The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One | ||||
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Compilation album (Mixtape) by | ||||
Released | 22 February 1999 | |||
Recorded | 1998 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 51:21 | |||
Label | XL | |||
Producer | Liam Howlett | |||
The Prodigy chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Entertainment Weekly | C+[2] |
Hot Press | 9/12[3] |
Mojo | [4] |
NME | 7/10[5] |
Rolling Stone | [6] |
Release Magazine | 7/10[7] |
Sputnikmusic | 4.5/5[8] |
Tom Hull – on the Web | A−[9] |
Prodigy Present: The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One is a 1999 solo mix album by Liam Howlett of The Prodigy (the latter used as a moniker in this case), initially produced for BBC Radio 1's mix show The Breezeblock.
There are more than 48 tunes from many artists mixed, scratched and cut. The album came about as a result of a 1998 guest DJ appearance by Howlett on Mary Anne Hobbs's Breezeblock show on BBC Radio 1, producing a similar set.
In a bid to stop popular bootleg copies of the show, an official album was released, essentially an extended version of the Breezeblock mix. The two mixes are not exactly the same as permission to use certain tracks was not forthcoming. Most notable is the removal of The Beatles' "Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band", which was also left off The Chemical Brothers' Brothers Gonna Work It Out DJ Mix but was included in the earlier promo release, Radio 1 Anti-Nazi Mix.
Reception
- Alternative Press (10/00, p. 120) – Included in AP's "10 Essential DJ-Mix Albums" – "Dark, raw and furious"
- Muzik (1/00, p. 84) – Ranked #9 in Muzik's "Compilations of the Year '99" – "...as this glorious mash of styles signifies, Liam Howlett knows a thing or two about pop music... The track sequencing is equally inspiring."
Track listing (samples will be listed once by relevance)
- Section 1 – 7:18
- Run D.M.C, "Peter Piper (Scratch stab) (uncredited) (1984)
- Simon Harris - BB&S Vol. 4 "Big Beats" (Drum Loop) taken from Billy Squier "The Big Beat" (1980)
- Run-D.M.C., "Here We Go (Live At The Funhouse)" (Vocals over "Big Beats") (uncredited) (1985)
- Mantronix, "Who is It" (Freestyle Mix) (Trumpet Riff sample + 'Get Down!' sample ) (uncredited) (1986)
- Rasmus, "Punk Shock" - is mislabelled as "Tonto's Release" in the CD booklet. (1998)
- Sugarhill Gang, "8th Wonder" (Whoo-haa scream) (uncredited) (1980)
- Hardnoise, "Untitled" (1991)
- Double Dee & Steinski, "Lesson 1" ("Check this out!" sample) (uncredited) (1982)
- Simon Harris "Different Screams" (vocals) from BB&S Vol. 1 (1987) taken from Syl Johnson, "Different Strokes" (uncredited) (1967)
- The Chemical Brothers, "Chemical Beats" (1994)
- Ultramagnetic MCs, "Kool Keith Housing Things" (1988)
- Lightnin' Rod featuring Jalal, "Sport" from UBB Vol. 19 (1973)
- La Pregunta, "Shangri La" from UBB Vol. 10 (uncredited) (1978)
- Ultramagnetic MCs, "Give the Drummer Some" (1988)
- Time Zone Featuring Afrika Bambaataa, "Wildstyle" (1983)
- Section 2 – 6:44
- Bomb The Bass, "Bug Powder Dust (Dust Brothers Mix)" (Intro Effect) (1994)
- Bomb the Bass, "Bug Powder Dust" (1994)
- Grandmaster Melle Mel, "Pump Me Up" mislabeled as being by Grandmaster Flash (1985)
- Psychedelic Skratch Bastards A.K.A I.S.P, "Battle Breaks" (Like That! sample) (uncredited) (1992)
- The Charlatans, "How High" (1997)
- Melvin Bliss, "Synthetic Substitution" from UBB Vol. 5 (Drum Loop) (uncredited) (1973)
- Darth Fader and Scarecrow Willy, "Toasted Marshmallow Feet Braxe" (1995) (Drum Loop) (uncredited) (1995)
- Darth Fader and Scarecrow Willy, "Toasted Marshmallow Feet Braxe" (1995) (Drum Loop) taken from Schoolly D, "P.S.K. What Does It Mean?" (Drum Loop) (uncredited) (1985)
- Run-D.M.C., "Sucker M.C.'s" (Drum Loop) (uncredited) (1983)
- Treacherous Three, "Feel the Heartbeat" (HA-HA Sample) (uncredited) (1981)
- The Prodigy, "Poison" (1995)
- Ramsey Lewis, "The Mighty Quinn" from SB Vol. 4 (uncredited) (1968)
- Simon Harris, "Long Trumpet" from BB&S Vol. 9 taken from The JBs, "The Grunt" (uncredited) (1973)
- Beastie Boys "Time to Get Ill" (Electric guitar riff) (1986)
- Jane's Addiction, "Been Caught Stealing" (1990)
- Tim Dog featuring KRS-One, "I Get Wrecked" (1993)
- Section 3 – 6:03
- Mix Master Mike, "Eardrum Medicine" (Untoned Whistle Sound Effect) (uncredited) (1997)
- Babe Ruth, "The Mexican" (1972)
- The B-Boys, "Rock the House" (1983)
- Psychedelic Skratch Bastards A.K.A I.S.P "Battle Breaks" (Drum Break) (uncredited) (1992)
- The Chemical Brothers, "(The Best Part of) Breaking Up" (1996)
- Davy DMX, "One For The Treble" (Scratch Samples) (uncredited) (1984)
- Afrika Bambaataa and Soulsonic Force, "Renegades of Funk" ('Cause every time I pop into the beat we get fresh' sample) (uncredited) (1983)
- Word of Mouth, "King Kut" (1985)
- Gaz, "Sing Sing" from UBB Vol. 5 (Drum loop) (uncredited) (1978)
- Simon Harris "113 B.P.M BB&S Special Edition (Drum loop) taken from Dynamic Corvettes, "Funky Music Is the Thing" (uncredited) (1975)
- Uncle Louie, "I Like Funky Music" from UBB Vol. 6 (Trumpet stab) (uncredited) (1979)
- Section 4 – 7:52
- DJ Mink Featuring The K.I.D & Carruthers, "Hey! Hey! Can You Relate" (1990)
- The KLF, "What Time Is Love? (Pure Trance)" (1988)
- Frankie Bones, "Funky Acid Makossa" (Beat Over KLF) from BB Vol. 2 (1988)
- Frankie Bones, "Shafted Off" (Drum Break) BB Vol. 2 (1988)
- Frankie Bones, "And the Break Goes Again" (Italia Mix) BB Vol. 5 (1988)
- Meat Beat Manifesto, "Radio Babylon" (1990)
- Marley Marl and MC Shan, "Marley Marl Scratch" ('On the turntables i would say he is nice'/His mixing style is so precise' Sample) (uncredited) (1985)
- Kool & The Gang, "Music Is The Message" (Drum Loop) (uncredited) (1985)
- Marley Marl and MC Shan, "Marley Marl Scratch" ('give 'em an example how a DJ works Sample) (uncredited) (1985)
- Herbie Hancock, "Rockit" (Snippet) (1983)
- The Prodigy, "Smack My Bitch Up" (Snippet) (1997)
- Public Enemy, ¨Public Enemy No. 1" (Snippet) (1987)
- Beastie Boys, ""Its The New Style" ('B-E-A-S-T-I-E, what up Mike D' sample) (1986)
- The 45 King, "900 Number" (Snippet) (1989)
- The Prodigy, "Molotov Bitch" (Snippet) (1996)
- Propellerheads, "Spybreak!" (1997)
- Beastie Boys, "It's the New Style" (Vocals over Spybreak!) (1986)
- Word of Mouth, "King Kut" ('Cutting and scratching' sample vocal) (1985)
- Word of Mouth, "King Kut (Latin Rascals Remix)" (Outro Effect)(1985)
- Section 5 – 4:57
- DJ Swamp, "Skip Proof Guitar Tone 1" (Guitar Tone) (uncredited) (1998)
- Mix Master Mike, "Eardrum Medicine" (Untoned Whistle/Synth Effect) (uncredited) (1997)
- Sex Pistols, "New York" (1977)
- Fatboy Slim, "Punk to Funk" (1996)
- Dj Rectangle, "Original Battle Breaks" (Untoned Whistle/Synth Effect) (uncredited) (1992)
- Medicine, "I'm Sick" (1997)
- Psychedelic Skratch Bastards A.K.A I.S.P "Battle Breaks" (Scratch effect)(1992)
- Section 6 – 5:48
- Darth Fader and Scarecrow Willy, "Toasted Marshmallow Feet Braxe" ('OK' intro sample) taken from "Man on the Moon" The Apollo 11 mission (1969) + Simon Harris, "Weather 1" from BB&S Vol. 11 (Weather storm sample) (1993)
- Grand Mixer DXT, "The Home of Hip Hop" (1985)
- J.V.C Force, "Strong Island" (1984)
- Primal Scream, "Kowalski" (1997)
- Beastie Boys, "Time to Get Ill" (1986)
- Barry White, "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby" from UBB Vol. 21 (1973)
- Simon Harris "#1 Stab" from BB&S Vol. 3 (1992) (Trumpet sample) taken from All The People featuring Robert Moore, "Cramp Your Style"(1972)
- Fred Wesley & The J.B.'s, "Blow Your Head" from Paul Winley's SDB Vol. 1 (1974)
- Dimples D, "Sucker DJ's"('He cuts the music with so much class' sample) (uncredited) (1983)
- Public Enemy, Public Enemy#1 (1985)
- Grand Mixer DXT, "The Home of Hip Hop" ('Real hip hop ma man!' sample) (1985)
- T La Rock, "Breaking Bells" (1986)
- Section 7 – 3:59
- LL Cool J, "Get Down" (1987)
- Digital Underground, "The Humpty Dance" ('oh, oh, oh my baby!' snippet)(1989)
- Uptown, "Dope on Plastic" (1989)
- Coldcut, "Beats and Pieces" (1986)
- The Wild Magnolias, "Soul, Soul, Soul" (Drum Loop) from UBB Vol. 5 (uncredited) (1971)
- Coldcut, "Beats and Pieces" ('Honey i have rhythms i haven't used yet'/ Laugh sample Outro) (1986)
- Section 8 – 8:40
- London Funk Allstars, "Sure Shot" (1995)
- West Street Mob, "Break Dance – Electric Boogie" (1983)
- Dj Roughneck, "Breakdown" (Breakdown! sample) (uncredited) (1998)
- The Motors, "Whiskey & Wine" (Drum break) UBB Vol.17 (uncredited) (1977)
- The Shadows, "Apache" taken from UBB Vol. 1 (Stratocaster riff sample) (1990)
- Hijack, "Doomsday of Rap" (1988)
- Spoonie Gee and The Treacherous Three, "Love Rap" ('Go Off!, Go Off!' sample) (uncredited) (1980)
- Hijack, "Doomsday of Rap" (1988)
- Simon Harris, ""Air Raid Siren"" (Siren sample) from BB&S Vol. 3 (uncredited) (1989)
- James Brown, "Talkin' Loud and Sayin' Nothing" (Keep on singin', keep on singin'! sample) (uncredited) (1972)
- Hijack, "Doomsday of Rap" (1988)
- Renegade Soundwave, "Ozone Breakdown" (1988)
- The Motors, "Whiskey & Wine" (Drum break) UBB Vol.17 (uncredited) (1977)
- The Beginning of the End, "Funky Nassau" from Paul Winley's SDB Vol.3 (1971)
- The Jimmy Castor Bunch, "It's Just Begun" from Paul Winley's SDB Vol. 6 (1972)
References
- 1 2 Bush, John (6 April 1999). "The Dirtchamber Sessions, Vol. 1 - The Prodigy : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 28 August 2012.
- ↑ Weingarten, Marc (16 April 1999). "Prodigy Present the Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One". EW.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
- ↑ Peter Murphy. "The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One | Music Review | Album". Hot Press. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
- ↑ Harrison, Ian (1 June 2015). "Mojo - June 2015". Mojo. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
- ↑ "NME Reviews - Present The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One". Nme.Com. 12 September 2005. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
- ↑ Diehl, Matt (5 June 2001). "The Prodigy - Prodigy Present the Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
- ↑ Noheden, Kristoffer (22 May 1999). "THE PRODIGY - THE DIRTCHAMBER SESSIONS VOLUME ONE". Release Magazine. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
- ↑ "Review: The Prodigy - The Dirtchamber Sessions: Volume One". Sputnikmusic. 29 January 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
- ↑ Hull, Tom (19 November 2023). "Grade List: The Prodigy". Tom Hull – on the Web. Retrieved 19 November 2023.