Good God Almighty that accelerated quickly.

After a bombshell album announcement earlier today and the reveal of its new artwork (featuring a shockingly un-dreaded Abel Tesfaye), The Weeknd has ended speculation about what his mysterious studio link-up with French electronic deities Daft Punk was all about and just dropped the debut single from Starboy featuring the duo. The song, the title track from the record, opens with very Daft Punk production, a slick, almost robotic driving beat that pulses along with rumbling synths, a simple piano riff and The Weeknd’s silky smooth falsetto wafting over the top of it all. You can listen below:

That chorus, with the very Daft Punk-esque vocoder and The Weeknd’s fiery lyrics (“look what you’ve done/I’m a motherfuckin’ starboy”) is like a sonic fish hook, not even two listens in and I’m already singing it in my head. If you listen to the song on Apple Music you also get some clues about Starboy the album. Though unplayable yet, Apple Music lists a whopping 18 tracks in total, though none are titled but for the third (False Alarm). It also lists an expected release date of November 25th, which did seem to be about five minutes away before today and now feels like an eternity.

We can’t wait to hear more from Starboy in the meantime.

Read more: The Weeknd donates $250K to the Black Lives Matter movement

Image: Uproxx

What’s striking about 2005’s Human After All is that it continues to resonate with electronic pop more than 10 years after it’s release. The filter sweeps of GrimesArt Angels, the dynamic shifts on Tame Impala’s Currents, the infectious repetition of Caribou’s Our Love, and the loose experimentation of Animal Collective’s Painting With- Daft Punk’s prescient album has it all. Yet despite making such a remarkable musical statement, the duo’s third helping was widely dismissed as mediocre at best.

In order to appreciate the album, it’s worthwhile considering what came before. In the 90s, electronic dance music surfaced from the underground, exploding into dozens of genres. Emerging from the French house and techno scene, producers Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo quickly captured the attention of the European music press.

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From the start the duo were breaking down barriers. Having arrived at a time where the general public didn’t consider producers or DJs to be “real musicians”, Daft Punk took their music out of the studio and performed it before crowds of thousands. Like many great pop bands, the duo may not have always been the first. But what they did do, they did better than anyone else.

Labelled French touch, Daft Punk’s newly minted genre was a presentable and commercially savvy take on electronic music. With an image that glossed over the more dangerous and unsavoury aspects of rave culture, it was dance music for the masses. With no small help from major record labels, the burgeoning duo’s career was soon building momentum.

By 1997, rave music fully broke into the mainstream. Daft Punk’s debut, Homework, road the crest of that wave, capturing the spirit of the time. In their wake, the pair’s amalgamation of classic funk, disco, techno and house was rapidly adopted by a host of hungry imitators.

Looking back, the release of their second LP Discovery served as an epitaph for the 1990s. Released in 2001, the album embellished the group’s trademark sounds with a glittery pop veneer. It was meticulous in terms of production and songcraft, a crystallisation of everything that had come in the decade before.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGBhQbmPwH8

In 2005, came Human After All. A humble successor to Discovery, the improvisatory LP was captured using an 8-track tape recorder over a period of two weeks. Its music was not only permeated by digital keyboards and vocoded vocals, but also more prominent guitar riffs and classic rock rhythms. Talking to Q Magazine in 2007, Bangalter’s explanation of single Robot Rock is perhaps indicative of the overall idea behind the album. “[Robot Rock] 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 rock—that power—and mix it with dance.”

The duo’s new album was also their least lauded. Rolling Stone’s Barry Walters awarded the album two and half stars out of five. He mused that the duo may have become “the victim of their own animatronic satire.” Pitchfork critic Mark Pytlik described the album as “passable and hardly special,” awarding it a paltry 4.9 out of 10. Pytlik struggled to reconcile the rawness of the LP’s rock elements with the band’s electronic roots. In his view, ragged and minimal production was praiseworthy in the world of rock, but Human After All lacked the finesse expected from an electronic band. Like many of his contemporaries, he considered the LP a poor man’s alternative to the duo’s earlier helpings. The general consensus was clear: this hybrid of dance and rock wasn’t where it was at.

But let’s not put commentators like Walters and Pytlik on the firing line. Critics simply articulate the views of the cultures to which they belong. In 2005, the garage rock revival was at its zenith and dance music was slipping back into the clubs. Dubstep was nestled deep underground, new rave hadn’t fully hit and the EDM explosion was still a little way ahead. Daft Punk’s electronica was never far removed from their rock influences but in the minds of many music fans the divisions had yet to come down.

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In 2016, it seems like the times have well and truly caught up. Like Human After All’s closing track Emotion, Caribou’s Can’t Do Without You from 2015’s Our Love is built around a single musical idea; a single lyrical motif repeated to near breaking point. The similarity is not coincidental. Talking with Pitchfork TV Caribou’s Dan Snaith praised Daft Punk’s earlier work. “This combination of kind of minimalism and maximalism has really spoke to me,” the producer revealed. “The first track of my new record I Can’t Do Without You is just about one repeated phrase and it’s all about building momentum out of the same chord progression over and over again, but just slowing, releasing, building…I think [Daft Punk] are just the masters of that.”

In 2015, UK producer Sophie’s debut album Product embraced trap infused power pop to what seemed like the sickening extremes. The consumer parodying music divided some critics, but it reached a broad audience. Consider Technologic’s musical elements; modulated vocals, industrial textures and lyrical hook “Plug it/Play it/Burn it/Rip it/Drag it/Drop it/Zip/Unzip it” repeated 399 times. This track paradoxically parodied and embraced consumerism long before Sophie.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8K90hX4PrE

Ratatats rock meets electronica sound made an imprint in 2015 with LP Magnifique. Given the album’s guitar driven tracks, squelching keyboards and vocoded sounds, there’s certainly some fingerprints of Daft Punk’s Human After All. It’s perhaps unsurprising given the two groups are long-time contemporaries, but it begs the question how the similar Human After All would have fared in 2015.

Selfproduced in Ableton Live, Grimes’ Art Angels embraced a similar DIY aesthetic to Daft Punk’s. A gutsy leap from her cult breakthrough Oblivion, the 2015 album pushed Claire Boucher to further heights of mainstream success. The album is deeply rooted in the world of electronic music, yet hops genres to include more than a few guitar driven numbers.

One explanation for all these similarities is this: With the continuing onset of the project paradigm, more and more home studio-based artists are leading the charge in popular music. Grimes’ and Tame Impala’s latest releases are both highly successful examples of projects recorded with the artists’ own digital audio workstations. Today’s musicians aren’t just capturing their sounds in the bedroom; they’re mixing, mastering and getting creative with their production. As digital recording becomes more commonplace those traditional notions of capturing a ‘realistic’ or ‘natural’ recording continue to filter out. Not only in the minds of the creators, but also the listeners. Daft Punk has always played on the aesthetic of a hyper-digital future, but it’s slowly become a reality.

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Image: MusicRadar

In 2014 came Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories. A global number #1 chartbuster, it was the thing record company execs fantasise about. Moving the group’s sound closer to their disco and funk influences, the album made numerous nods to the very genres which laid the seeds of underground house and techno music in 1980s. It was almost as if Daft Punk were giving us a knowing “I told you so.” They were hip to the artificiality of the rock-electronic divide the whole time.

Thinking back to 2005, so much of the music has passed from our fickle notions of “cool”. The new rave sounds and indie pop that flooded music festivals in a sea of fluorescent clothing seem like a distant memory. But where the music of many of Daft Punk’s mid-noughties contemporaries slips into the periphery of popular consciousness, we’re only now getting a full grasp upon Human After All. In 2016, the barriers between rock and house which the album broke down seem to have more generally subsided. Despite the initial scepticism which it was faced with, the resonance of Human After All more than a decade on suggests that it has that sliver of elusive substance which makes an album truly great, even timeless.

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Ever wanted to see Daft Punk as LEGO men? Of course you have. And now, you can. A band of robotic LEGO figurines and their grand human ruler have graced YouTube with their most recent offering.

Having previously covered Depeche Mode and also created their own techno jams on their YouTube channel, the Toa Mata Band have now covered Daft Punk’s classic, Da Funk, using drum pads, bass guitar, Nintendo DS and more.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0H2aMUENtX0]

The Toa Mata Band is made up of several tiny robotic LEGO figures programmed to play a variety of musical instruments. Known as ‘The World’s First Lego Robotic Band’, they are made up of figurines from the LEGO’s Bionicle range and are controlled by Italian music producer Giuseppe Acito.

Each ‘member’ of the band has been built from LEGO Bionicle pieces. Their arms are controlled by an Arduino Uno microprocessor connected to an iPad running Nord Beat (bear with me), which is a Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) app, a communication protocol that allows MIDI-equipped instruments to communicate with each other.

That’s a lot of tech words for LEGO pieces rigged with rubber bands and pulleys attached to a computer. The tiny bots essentially hit the instrument they’re facing when prompted by the software program.

However it works, it is by far the coolest thing I have seen in a very long time.

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In a bittersweet moment for Daft Punk fans, the documentary Daft Punk Unchained is now available for streaming via the French NME site…. but without English subtitles.

Directed by Hervé Martin Delpierre and co-written by Delpierre and Marina Rozenman, the documentary explores the cultural phenomenon of the musical duo, who we last heard from in 2013 with the album Random Access Memories. The press release for the film states: “Between fiction and reality, magic and secret, future and reinvention, theatricality and humility, The Robots have built a unique world. The film combines rare archive footage as well as exclusive interviews with their closest collaborators.”

It also features appearances from the likes of Kanye West, Pharrell, Nile Rodgers, Giorgio Moroder, Michel Gondry, Paul Williams, Todd Edwards, Pete Tong and more. 

From what we can see it looks pretty awesome; it’s just a shame we can’t understand what anyone is saying. As they say, C’est la vie, and fingers crossed for an English release shortly.

If you must get a Daft Punk fix today you can check out their throwback merch here.

Daft Punk have some cool new merch, bound together with a vintage twist.

On their online store, they now have skateboards, t-shirts, belt buckles and baseball caps, all bearing their logo. Not to mention an array of frisbees and yo-yos to get you outside and away from your computer, with the duo teaming up with fashion brand New Era for the caps (robots don’t wear caps). Although a few people on their Facebook page have been complaining about the nature of the new merch and the lack of new music, we thank the robots for these gifts.

Check it out:

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Daft Punk will also apparently be featured in a new documentary about Nile Rodgers as he prepares to release Chic, his first album in 23 years.

Daft Punk aren’t the only artists to release strange merchandise of late. Scottish post-rock stalwarts Mogwai have just released their own brand of seriously sick skateboards, while Run The Jewels’ Killer Mike teased some pretty sexy RTJ-themed women’s leggings on his Instagram.

This is very cool. A Brazilian guitar virtuoso has posted a video to YouTube of a very special version of Daft Punk’s Get Lucky. Sure, there’s been endless covers of it, but none quite like this.

Andre Antunes shows the hell off in this three minute clip, running through the signature style, and classic riffs, of ten of the most famous guitarists of our time – there’s a little Slash, some Kurt Cobain, shred-gods Steve Vai and Joe Satriani, Carlos Santana and more. I love the version of Tom Morello of Rage Against The Machine, but without doubt my favourite is the self-harmonised brilliance of Queen’s Brian May.

Let’s hope he does this to more songs, this is awesome.

Shred-worthy, share-worthy, ‘holy-shit-that’s-amazing’-worthy!

2014 has provided a number of musical collaborations that we didn’t realise we craved until they happened: Flying Lotus and Kendrick Lamar, Röyksopp and Robyn, Sbtrkt and Ezra Koenig…

But sometimes collaborations are as surprising as the continued success of Lil Wayne. This results in either a lot of exasperated groans (see Jay-Z x Linkin Park) or, occasionally, unanticipated collaborative harmony. Here’s a sample of the latter from the recent past.

1. Daft Punk & Paul Williams

If anyone knows their way around a collaborative track, it’s French dance legends Daft Punk. The duo’s 2013 album Random Access Memories is testament to this, featuring artists as diverse as EDM pioneer Giorgio Moroder, The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas and Animal Collective’s Panda Bear. The most peculiar appearance, however, came from then-72-year-old Paul Williams (the man behind The Muppet Movie soundtrack, of all things). Touch is an introspective, jazz-infused eight minutes that wanders blissfully between genres and is widely regarded as the cornerstone of the album. Williams contributes several heartfelt verses that border on spoken word. It must be noted, of course, that he is an internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter beyond Rainbow Connection, having penned hits for the likes of David Bowie and Barbra Streisand. It’s just funnier to think of him as Kermit the Frog’s lyricist.

2. Arctic Monkeys & Dizzee Rascal

You can decide for yourself whether this one was actually a success, but when Arctic Monkeys teamed up with London rapper Dizzee Rascal in 2007, it certainly raised some eyebrows. The indulgently titled Temptation Greets You Like Your Naughty Friend was recorded during the sessions for Arctic Monkeys’ second album, Favourite Worst Nightmare, and eventually appeared on the Brianstorm EP. Apparently Dizzee enjoyed the experience and was keen to work with Alex Turner again. The verse he contributed wasn’t all that abrasive, but perhaps it was for the best that further collaborative work never eventuated.

3. alt-J & Miley Cyrus

Admittedly this wasn’t a collaboration, as such, but questions have been asked about alt-J’s decision to borrow a verse from Miley’s 4×4 in their single Hunger of the Pine. Public opinion is divided; many believe the sample (‘I’m a female rebel’) seems to have been rather awkwardly shoehorned into the track, while others – myself included – can see its artistic merit and the element of unpredictability it provides. The inclusion of the sample came about as a result of alt-J’s drummer, Thom Green, remixing the track during the writing of the band’s second album, This Is All Yours. Apparently Miley’s on board, and has even worked a bit of Fitzpleasure into her Bangerz tour shows.

4. Tyler Touché & His Mum

Brisbane whiz kid Tyler Touché was just 16 when he released Baguette, a bouncy, nu-disco inspired track that garnered significant airplay and earned him a coveted spot at Splendour in the Grass 2013. The most amusing aspect of young Tyler’s success is that the word ‘baguette’ before the chorus was sung by his mum (presumably now known as Mrs Touché). She seems to have retired from her brief stint in the club music scene, though, as Tyler has sourced other vocalists for subsequent releases.

5. Crystal Castles & Robert Smith

When Crystal Castles re-recorded their cover of Platinum Blonde’s 1983 hit Not in Love with The Cure’s Robert Smith on lead vocals, it was a rare moment of cohesion. The recently disbanded Canadian duo were renowned for their glitchy, chaotic and cacophonous music, so releasing something that was effectively a pop song was, in itself, an odd turn of events. The fact that legendary frontman Robert Smith was supplying the vocals (and that it worked so well) made the situation even more surprising.