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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.
"Megamix 1" (Around the World, Technologic, Television Rules The Nation) Daft Punk: n/a: n/a: FreeStyleGames: No: Daft Punk Record Bag "Megamix 2" (Robot Rock, Da Funk, Short Circuit) Daft Punk: n/a: n/a: FreeStyleGames: No: Daft Punk Record Bag "Monkey Wrench" Foo Fighters "Sabotage" Beastie Boys: FreeStyleGames: Yes: Born To Rock "Mr. Big ...
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 ...
The robot was created by Tony Gardner and his team at Alterian, Inc. The music video is included in the CD and DVD edition of the album Musique Vol. 1 1993–2005 . The pyramid design used in the video is similar to the scheme used in Daft Punk's live performances during the Alive 2006/2007 tour.
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
In its early development, electronic music was associated almost exclusively with Western art music, but from the late 1960s, the availability of affordable music technology—particularly of synthesizers—meant that music produced using electronic means became increasingly common in the popular domains of rock and pop music and classical ...
The six "performers" in the band are all robots made from recycled parts, playing real electric and acoustic instruments and controlled via a MIDI sequencer. [1] The project initially debuted in 2013 with four robots (a guitarist, bassist, drummer and a small drummer's "assistant"), performing covers of famous rock songs.
Daft Punk's Electroma (also known as Electroma) is a 2006 avant-garde science fiction film directed by the French electronic music duo Daft Punk.The story revolves around the quest of two robots (the band members, played by Peter Hurteau and Michael Reich) to become human.