No Tourists

AlbumNov 02 / 201810 songs, 37m 45s
Big Beat
Popular

The cover of The Prodigy’s seventh album features a London bus bearing “THE FOUR ACES” as its final destination—the East London club was where the Essex rave revolutionaries made their live debut in 1991. Almost three decades later, is one of British music’s most forward-thinking bands finally looking back? “I don\'t really like nostalgia, but we wanted to make a record that tapped into the best parts of what we’re about,” Prodigy mastermind Liam Howlett tells Apple Music. “We’re proud of the roots of the band. Two or three tracks tap back into the first five years, that pirate-radio rave sound—raw and really dirty—that breakbeat sound.” Even with its nods to the past, *No Tourists* sounds fresh. Its combination of sharp hooks with bone-rattling beats and basslines is flame-sealed by the trio’s anger and intensity. “The last record \[2015’s *The Day Is My Enemy*\] was quite violent,” says Howlett. “This is equally aggressive but a bit more melodic. It’s like a cheeky smile but also a punch in the ribs.” It’s hard not to see Britain’s political and social turbulence reflected in “Champions of London,” where Keith Flint barks, “Civil unrest/Grab the bulletproof vest.” “I live in the city,” says Howlett. “You can\'t help getting affected by things when you’re right in it. It’s why I like living in London: I like the edge of it. More stuff happens.” Howlett estimates he wrote 80 percent of the record with playing it live in mind—a headspace aided by setting up portable studios in hotels while the band toured Europe in 2018. “Without the live side, The Prodigy wouldn’t be here and the music would be vastly different,” he says. “It’s the last untapped thing where you can watch the whites of people’s eyes and see the true reaction in real time—bang. As you play your new song, you *know* if it’s good straight away—or it’s back to the studio to have another go.”

10

6.2 / 10

On their seventh studio album, the UK rave veterans help themselves liberally to sounds and ideas from their back catalog while punching up the production to ultra-modern standards.

The Essex ravers’ brilliant seventh album takes various touchstones from their 28-year career and gleefully beats you over the head with them

Barbra Streisand - Walls

A series of big beats in search of a big hook.

Discover No Tourists by The Prodigy released in 2018. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

7 / 10

It's hard to believe the Prodigy will be celebrating a 30th anniversary soon, and there's something comforting in the knowledge that they've...

6 / 10

Did The Prodigy change, or was it us? Their ‘90s hits captured lightning in a bottle and defined an era but ever since the turn of the century,

(BMG/Take Me to the Hospital)

5 / 10

The Prodigy claim they're 'No Tourists' on their seventh album, despite that the LP visits some pretty well-known crowd-pulling territory.

7 / 10

Mainstream success never seemed to sit especially well with the Prodigy main man Liam Howlett.

Maxim Reality and Keith Flint keep shouting through Liam Howlett’s earth-shaking sub bass, but some of the slogans sound empty

55 %

A fun romp through the past.

Album Reviews: The Prodigy - No Tourists

3.0 / 5

The Prodigy - No Tourists review: The Prodigy continues to meet expectations.

No TouristsArtist: The ProdigyGenre: DanceLabel: BMG Rights ManagementWhile many of us have aged terribly in the 21 years since The Fat of the Land was released, whatever deal The Prodigy trio struck up with the devil in the early 1990s in exchange for making sinister and addictive techno that defined a generation, they show no signs of slowing down on their seventh album No Tourists.

After almost 30 years together, the veteran Essex rave crew are still producing the goods. Album review by Guy Oddy

7 / 10