*** Welcome to piglix ***

Experience (The Prodigy album)

Experience
TheProdigyExperience.jpg
Studio album by The Prodigy
Released 28 September 1992
Studio
  • Earthbound Studios
  • The Strongroom
Genre
Length 59:28
Label
Producer Liam Howlett
The Prodigy chronology
What Evil Lurks
(1991)What Evil Lurks1991
Experience
(1992)
Music for the Jilted Generation
(1994)Music for the Jilted Generation1994
Singles from Experience
  1. "Charly"
    Released: 12 August 1991
  2. "Everybody in the Place"
    Released: 23 December 1991
  3. "Fire/Jericho"
    Released: 14 September 1992
  4. "Out of Space"
    Released: 9 November 1992
  5. "Wind It Up (Rewound)"
    Released: 5 April 1993
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B
Robert Christgau (2-star Honorable Mention)
Q 3/5 stars
Record Collector 4/5 stars
Spin 9/10 stars

Experience is the debut studio album by English electronic dance music band The Prodigy. It was first released on 28 September 1992 through XL Recordings.

Apart from Liam Howlett, who is responsible for all the compositions, out of the additional three members at that time, only Maxim Reality provides contribution by performing the vocals on the last track.

A wide variety of artists in the breakbeat hardcore scene in the early 1990s are given respect and namechecked in the sleeve notes of the album, including SL2, Carl Cox, Moby, Tim Westwood, Orbital and Aphex Twin.

Experience peaked at No. 12 in the UK Albums Chart.

On 19 June 2001, an expanded edition of the album was released in the United States, featuring a bonus disc of remixes and B-sides. It was released in the United Kingdom seven years later on 4 August 2008 as Experience: Expanded, with a gold cover and two extra tracks.

Experience received very positive reviews upon its release. AllMusic gave the album 5 out of 5 stars, saying that it "shows the Prodigy near the peak of their game from the get go" and stating that "almost every song sounds like a potential chart topper".

Tom Ewing of Freaky Trigger commended the album as "four-minute-warnings, [...] hyperactive ravey blasts which boasted genuine irreverence rather than learned attitude."

Moby credited Experience with changing his perception about dance albums; previously he felt that "dance albums had always failed [...] because they didn't work over the full length of the record. Mostly they were singles collections which was exactly what I didn't want to do," and noted that Experience "impressed me because they'd managed to create a full listening experience which encompassed various styles. This was the kind of vision I had for my [unmade] debut album."


...
Wikipedia

...