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Musically, "Robot Rock" has been described as electronic rock [8] [9] and dance-rock. [10] It contains a sample of the Breakwater song "Release the Beast". [7] The sample features a synthesizer riff with an oscillator sync timbre, as well as percussion and power chords on an electric guitar.
The song has been sampled by the French-house group Daft Punk on their song Robot Rock. [6] The song was also used by Reese's during their 2023 Halloween advertising campaigns. [7] The song was also sampled on the intro for rapper Murs' album Murs 3:16: The 9th Edition
In review issued on May 3, 1980, Billboard said that the music of the album "veers to the tired galactic rock concept a bit too much, but its sound is versatile and strong". [1] For the week ending July 5, 1980, the album reached its peak position of number 34 on the Billboard Soul LPs chart.
Robot Rock may refer to: . Robot Rock, a 1997 album by Joy Electric "Robot Rock" (song), the first single from Daft Punk's 2005 album Human After All A repetitive, trance-like subgenre of desert rock which emerged in the late 1990s and early 2000s
Human After All is the third studio album by French electronic music duo Daft Punk, first released on 14 March 2005 through Virgin Records.Unlike their previous studio album Discovery (2001), whose sound was inspired by disco and garage house and produced over the period of two years, Human After All was more minimalistic and improvisational with a mixture of heavier guitars and electronics ...
Robot Rock is among the best of the neo-new wave albums, and deserves a spot on the shelf next to albums like the Human League’s Dare, Depeche Mode’s Speak and Spell and Soft Cell’s Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret. [1] CMJ New Music Monthly called the album "synth-pop reduced to its [Gary] Numan-ian essence." [8]
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
The music video for "Technologic" is the third directed by Daft Punk, following "Fresh" and "Robot Rock". The video features Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter on a pyramid-themed stage playing the bass guitars shown in the single cover. The lyrics flash as individual words of text on a television monitor set on the stage.