"Robot Rock" is the first single from Daft Punk's 2005 album Human After All. While the single reached a moderately high chart position, many critics found the song overly repetitive. It features sampled portions of "Release the Beast" performed by Breakwater.
Composition
"Robot Rock" contains a sample of the Breakwater song "Release the Beast". The sample features a synthesizer riff with an oscillator sync timbre, as well as percussion and power chords on an electric guitar. Daft Punk incorporated a vocoder into the production, repeating the title phrase of "Robot Rock". Aside from the sampling, Thomas Bangalter noted that the duo used a Moog synthesizer with guitar pedals for the song.
The Breakwater sample is credited on the single's sleeve and on the liner notes of the parent Human After All album. Bangalter explained that on his Roulé label, "we've been doing records that are 9 minutes with only [a single] one second loop, with even less foundation than there is on 'Robot Rock'. It's always been a way to reinterpret thingsâ"sometimes it's using [an] element from the past, or sometimes recreating them and fooling the eyes or the ears, which is just a fun thing to do." He elaborated that the song "is a tribute to the power of heavy rock chords. In a way I think we were exploring if you can take the essence of rockâ"that powerâ"and mix it with dance. But to take a riff and loop it is to explore the core of rock."
The Breakwater synthesizer riff is absent from the "Maximum Overdrive" remix of "Robot Rock", which consists of the song's other elements for a duration of nearly six minutes. A music video for this remix has been shot and included on the Daft Punk Musique Vol. 1 1993â"2005 compilation CD and DVD. "Robot Rock" was later used in the film Iron Man 2, in a scene where James Rhodes fights Tony Stark while both wearing versions of the Iron Man suit. The song is also featured on the game DJ Hero mixed with band Queen's "We Will Rock You" and is called "We Will (Robot) Rock You".
Music video
The music video for "Robot Rock" consists of Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo of Daft Punk performing the song on a stage decorated with several televisions and lights, and filmed on VHS, to achieve an aged look. This is the first video to feature the duo as themselves exclusively. This pattern continues for the rest of the Human After All videos except for "The Prime Time of Your Life", where they only make a cameo appearance. Bangalter plays the double neck guitar shown on the "Robot Rock" single cover while de Homem-Christo performs on a single set of drums.
Reception
Critical response
Though it reached moderate positions in UK and U.S. dance charts, the single encountered criticism for its general structure. A review in Stylus Magazine expressed that the track "does nothing, means nothing and goes nowhere for an unconscionably long time." References to earlier Daft Punk singles were also mentioned, as Rolling Stone declared "nothing builds to achieve the prior glories of 'Da Funk' or 'One More Time'" and Pitchfork Media noted that the single "is a poor man's 'Aerodynamic'." However, a Sputnikmusic review noted that "although annoying in nature, [it] is also very rewarding to listen to."
Chart performance
Single track listing
Notes
References
External links
- Robot Rock official music video
- "Robot Rock" (CD version) at Discogs
- "Robot Rock" (12" version) at Discogs