The Prodigy first emerged on the underground rave scene in the early 1990s, and have since then achieved immense popularity and worldwide renown.
Leeroy Thornhill (dancer/very occasional live keyboards) was a member of the band from 1990 to 2000, as was a female dancer/vocalist called Sharky who left the band during their early period. The current band members include Liam Howlett (composer/keyboards), Keith Flint (dancer/vocalist) and Maxim (MC/vocalist). The group's brand of big beat music makes use of various styles ranging from rave, hardcore techno, industrial and breakbeat in the early 1990s to electronic rock with punk vocal elements in later times.
They have sold over 20 million records worldwide. Along with Fatboy Slim, The Chemical Brothers and The Crystal Method, as well as other acts, members of the Prodigy have been credited as pioneers of the big beat genre which achieved mainstream popularity in the 1990s and 2000s. The Prodigy are an English electronic dance music group established by Liam Howlett in 1990 in Braintree, Essex. Take Me To The Hospital - Losers Middlesex A&E Remix (5:47)ġ2. Take Me To The Hospital - Josh Homme & Liam H's Wreckage Mix (4:10)ġ1. Take Me To The Hospital - Sub Focus Remix (4:34)ġ0. Take Me To The Hospital - Rusko Remix (4:24)Ġ9. Warrior's Dance - South Central Remix (5:42)Ġ8. Warrior's Dance - Future Funk Squad's 'Rave Soldier' Mix (5:33)Ġ7. Omen - Herve's End Of The World Remix (5:24)Ġ5. Invaders Must Die - Chase & Status Remix (5:10)Ġ4. Invaders Must Die - Liam H Re-amped Version (3:00)Ġ2.
Take Me To The Hospital (Losers Middlesex A & E Remix) (5:48)Ġ1. Take Me To The Hospital (Josh Homme & Liam H's Wreckage Mix) (4:10)ġ3. Take Me To The Hospital (Adam F and Horx Remix) (5:33)ġ2. Take Me To The Hospital (Subfocus Remix) (4:33)ġ1. Take Me To The Hospital (Rusko Remix) (4:23)ġ0. Warrior's Dance (South Central Remix) (5:41)Ġ9. Warrior's Dance (Future Funk Squad's 'Rave Soldier' Mix) (5:33)Ġ8. Warrior's Dance (Kicks Like a Mule Remix) (5:08)Ġ6. Omen (Herve's End Of The World Remix) (5:23)Ġ5. Invaders Must Die (Chase And Status Remix) (5:10)Ġ4. For all the feels and freedom of house music, Volt and Divine ask that you look no further.01. “‘All I Need’ was born in a lockdown session” says Volt, “during a time where we both felt the world needed some words about love and that special someone that will always complete you – a sweet track, made in sad times, that can now start spreading happiness”. Support for Divine verifies her godliness in house circles, with Low Steppa, Mark Knight, David Guetta, Sam Divine, Bob Sinclar and Oliver Heldens all in her corner, and Kiss FM and BBC Radio 1 blasting her across the world’s airwaves. Always into something both domestically and globally, Divine has had the chance to work with a host of hot properties headed by The Deepshakerz, Rene Amesz, Hatiras, Johan S, Danny Rhys and Elliot Fitch. The Toolroom, Stereo Productions and Snatch! labels, and Mysteryland, Promised Land and ADE live stages, lead the list of outfits Volt has sent his electric sound through, and Volt riding with Sunnery James and Ryan Marciano saw their ‘In My Mind’ collaboration become a Spotify sensation, totalling over a million streams and counting.ĭivine brings an all singing, all dancing, all spinning, always hype performance across the entire house spectrum, with Simma Black, Spinnin’ Records and Armada SBJKT but three beneficiaries of the Curacao-born entertainer giving it all she’s got. Marc Volt brings a spark to the house scene that his name demands, lighting up playlists and sets belonging to Danny Howard, Hannah Wants, Camelphat, Solomun, Riva Starr and Joris Voorn: a star selection of those hyping the Amsterdam-based producer’s sound. Volt and Divine prove to be a match made in heaven, especially with names that sum up ‘All I Need’ perfectly as they reach the pinnacle of dancefloor drive and vocal bliss. Theirs is a sharp and skippy vocal house session that you can take as a heart-on-sleeve love song, or a serious bumper to wrap your body around, getting more intimately acquainted on a stylishly soulful breakdown. Classic organ-bass bump and grind from Marc Volt and Divine pushes speakers back while keeping its daytime options open.