Nicolas
Jaar and Dave Harrington collaborate as Darkside, and the duo’s album, Psychic,
is one of the more experimental/avant-garde, spaced out pieces of work you’ll hear
all year. The pair also collaborated as “Daftside” in order to dissect and reconfigure
Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories album in their own indomitable style. That
brought mixed results (for me) but I thought they nailed it on the re-work of
‘Get Lucky’ – one of the tracks of 2013 in its original form. Have a listen:
Showing posts with label Random Access Memories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Random Access Memories. Show all posts
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Album Review: Daft Punk – Random Access Memories (2013)
Back
in 1997, when my now 15-year-old daughter was still in the womb, I used to play
Daft Punk’s breakthrough hit ‘Da Funk’ so often, and so loudly, I was quite convinced
she would be born with either a bassline-induced nervous twitch or a fully
blown funky afro … quite possibly both.
It’s
great watching her discover new “old” music. She’s come through a chamber music
programme over the course of nearly a decade now, and is relatively proficient with
at least three instruments. She understands the basics of composition to the
extent she is starting to experiment with software to make her own stuff. I’m proud
of her achievements, and so pleased she loves music as much as I do. But she
knows what she likes, and her reason for asking was not because she thinks her
old man has exceptional taste (he does!), but more to do with the fact that she
knows he’s a serial music hoarder, and would more than likely have a copy of the
duo’s latest work, Random Access Memories.
And
so I tell her a little history, including the afro story, we talk a bit about disco,
and I tell her a little of what I know about Daft Punk. In the course of doing
that, I think I pretty much determined – in my own mind at least – that Random
Access Memories is a disco tribute album. Not necessarily the most
state-of-the-art or populist album Daft Punk could have made, but one that was
near and dear to its collective heart.
Step forward, Nile Rodgers, rhythm guitarist extraordinaire and the main man behind many a disco classic – think the entire back catalogues of Chic, Sister Sledge, some Diana Ross, and collaborations with a multitude of others. He’s been a producer, an in-demand session musician, a solo artist, and just about everything in between. And from what I gather via social media, he seems like a helluva lovely guy. 2013 has been huge for Rodgers after some years of struggle (health), live gigging with the latest version of Chic, including an appearance at that most unlikely of venues, Glastonbury, and this, a star turn on Random Access Memories.
If
Rodgers is the disco God of the Eighties – and I think you could argue that he is
– then Giorgio Moroder was that guy in the Seventies. And if Rodgers plays
tribute to himself on the album, then the otherwise faceless French duo of Guy-Manuel
de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter, aka Daft Punk, seem equally determined
to acknowledge Moroder’s wider influence. So much so, ‘Giorgio By Moroder’,
which includes a voiceover from the man himself, rates as one of the album’s
best moments.
There’s
also ‘Get Lucky’, earworm of the year for those who wouldn’t normally pay
attention to the otherwise much maligned genre that is disco. Pharrell Williams
provides the vocal for that smash, and also another fine moment on ‘Lose
Yourself To Dance’ … but the cameos are not confined to Nile, Giorgio, and
Pharrell; there’s Panda Bear (of Animal Collective fame and considerable
hipster cred) on ‘Doin’ It Right’, Julian Casablancas (of The Strokes) on ‘Instant
Crush’, and well kent Los Angeles producer Todd Edwards (on ‘Fragments of Time’).
Usually I’d have serious reservations about an album which employs so much vocoder, but Daft Punk is one of the few outfits to do it this well, and curiously, in the same way these guys have unwittingly managed to turn the form book on its head, what is often unpalatable for me in any other form, seems to be perfectly tolerable here. It works.
In
the end, thankfully, it was neither, but I had to repress a wry smile recently
when – completely unprompted – she blurted out … “so Dad, have you got any Daft
Punk?” …

Which,
of course, I did.

Perversely,
that commitment to making an album they’d love to listen to themselves, with
scant regard for the latest trends in dance music, Daft Punk have succeeded in
making an album that looks likely to not only make all of those critical
end-of-year lists, but likely to top a fair few of them. An album that will just
as likely now be considered “state-of-the-art” and “populist” … which in itself
is quite some achievement in 2013 terms, for what I loosely describe as a “disco
tribute album”.
Step forward, Nile Rodgers, rhythm guitarist extraordinaire and the main man behind many a disco classic – think the entire back catalogues of Chic, Sister Sledge, some Diana Ross, and collaborations with a multitude of others. He’s been a producer, an in-demand session musician, a solo artist, and just about everything in between. And from what I gather via social media, he seems like a helluva lovely guy. 2013 has been huge for Rodgers after some years of struggle (health), live gigging with the latest version of Chic, including an appearance at that most unlikely of venues, Glastonbury, and this, a star turn on Random Access Memories.
It’s
probably a moot point and a discussion for another day, but it begs the
question: Has Daft Punk revived the career of Nile Rodgers, or is it the other
way around?
Usually I’d have serious reservations about an album which employs so much vocoder, but Daft Punk is one of the few outfits to do it this well, and curiously, in the same way these guys have unwittingly managed to turn the form book on its head, what is often unpalatable for me in any other form, seems to be perfectly tolerable here. It works.
And
so it all works. A disco tribute album in the year 2013. Who’da thunk it?
A
genre that isn’t exactly known for its capacity to produce classic albums, might
just have produced one of the very best of its year. A full 35 years or more
after the very same genre supposedly died a grizzly death. If someone had
suggested such a notion as little as 12 months ago, the padded vans containing
men in white coats would have been queuing up at the front door. If Daft Punk,
Nile, Giorgio, and the rest prove anything on Random Access Memories, it’s to
always expect the unexpected where music is concerned. And never write off the
infectious delights of disco!
I thought this clip was quite amusing - an excerpt from Soul Train, apparently this is Stevie Wonder's 'Superstition', but it could just as well be Daft Punk's 'Lose Yourself To Dance'. You decide:
I thought this clip was quite amusing - an excerpt from Soul Train, apparently this is Stevie Wonder's 'Superstition', but it could just as well be Daft Punk's 'Lose Yourself To Dance'. You decide:
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