The Prodigy sample thousand faces in Chile

October 29th, 2009 by Entertainment News Reporter

Wednesday, October 28, 10:01 PM Santiago de Chile, Oct 29 (EFE) .- The British electronic music band The Prodigy showed yesterday in Chile thousand faces with a loud musical show where rave and techno beats mixed with touches of rock and punk. A few days before the performance in the Chilean capital, histrionic Keith Flint, one of the singers in the group, warned that "anything that will let them have heard before so deaf" and, in view of what happened , was not far wrong. It was a brief show-one and a quarter-but intense, during which over 3,000 people attending the theater Caupolicán got tired of dancing and jumping with the melodies and the drumbeats of the English. The audience consisted of people between 25 and 40 years, many with black shirts and, amid the bustle, the occasional crest of a small group of punks. After a local DJ to warm up the audience with a good session electronic music, started the show with the theme "World's on Fire" included on his latest album "Invaders Must Die, published this 2009 after a break of five years. Keith Flint and Maxim, the two vocalists, jumped feverishly while the dishes banging drums and drums and a guitarist with momentum pinch the strings of his instrument. Back, between multiple computer screens, keyboards and a mixer and dishes DJing was Liam Howlett, founder of the band. The party started rave rhythms, which gender has the honor of being pioneers, and they hit very hard on the British scene in the early nineties. The artists went out of control, hyperactive and unable to stop jumping, constantly accompanied by the fans who flocked to area of the floor of the theater. Sonaron then "Poison", published in 1995, and "Spitfire" from the album "Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned", recorded in 2005, bringing the scene changed to punk tinged rhythms and rock . The strength of their genes mails returned with "Firestarter" and his most famous song, "Smack my bitch up", which triggered the madness in the audience, sweltering with the heat of the premises and the agitated movements. After an hour of action fireproof, the British feigned to end the show, but quickly returned to the stage sending water to the public to continue singing. There was more, a quarter of an hour he gave for three songs, one of them "Take me to the hospital," a Highlights of his latest work. In his third visit to Chile, The Prodigy did not disappoint their loyal fans in a country where there is still little traction for electronic music. The next concert will take on 30 October in Buenos Aires. Argentines are prepared because the noise is assured. Average (Not Rated)

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