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Human After All

 
Album Review: Human After All
 

  • Artist: Daft Punk
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: March 15, 2005
  • Genre: Electronica

Review

Daft Punk has always been one of dance music's most flexible -- and accessible -- acts, spanning the relentless pulse of Homework and the lush, sprawling Discovery with a distinctive wit and playfulness that made fans of electronic music diehards and indie rockers alike. Though the long-awaited Human After All retains that playfulness, it's the duo's simplest album, which oddly enough, makes it their most difficult to embrace at first. Human After All was made in six weeks, and sounds like it -- and not always in a good way: the quick-and-dirty recording process and limited palette of grainy synths, vocoders, and guitars do lend a stripped-down, spontaneous feel, but just as often, this minimal approach feels like it's supporting minimal ideas. Most of Human After All's tracks concentrate on one or two heavily repeated motifs, giving some of the tracks the feeling of demos copied and pasted to a full song length (even more uncharitably, you could say that they sound like parts of a Daft Punk beats-and-loops construction kit). "Steam Machine," for example, starts off strong with a low-slung, low-rent drum machine beat and aptly hissy whispering, but fails to do much over the course of five minutes. Repetition and simplicity, or at least a certain kind of innocence, have been at the heart of Daft Punk's music since the beginning, but this formula doesn't always work on Human After All; this is particularly true on the album's softer songs, "Make Love" and "Emotion," both of which are pretty and evocative, but never quite pack the emotional punch that they threaten to. And though Human After All's linear quality is superficially like the duo's more danceable work, many of the tracks are too slow to ignite the dancefloor (however, "Television Rules the Nation"'s robotic, "Smoke on the Water" meets "Iron Man" guitar riff nails the cleverly stupid vibe that doesn't always connect on the rest of the album). All of this makes the album something of an odd beast, and the baffled reactions of some fans -- some of whom suggested that Human After All was a fake album by the band made to foil digital piracy when it leaked several months before its official release date -- is understandable. Daft Punk aren't responsible for their listeners' expectations, but they release music so rarely that this low-res album with just ten songs (or nine, if you don't count the 19-second channel-surfing blip that is "On/Off") does, initially, feel like a disappointment. However, Human After All's best tracks do make the duo's somewhat confounding aesthetic choices work: "The Brainwasher"'s trippy opening and mischievous riffs have a real sense of tension and momentum; "Robot Rock" takes Discovery's guitar worship even further, forging it into cybernetic metal; and the irresistible "Technologic," with its catchy technobabble and cheap-and-cheerful disco beat, feels like the next evolution of tracks like "Teachers" and "Harder, Faster, Better, Stronger." Since the album is on a smaller scale than Daft Punk's previous albums, it's not surprising that its pleasures are smaller too. The way that the synth, guitar, and vocoder lines blur into mecha-orga unity on the oddly bittersweet title track, and the way that the schaffel beat on "Prime Time of Your Life" gradually overtakes the song, eventually speeding up and devouring it, may not change the way listeners think about music the way that Discovery or Homework did, but that doesn't make them any less enjoyable. Human After All ends up being just not-bad (a first for Daft Punk); that may be hard to accept for fans that demand nothing less than brilliance from them, but just because it isn't an instant classic doesn't mean that it's totally unworthy, either. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Human After All Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (5:19)
The Prime Time of Your Life Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (4:23)
Robot Rock Kae Williams, Jr., Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (4:47)
Steam Machine Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (5:20)
Make Love Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (4:50)
The Brainwasher Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (4:08)
On/Off Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (0:19)
Television Rules the Nation Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (4:47)
Technologic Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (4:44)
Emotion Thomas Bangalter Daft Punk (6:56)

Credits

Daft Punk (Guitar), Nilesh "Nilz" Patel (Mastering), Cédri Hervet (Production Coordination), Gildas Loaëc (Production Coordination)
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Wikipedia: Human After All
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Human After All
Human After All cover
Studio album by Daft Punk
Released March 9, 2005 (Japan)
March 14, 2005 (UK)
March 15, 2005 (U.S.)
Recorded September 13, 2004 – November 9, 2004[1]
Daft House (Paris, France)
Genre House
Length 45:34
Label Toshiba-EMI (Japan)
VJCP 68735 (CD)

Virgin
V2996 (UK 2LP)
CDV2996 (UK CD)
63562 (U.S. CD)
Producer Daft Punk, Cédric Hervet, Gildas Loaëc
Professional reviews
Daft Punk chronology
Daft Club
(2003)
Human After All
(2005)
Musique Vol. 1 1993-2005
(2006)
Singles from Human After All
  1. "Robot Rock"
    Released: April 11, 2005
  2. "Technologic"
    Released: June 14, 2005
  3. "Human After All"
    Released: October 31, 2005
  4. "The Prime Time of Your Life"
    Released: June 17, 2006

Human After All is the third studio album by French duo Daft Punk, first released on March 14, 2005 internationally and a day later in the United States. With it, Daft Punk applies minimalism and rock music to their French house music style. It received mixed reviews noting its reported six-week creation, which is particularly short compared to previous albums Discovery and Homework.

This album has been released with the Copy Control protection system in some regions.

Contents

Conception

The Japan edition of the album artwork features a quote from Daft Punk stating: "We believe that Human After All speaks for itself." In a later statement, Daft Punk considered Human After All to be the favorite of their three studio albums and regard it as "pure improvisation."[2] The album's brief creation and minimal production had been decided upon beforehand as counterpoint to their previous album. As Thomas Bangalter stated, "We were definitely seduced at the time by the idea of doing the opposite of Discovery." He also stated that Human After All was created primarily with two guitars and a drum machine.[3] Furthermore it was produced in two weeks and mixed in four, a session in sharp contrast to their older material.[3]

Bangalter has stated that the album is an attempt to discover where human feelings reside in music.[4] He later commented that "we felt like the third album was about this feeling of either fear or paranoia... [The record is] not something intended to make you feel good".[5] When questioned on the positive reaction to the use of the tracks in Daft Punk's recent live performances, Bangalter expressed that, "Human After All was the music we wanted to make at the time we did it. We have always strongly felt there was a logical connection between our three albums, and it's great to see that people seem to realize that when they listen now to the live show."[6]

The cover image of Human After All features the Daft Punk logo displayed on a television screen. Each single from the album ("Robot Rock", "Technologic, "Human After All" and "The Prime Time of Your Life") features a cover with a different image on a similar screen. This television theme is also expressed with tracks from the album, including "On/Off" and "Television Rules the Nation".

Reception

When the album was leaked on the Internet several months before release, fans speculated that it was a fake designed to foil online filesharing.[7] Reviews noted that the album's tracks were overly repetitive and of primitive quality. Critics also felt that, despite the re-affirmation of humanity suggested in its title, the album remained overtly mechanical.[8][9][10][11]

Nevertheless, Human After All is seen as a strange and gutsy musical statement. One review in Stylus Magazine stated, "it's the same story, track after track, willfully mistaking alternation for variation, intensification for development and dynamics. In other words, a shining example of pop songcraft in the 21st century."[8]

The recent live tour featuring tracks from Human After All caused people to reconsider what they felt about the album. Pedro Winter, Daft Punk's manager at the time, stated, "When we put out Human After All, I got a lot of bad feedback, like, 'It's so repetitive. There's nothing new. Daft Punk used to be good.' Then they came back with the light show, and everyone shut their mouths... People even apologized, like, 'How could we have misjudged Daft Punk?' The live show changed everything. Even if I'm part of it, I like to step back and admire it. Me, I cried."[12]

The first single "Robot Rock" received moderate attention, reaching #32 in the UK and #15 on the U.S. dance charts, but was not a major hit. The second single "Technologic" only hit #40 in the UK but did considerably better in airplay. The track has also been featured on The O.C. and in an iPod commercial. A sample of the track has also been used as the chorus for Busta Rhymes' single "Touch It".

Human After All was nominated for the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Electronic/Dance Album.

Track listing

  1. "Human After All" – 5:19
  2. "The Prime Time of Your Life" – 4:23
  3. "Robot Rock" – 4:47
  4. "Steam Machine" – 5:22
  5. "Make Love" – 4:48
  6. "The Brainwasher" – 4:08
  7. "On/Off" – 0:19
  8. "Television Rules the Nation" – 4:47
  9. "Technologic" – 4:44
  10. "Emotion" – 6:57

Personnel

  • Daft Punk – guitars, keyboards, sampling, vocoders, vocals, drum machines, programming, production
  • Cédri Hervet – production coordination
  • Gildas Loaëc – production coordination
  • Nilesh "Nilz" Patel – mastering

Remix album

Human After All: Remixes cover

Human After All: Remixes was released on March 29, 2006 exclusively for Japan. It features numerous remixes previously unavailable on CD in a limited pressing of 3,000 copies. A limited edition of the album included a set of Daft Punk kubricks. The album implements a Copy Control system.

  1. "Robot Rock" (Soulwax remix) – 6:31
  2. "Human After All" (SebastiAn remix) – 4:48
  3. "Technologic" (Peaches No Logic remix) – 4:38
  4. "The Brainwasher" (Erol Alkan's Horrorhouse dub) – 6:05
  5. "The Prime Time of Your Life" (Para One remix) – 3:52
  6. "Human After All" ("Guy-Man After All" Justice remix) – 4:01
  7. "Technologic" (Digitalism's Highway to Paris remix) – 6:01
  8. "Human After All" (Alter Ego remix) – 9:26
  9. "Technologic" (Vitalic remix) – 5:27
  10. "Robot Rock" (Daft Punk Maximum Overdrive mix) – 5:54
    • This song was previously titled "Robot Rock (Maximum Overdrive)".

References

  1. ^ Liner notes of the Human After All album - "Paris, September 13, 2004 to November 9, 2004"
  2. ^ Suzanne Ely, "Return of the Cybermen" Mixmag (July 2006)
  3. ^ a b "Thomas Bangalter interview at French Touch Forum". http://frenchtouch.forumactif.com/viewtopic.forum?t=1333. 
  4. ^ "Belfort's After Show interview at French Touch Forum". http://frenchtouch.forumactif.com/viewtopic.forum?t=1349. 
  5. ^ Eric Ducker, "The Creators" (2007). The Fader, issue 47, pp. 116. Retrieved on February 17, 2008.
  6. ^ Interview: Daft Punk Pitchfork Media. Retrieved on October 2, 2007.
  7. ^ Heather Phares, Allmusic Review. Retrieved on November 3, 2007.
  8. ^ a b Matthew Weiner, Human After All review at Stylus Magazine Online (March 14, 2005)
  9. ^ Barry Walters, Human After All review Rolling Stone (April 7, 2005)
  10. ^ Mark Pytlik, Human After All review Pitchfork Media (March 15, 2005)
  11. ^ Daniel Incognito, Human After All review Sputnikmusic. Retrieved on June 26, 2007.
  12. ^ Daft Punk and the Rise of the New Parisian Nightlife Paper Magazine. Retrieved on November 3, 2007.

External links


 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Human After All" Read more