknown. This remix is available on 'Electronic Punks' video. The original version iofficialable on a freebie cassette called 'Future Tracks'. Vogue Also known as 'Live Vogue' or just 'Live Jam'. This jam tune was in Prodigy's set in 1995 and it was played rarely. The song was very minimalistic and on stage was only Liam behind his keyboards and Leeroy dancing. Ska Beats Short raggae-based beats which were played after 'Out Of Space' in summer 1995. Religion (Trance U Down) Not actually a Prodigy song - it's a sample from Prodigy's remix of Front 242's 'Religion'. It was performed live a few times in late 1995. Benny Blanco Contains a sample from 'Carlito's Way' the movie. This song was in Prodigy's set in 1995 and it came back in 1997 as an intro of their live show (the intro contained also a sample from 'Wild Style' performed by Time Zone) but the song actually managed to appear in their shows in 2002. Smack My Bitch Up Intro The live intro contained a sample from the movie 'The Usual Suspects'. Blow Your Mind 'Blow Your Mind' was the original version of 'Diesel Power'. 'Blow Your Mind' contained lyrics by Maxim and it was the set in 96-97. Beats This jam tune is better known as 'Serial Thrilla (Beta Version)' or 'Lyrical Terrorist'. However this song was titled as 'Beats' on Prodigy's Breathe tour. This tune contained same elements as 'Serial Thrilla'. Narayan Beats 'Narayan Beats' was basically a jam with those beats which last during the two last minutes of the album version. Climbatize Horns Also known as 'Climbatize Intro'. This song was just the horn sample which was sampled from Egyptian Empire's 'The Horn Track'. Voodoo Beats Liam's remix of the Chemical Brothers's 'Voodoo People' remix. Also known as 'Rock The House In' but on the official pages it was called 'Voodoo Beats'. The remix contains a sample from 'For Pete's Sake' performed by Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth. Ghost Town 'Ghost Town' is a cover track of The Specials' song. Originally it was meant to be released on 'The Fat Of The Land' but when Tricky did his own version of it Liam cancelled it's release. This song was played on a few gigs in 1998 and finally released in 2002 on a charity compilation. The live version contained vocals by both Maxim and Keith and it was rather different than the released version. Masterplan Also known as 'Prepare For The Rush'. Contains a bassline sample from 'Master Plan' by The Kay Gees. What We Want A song which was performed a few times in 1999. Trigger This song was performed live in 2001 and 2002. It was some of the new material which Liam had written for the 4th album. Later on, Liam threw away all the "new stuff" which he had writted and 'Trigger' was one of the abandoned songs. It featured Maxim on vocals. Some parts of 'Trigger' can be heard on 'Shoot Down' which is available on Prodigy's 'Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned' album.. Nuclear The story of this song is the same as 'Trigger' had. This punk-styled song featured vocals by Maxim and Keith. ORIGINAL LIVE VERSIONS No Good (Start The Dance) The very original version of 'Start The Dance' was a bit slower and it didn't include the vocal sample from Kelly Charle's song. Liam used the vocal sample on a "jam" song. 'No Good (Start The Dance)' was usually titled as 'Start The Dance' in their set list. Serial Thrilla The beta version of 'Serial Thrilla' was actually a jam which was played during Prodigy "Breathe Tour" in late 1996. The jam song was often called 'Lyrical Terrorist' or 'Serial Thrilla (Beta Version)' but the song was titled only as 'Beats' in their setlist. The beta version wasn't anything like the final album version - it contained same elements aset listds but the lyrics were by Maxim while Keith was dancing during the jam. Breathe (Beta Version) Originally 'Breathe' was an instrumental song. After the band had played the instrumental version for a few months Keith and Maxim wrote lyrics for the song. The structure of the original version was totally different from the LP version. Smack My Bitch Up The original version contained different vocals. The vocals were in both versions - the original and LP version - by Shahin Badar. Baby's Got A Temper The original live version which was first time performed in early 2002 at Big Day Out festivals was slower than the single version. The lyrics were in different order and the Firestarter "funk guitar" sample was in different place. |