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One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

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by DiS News
Artists: Daft Punk
Digital love cats, Daft Punk are to release their third LP ‘Human After All’ in spring next year.

Out on March 21st to be precise, ‘Human After All’ was recorded by Thomas Bangalter and Guy Manuel de Homem Christo in just six weeks between September and November 2004 at the duo’s home studio in Paris.

Ten tracks long, the record is described by the band as ‘diverse and fresh whilst retaining the trademark Daft Punk sound, this time with a more spontaneous and direct quality to the recording’.

The tracklisting in full is:

1. Human After All
2. The Prime Time Of Your Life
3. Robot Rock
4. Steam Machine
5. Make Love
6. The Brainwasher
7. On/Off
8. Television Rules The Nation
9. Technologic
10. Emotion


One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

"retaining the trademark Daft Punk sound, this time with a more spontaneous and direct quality to the recording"

does that mean it sounds a bit like 'Homework'?
By the look of those titles i'd guess not...

One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

Boring, Digital Love was their only good song.

Re: One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

so why have you rated them a four?

One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

have to say, Discovery was mostly disappointment, except for tracks 1, 3 and 4.
Homework was fantastic.

'scuse me for not being optimistic about this,

One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

Daft Punk are awesome. Just because they don't play art-punk rehashes, doesn't mean you can't enjoy them...

Great invention in their records.

Go back to your Bloc Party singles.

Re: One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

i never said that, in fact i'd say i prefer Daft Punk to Bloc Party, and i've enjoyed both of DP's albums (although i've not heard Daft Club yet). it's just that the way they'd put 'trademark' sound made me sort of wonder what they meant, as their work has differed somewhat over the years...

One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

WoooooH,Daft Punk are Back. Lets Celebrate. they make the only decent dance music the world has ever seen

One More Time: Daft Punk show their human side

"go back to your Bloc Party singles" what does that mean? Are they Art-rock rehashes in your eyes/ears? Couldn't you have chosen a more appropriate band to bash, one like Art Brut or Thee Untsrung or some other wanky london band with no substance? Do you read the NME and dismiss avery band they unfairly try to lump in with their manufactured scenes?

Daft Punk - New album track by track review

The Thomas Bangalter and Guy Manuel of Homem Christo duet declared that they had recorded the ten pieces of their next album "Human after All" in their Parisian studio in only six weeks, between September and November of this year.
Announced for Mars 2005, this album is described by the band as "diverse and fresh whilst retaining the trademark Daft Punk sound, this time with a more spontaneous and direct quality to the recording"...
I volunteered for the hard journalism job of listening to it and reviewing it exclusively (even though I'm not really familiar with cheap 80's stuff the Dafts usually copy or sample), and I must admit that the album is disappointing from the very start.
With "Human After All" indeed, here's a primer of 80's synthetic bad taste with a full dose of filters, in order to announce directly to the listeners : "What were you waiting for? This is Daft Punk doing some Daft Punk". Five minutes of robotic-house-chewing-gum-pop, which seem to last forever after only two minutes (in a boring way). Of course, many fans and 80's nostalgics will love it...
... And they won't be deceived. The second track, "The Prime Time Of Your Life", even more irritating that the one before, loops on half a sample, filtered in as many ways as possible, before ending on a Lil' Louis-stylee acceleration, that goes up until the track sounds like the noise of the washing machine in drying mode.
After this intense brainwashing session, let's get on with more serious matters, and a "Robot Rock" always based on half an idea, exploited to the extreme, but here in the form of electro-funk exctasy-torture with pop-rock sauce, which soon becomes a supra-gimmicky discoïdal breakbeat you cannot escape from (meaning "everybody on the dancefloor NOW"). Caramba!
"Steam Machine" then tries to go the same road in a gothic-hopping manner, kinda "go play Nine Inch Nails on your Playstation", but without achieving much, and "Make Love" and its playskool-electro-pop offers a small and boring acalmy.
At this point we can only hope and pray for a more inspired B side than this one... and a quick end to this review!
Comes "The Brainwasher", an epic tek-rock-house rollercoaster of less than 4 minutes, should appeal to all the dancing freaks, be it vast crowds or small dancefloors.
Then "One/Off", a 20 secondes "zapping on the telly" interlude, is used as opener for "Television Rules The Nation", a track served on a phat and solid beat, very rock'n'roll, but finally rather meaningless. The Daft Punk formula is always the same : a guitar or synthetizer gimmicky-loop that goes on for 4 minutes with just a small sentence repeated while an inventory of the filters at disposal is being made. It's just over-boring, idea-less programmation...
The end of the album is unfortunately from the same tree, with a very efficient "Technologic", but in the end rather "dance" (in an "aerobics" meaning of the term, like in "eurodance"), and an "Emotion" which is visibly emotion-less.
Verdict: two tracks out of ten. Bets are on for the choice of singles (I'd say "Robot rock" and "The Brainwasher").

Djouls.
Translated from french website http://www.saounds.com/index.php/2004/12/24/342-daftpunk-humanafterall