Daft Punk: how the mystery music masterminds used their robot disguise to take over the world
Friday, February 26, 2021 2:52 PM UTC
While Daft Punk’s break-up may have been unexpected, the enigmatic nature in how the public were notified was predictable. Announced via the electronic duo’s YouTube channel, an upload titled Epilogue turned out to be a scene lifted from their 2006 Electroma film, alongside a vocal borrowed from a track on 2013’s Random Access Memories album.
The pivotal desert scene features a prolonged trek by the duo in their instantly recognisable helmets and culminates in one self-destructing while the other walks away. Continuing then what is the pair’s time-honoured preference for ambiguity, it indicates a finale while refraining from disclosing the explicit details.
How Daft Punk Used Their Robot Disguise to Take Over the World
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Image: Andrea Raffin/Shutterstock
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While Daft Punk’s break-up may have been unexpected, the enigmatic nature in how the public were notified was predictable. Announced via the electronic duo’s YouTube channel, an upload titled Epilogue turned out to be a scene lifted from their 2006 Electroma film, alongside a vocal borrowed from a track on 2013’s Random Access Memories album.
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The Conversation: How Daft Punk used their robot disguise to take over the world
Daniel Cookney , University of Salford While Daft Punk s break-up may have been unexpected, the enigmatic nature in how the public were notified was predictable. Announced via the electronic duo s YouTube channel, an upload.
The Conversation: How Daft Punk used their robot disguise to take over the world nzherald.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nzherald.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.