Daft Punk’s first album laid the groundwork for their robot personas, with four to the floor beats, programmed drum machines, and sequenced synthesizers. On their second album Discovery, Daft Punk fully lean into the artificial – singing through robotic vocoders that correspond with their now-iconic robot helmets.
But in there is a paradox, explored on episode 2 of Listening to Daft Punk: the more machine the robots become, the more human the music sounds.
Songs Discussed
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So your song went viral on TikTok. What’s next?
The 1980s jam that gave Latto and Mariah Carey Big D*** Energy
Kendrick Lamar and the big samples
Modern Classics: PJ Morton made Nas’s Stevie Wonder dream come true
Will Ukraine win Eurovision 2022?
Belle and Sebastian on the value of staying "young and stupid"
The New Alternative
Jump-starting the creative process with Allison Ponthier
A Higher Power Ballad
How sound becomes hearing
Listening 2 Britney: Gimme More
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Listening 2 Britney: I'm a Slave 4 U
Listening 2 Britney: ...Baby One More Time
Chartbreakers (ft. Megan Thee Stallion and the Red Hot Chili Peppers)
Leon Bridges and Khruangbin Sing a Song of Texas
Shaking Out the Numb with Sylvan Esso
We *do* talk about Bruno
32 Albums in, Elvis Costello is Just Getting Started
Accidental K-pop star Eric Nam risks it all to go his own way
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