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Live Daft Punk performance featuring "Technologic" 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 ...
The music video for "Robot Rock" consists of Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo of Daft Punk performing the song on a stage decorated with several televisions and lights, and filmed on VHS, to achieve an aged look. This is the first video to feature the duo as themselves exclusively.
On 22 February 2021, Daft Punk released a video on their YouTube channel titled "Epilogue". [96] The video features a scene from their 2006 film Electroma, in which one robot explodes and the other walks away into the sunset; a title card created with Warren Fu reads "1993–2021" while an excerpt of Daft Punk's song "Touch" plays.
In some of his first detailed comments about Daft Punk‘s surprise 2021 split, group member Thomas Bangalter says he has no regrets about hanging up his robot costume. During an interview with ...
The duo initially shot footage for a music video of the song "Human After All", but expanded the content for a feature-length film instead. [5] According to Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, Daft Punk's Electroma had been an unplanned extension of filming videos for the Human After All album.
"Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" is featured in the 2007 YouTube viral video Daft Hands, which shows a pair of hands moving to reveal each word of the song's lyrics. [18] [19] The video was performed by Austin Hall, who later appeared on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. [20] In 2010, Time magazine included Daft Hands in a list of "YouTube's 50 Best ...
Musique Vol. 1 1993–2005 is an anthology by Daft Punk released in Japan on 29 March 2006, in the United Kingdom on 3 April 2006, and in the United States on 4 April 2006. A special edition includes a bonus DVD with 12 music videos—two of which are new, "The Prime Time of Your Life" and "Robot Rock (Daft Punk Maximum Overdrive)".
The music video and the song are both based on an infinity loop. [23] [24] After showing a circle slowly develop into an animated walk cycle of a humanoid, the humanoid becomes more advanced, self-destructs, and returns to the starting image of a circle. The video contains many references to Daft Punk's previous work.