Showing posts with label daft punk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daft punk. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

New (Actual) Daft Punk and Justice??


So I've just sat down to the good old computer too see that the interweb is buzzing with new tracks from both Daft Punk AND Justice. Once you've re-cooperated from your head exploding like mine did, take a listen to these tracks. The Daft Punk track 'The Crash' spans 12 minutes and definitely sounds more along the lines of backing music for TRON, and not some douche pulling a fast one. Maybe a response to that song that leaked days ago that wasn't them? The Justice track 'The Beginning of the end' sounds...well, like a Justice track. Synthed out keys and a slappy bass. Maybe they dropped it because their big brothers told them to.

*Not so awesome Update: So apparently people are now saying that the Justice track is fake, and was sent by a hacker using a fake Ed Banger e-mail account. Sorry for getting everyone all excited. I will be spending my day tracking down this guy...and killing him. Sure, between these guys and Keedz, Ed Banger might as well sign some more acts to take all the stress out of Justice actually releasing anything.

* Another Update : Both are fake. I hate the internet sometimes

Justice - Beginning of the end (FAKE)

Daft Punk - The Crash (FAKE)

Monday, November 17, 2008

New Music Monday: Fire! Santa Rosa, Fire!


From Adelaide, South Australia, comes Fire! Santa Rosa, Fire! Citing everyone from DFA 1979 to Daft Punk as influences, the group uses rapid and fierce guitar riffs along with the voice of new addition, Caitlin Duff, to form their own brand of electro-pop. Performing with the likes of Midnight Juggernauts at Big Day Out '07, these guys are on the up and up and show a lot of promise. Theres something to be said for the simplicity with these guys in terms of the rhythm, and then adding the off time guitars to complete the sound. Check it.

Fire! Santa Rosa, Fire! - War Coward

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Remix Sunday: Miracle Fortress versus Daft Punk


I love both Miracle Fortress and Daft Punk, so for me this is just about the best thing ever.

Daft Punk - Digital Love (Miracle Fortress cover)

- a.m.p.m.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Love Will Reign Supreme

Mobius Band's V-Day EP needs more press, and so after the fact, here we are. Listening to these fantastic covers brings to mind the love felt between our favorite outgoing Cuban leader and his boy Khrushchev way back in the day. How's that for a shitty attempt at relevance? Anywho...seeing as how this free release showcases the band covering acts as diverse as The National, Neil Young, and Daft Punk, it is worth the time and effort to click numerous times. Stay tuned for a new post with an independent label/Kosovo joke that won't go over.

Mobius Band - Razor Love (Neil Young Cover)
Mobius Band - Baby, We'll Be Fine (The National Cover)
Mobius Band - Digital Love (Daft Punk Cover)

Compare: The National - Baby, We'll Be Fine

The rest can be found here.

- B.A.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Daft Punk: Electroma

Two Fridays ago saw Vice Canada (and perhaps others) presenting a midnight screening of Daft Punk's feature film, Electroma at the Royal Cinema, conveniently located a half-block from my house. Given that it was a one-time only showing, it was so close, and Daft Punk made a movie that I hadn't yet seen, there was only one Friday night option: get baked and go see this 1-hour long offering from France's favourite robot brothers.

I'll be honest - my expectations weren't that high. I already knew the premise, read some lukewarm reviews, and knew that sitting through a silent film at midnight while high without falling asleep was going to be a chore. But I did it, and I'm a better person for it.

That isn't to say it was particularly good. In fact, had I known that IMDB's eight-sentence plot summary was actually a fully description of literally everything that takes place in the film, I may have stuck around the homestead.

But given that I can't take back the 74 minutes, I opt instead to think of what was good about the flick: a diverse and fitting music soundtrack, scenes of dramatic robot suicide, and the hilarity of drastically oversized human heads.

Actually, writing off the remainder of the film as mediocre-to-terrible is probably unfair. Instead, Electroma's failure lay almost exclusively in the Vincent Gallo-esque pacing - each scene realistically could have been portrayed in one-fifth the time it took to actually unfold. Instead of being captivated, the audience felt more like with the beginning of each scene came the understanding that they could rest their eyes for the following 7 minutes and still awake in time to gather the gist of what happened in time for the next scene change.

But yes. Robots do melt and explode, and their human-replica heads are reminiscent of a bobblehead come to life (think: the ever-amusing "big head" option in NHL 2005 for PS2). So in that, Electroma can't be that bad. And, the music really shines.

Somewhat surprisingly, the soundtrack is comprised of nothing Daft. Instead, it includes everything from Chopin to Curtis Mayfield and psych-rock forefather (and Liv Tyler's adopted father) Todd Rundgren, as well as a signature ethereal offering from Brian Eno. Each track does its best to bring a sense of identity to otherwise bland series of scenes that are at times difficult to sit still through.

From the Electroma OST


Bonus: from Alive 2007


- bbbykmbrly.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Remix Sunday - Night Facilities


Night Facilities is a dj/producer from Norwich, England. Dude's only 17 and he's already produced stellar remixes of The Go! Team, Cassius, Simian Mobile Disco, The Chemical Brothers and Daft Punk. In fact, he recently crafted one of my favourite Daft Punk remixes ever with his tweaked and sample-tastic reconstruction of 'Prime Time of Your Life'.

He also started his own blog back in August where he makes available rare songs, promos, remixes (both his and those done by others) and his own original creations. 'We Invented MTV' is one of the latter, and I recommend giving it a listen.

- a.m.p.m.



Thursday, August 16, 2007

Human After All?



Working at a summer camp hasn't allowed me a great deal of time to write about or seek out much new music. However, last week my girlfriend and I got a couple days off to go to Montreal to see Daft Punk. I'd read all about it on the internet ever since Coachella 2006, but I can now fully support the hype and state that their live set is indeed mindblowing - both visually and sonically. Despite the fact that their set was essentially the same as the Coachella bootleg, nothing could stop the crowd from going bat shit crazy over two guys in robot costumes and an incredible light show. I don't think my words would do the creativity and synchronization of the lights and music any justice; that is something that must be witnessed. The red Tron suits for the encore were unreal.

The Rapture opened the show with a healthy collection of old and new, and according to the bill Kavinsky and SebastiAn were there but all I noticed was a mixtape of good tunes being played in between The Rapture and Daft Punk. We didn't make it to the 'official afterparty' but the show will be one to remember. Enjoy some blurry photos and a video, and check out this One More Time/Aerodynamic remix from Coachella (listen to the crowd as Aerodynamic's unmistakable guitar solo is mixed in):

Daft Punk - One More Time (Aerodynamic Remix) [from Coachella set]


- Stay fly

A.W.