Ten years ago, Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories gave life back to music. The world-beating smash “Get Lucky” broke streaming records, forged a retro sound that still dominates the charts, and paved the way for artists like The Weeknd, Dua Lipa and Lizzo to craft their own throwback hits. How did Daft Punk do it? Switched On Pop’s four part-mini series Listening 2: Daft Punk unlocks the sounds, voices, and stories across all four of the group’s studio albums. On their first album, Homework, Daft Punk stretched the boundaries of electronic music and began wiring the circuits that would become their robot alter-egos, asking a fundamental question: where does the human end and the machine begin?
Songs Discussed
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The Weeknd drives through purgatory (with a little help from Jim Carrey)
Why do new Christmas songs fail?
Tai Verdes TikTok-ed his way to a breakout hit
Robert Plant & Alison Krauss Raise The Roof
The Beatles get back to their roots
Taylor, Adele & Silk Sonic’s broken hearts club (with Brittany Luse)
Snotty Nose Rez Kids on hip hop and Indigenous protest
The State of the Pop Union
Why ABBA songs just hit different
The Healing Power of Pop with Esperanza Spalding
Janet Jackson's Legacy After 'Control' from It's Been A Minute with Sam Sanders
James Bond's Spycraft Sound
James Blake & The Return of Harmony
Sparkle spoke out against R Kelly. It cost her her career.
ICYMI: The Mystery of Montero AKA Lil Nas X (feat. Take A Daytrip)
Deja Vu: Why Olivia Rodrigo keeps giving up songwriting credits
CHVRCHES and the sound of 80s horror
From Taylor Swift to Bon Iver, Aaron Dessner Finds Meaning in Musical Community
Modern Classics: Carina del Valle Schorske on Cat Power's "Manhattan"
The Joy of Music Festivals
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