The uncompromising rave punk spirit that has driven them for over 25 years seems stronger than ever on a record that will delight old fans and capture a whole new era of angry youth. As well as CD and double vinyl, the album comes as a limited edition 3LP set which includes the album pressed across three 45rpm coloured vinyl records (red, yellow, black). Add the way "Roadblox" provides the cinematic side of Prodigy that's often overlooked and the album seems a triumph, but lead single "Nasty" is a lesser "Firestarter" and at 14 cuts, this chunky effort is built for returning fan club members and not the EP-craving EDM crowd. ‘The Day Is My Enemy’ is in many ways the quintessential Prodigy album. The Prodigy return in March with a their sixth studio album, The Day Is My Enemy, which will be available in a number of formats including a deluxe box set. It was released on 26 January 2015 and is the title track of their album of the same name. "Rok-Weiler" is a fashion-minded and fierce highlight that fits the band's catalog the same way the great "Paninaro" fit with the Pet Shop Boys, and as far as Howlett the musical innovator, there are plenty of new video game noises, wormholes of time, and tricky vocal edits that are razor-sharp. The Day Is My Enemy is a promotional single released by the British electronic band The Prodigy.
Even if they weren't, Liam Howlett and company have decided they need it, and collaborated in a way that makes this the most "band" Prodigy album in ages, something that benefits the twitchy disco number "Wild Frontier" and the aptly titled "Rhythm Bomb" with guest producer Flux Pavilion providing the rave sound of today. The Day Is My Enemy (Liam H Remix) Lyrics: The night is still young but I'm getting older / I don't wanna slow down, I don't wanna be sober / Give us some cobra, till I hangover / Drunk drove the. Refusing to grow old gracefully, veteran ravers the Prodigy offer a wobbly, angry album with their sixth studio effort The Day Is My Enemy, an LP that supports titles like "Nasty" and "Destroy" with stadium-sized beats and '90s chants, as if they were what the kids were clamoring for in 2015.