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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The b*tch of loving musical theater (with Bridger Winegar)
Kali Uchis takes on the world
Soundalikes: Lil Nas X and Ariana Grande
The case of the missing vocals, and other listener questions
Too Fast? We’re Curious: The sped-up remix phenomenon - ICYMI
Wham! Op. 84 “Last Christmas” with Chilly Gonzales - ICYMI
"Did I mention that it's Christmas in this club?" (w Matt Rogers)
Nicki Minaj's Roman Empire
Hear the Year: The music we loved in 2023
Behind the Scenes of Switched on Pop on Harman Audio Talks
Noah Kahan’s Folk Pop Revival
Why Country Music Dominated 2023's Charts
The Beatles: "Now and Then" and Forever
Rerecording Taylor Swift's 1989, Dark Side of the Moon, and Demi Lovato
Chartbreakers: Mitski tops the TikTok chart
How Talking Heads reinvented the concert film (with Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz)
Feeling Fine with Faye Webster
Metro Boomin Wants Some More
In Defense of Crunk
Made In America: Jay-Z & Toby Keith ICYMI
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