Showing posts with label Daft Punk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daft Punk. Show all posts

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Nothing to hide



Curious to know what a collaboration between Pharrell and Daft Punk would sound like? Now you can satisfy that curiosity - and I don't know how this has managed to skip my radar for so long! Here's the new single from N*E*R*D, co-written and produced by Daft Punk. Smooth and sexy track, just as the video.



n-e-r-d.com
http://www.myspace.com/nerdofficial

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Some (non-Christmas) music for Christmas time

Holy Fuck - LP


Instrumental rock where the sounds and noises are manipulated without limits, reminding the innumerous projects that populated New York circa 1980 (Liquid Liquid, This Heat, Glenn Branca...). Coming from Canada, Holy Fuck use ingredients like complex rhythmic sctructures and infectious samples to create an organic body that is pure energy. (8/10)

Myspace page


No Age - Weirdo Rippers


A selection of best songs from previously released EP's, "Weirdo Rippers" is what happens when you grab punk music and insert it in a noise machine ending up with anthemic melodies battling with drones and lots of reverb. (7/10)

Myspace page


Midnight Juggernauts - Dystopia


The proclaimed australian answer to new-rave and Justice's favourite new band is also something that seems like a tribute to glam-rock. Confusing? "Dystopia" is that kind of album. It's also dense pop music that tries to reach the stars and, when you do it with such a sense of urgency as this band does, you may actually end up getting there. (7/10)

Myspace page
Official Site


Daft Punk - Alive 2007


With a show that is supposed to be an epic celebration and innumerous bands and projects citing them as main inspirations, 2007 may very well be the best year of their career. To celebrate this, here's a live album that, even if sounding incomplete without the actual images, shows how well these two robots know how to take a crowd into ecstactic euphoria, mashing up the best elements of their own songs to create more new anthems. (8/10)

Myspace page
Official Site


Boys Noize - OiOiOi


Speaking of Daft Punk and their influence in today's music scene, Berlin project Boys Noize is one of the best examples. Full-impact electronic songs, where loud is not loud enough and the day is not complete without punching everyone in the dancefloor with your bleeding samples and brutal beats. (7/10)

Myspace page


Skepta - Greatest Hits


Anyone that names his debut album "Greatest Hits" has to have my respect. In 2007, grime tried to sound like something else, and even if that approach has produced at least one great record ("Maths And English" by Dizzee Rascal), it's nice to see someone still doing pure grime and sounding as fresh as Skepta does. (7/10).

Myspace page


Shape Of Broad Minds - Craft Of The Lost Art


J. Dilla may be death, but his legacy lives on. "Craft Of The Lost Art" is an ode to the old fresh days of hip-hop but, like Dilla, everything is taken into the present and even to the future by some of the most inventive beats and samples you'll hear in quite some time. (7/10)

Myspace page


Gorillaz - D-Sides


The ultimate music band of this decade, everything Gorillaz have done in their lifetime is somewhere around brilliant (and this includes not only music but also videos, DVD's, books, visuals, imaginary, etc.). "D-Sides" is a posthumous release that collects rare tracks, B-sides and remixes and, even if lacking the conceptual force that could be fully heard on their two official albums, is still full of amazingly successful experiments, using an absurd number of disparate Pop elements to create a new world out of chaos. (7/10)

Official Site
Myspace page

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Music Videos # 51

Daft Punk - One More Time / Aerodynamic (Live @ Hyde Park)



Respect the source. No Justice review is complete without mentioning one of their main inspirations, the now-reaching-legendary-status duo Daft Punk, so here they are sending a whole crowd of thousands into massive amounts of euphoria a week ago in London. Unbelievable.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Daft Punk's Electroma


Thinking of Daft Punk as musicians that make electro-house party anthems? "Electroma" will defraud your expectations then. This is the experimental movie that Daft Punk made in 2006 and is more of a visual-installment that doesn't even have any songs from them, instead featuring music by Brian Eno, Curtis Mayfield, Sebastien Tellier, Todd Rundgren, Chopin or Haydn. The plot is minimal to the point of almost non-existence: two robots in their quest to be human, their failure and one last walk through the desert. But this is just an excuse for making something close to surreal, creating poetic ambiences while playing with geometrical forms and beautiful shots, all with a very subliminal sense of humor. Two movies come to mind in the end: "2001: A Space Odyssey" by Stanley Kubrick with its 1960's sci-fi imaginary; and "Gerry" by Gus Van Sant with its minimal approach to the act of walking through a vast desert. And I was reminded that I really like Daft Punk.