Even more so than the celebrated Chemical Brothers – who began recording after Prodigy but received a hits compilation before – Liam Howlett and co. were fantastic singles artists who also fashioned excellent full-lengths. As such, ‘Their Law’ 1990-2005, the singles collection that could put the cap on their career, is a collection that will leave listeners breathless but also one that can’t capture how special Prodigy were to the electronica and rave scenes. Their biggest single, ‘Firestarter’, comes first, and its LP (‘The Fat of the Land’) gets most of the early slots, although things right themselves by the end with no less than five singles – from 1995’s ‘Music for the Jilted Generation’ and four from 1992’s ‘Experience’.
| Track | Track name | Artist | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Track 1 | Firestarter | The Prodigy | 4.42 |
| Track 2 | Their Law | The Prodigy | 5.36 |
| Track 3 | Breathe | The Prodigy | 5.36 |
| Track 4 | Out of Space | The Prodigy | 5.02 |
| Track 5 | Smack My Bitch Up | The Prodigy | 5.43 |
| Track 6 | Poison | The Prodigy | 4.01 |
| Track 7 | Girls | The Prodigy | 4.12 |
| Track 8 | Voodoo People | The Prodigy | 3.4 |
| Track 9 | Charly | The Prodigy | 5.22 |
| Track 10 | No Good (Start the Dance) | The Prodigy | 6.19 |
| Track 11 | Spitfire | The Prodigy | 3.26 |
| Track 12 | Jericho | The Prodigy | 3.46 |
| Track 13 | Everybody in the Place | The Prodigy | 5.09 |
| Track 14 | One Love | The Prodigy | 5.25 |
| Track 15 | Hot Ride | The Prodigy | 4.3 |





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