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Daft Punk Is Now In The Past, After Pushing Pop Into The Future

NASA landed a new rover on Mars this month, and Daft Punk blew itself up in the desert. The explosion marked the end of an era, at a time humanity embraces a new one. The mysterious French EDM duo announced an end to their nearly three-decade journey with a YouTube video titled “Epilogue.” It was portrayed in true Daft Punk fashion: suited up, helmets on, without a word. The video depicted one walking in the desert while the 60-second timer counted down to his demise. He never looked back before he was blown into pieces, resembling a machine over human flesh. The other watched motionless and expressionless before embarking on his own journey toward the sun on an endless desert horizon.

5 Times Daft Punk s Music Made Movies Or TV Shows Better

CinemaBlend Copy to clipboard We have officially reached the end of an era - an “epilogue,” if you will - pioneered by a pair of French musicians whose impact on pop culture, beyond even just music, cannot be exaggerated, inspiring memorable needle drops (such as in TRON: Legacy one of the coolest film scores in years. Their revolutionarily eclectic styles and unique guise of anonymity made Daft Punk key to bringing electronic dance music into the mainstream - an achievement some may not have comprehended to its full extent until just recently. Daft Punk’s Electroma in which the band members’ dramatized counterparts (depicted as actual robots and portrayed by different actors) are walking in the desert when Bangalter silently requests Homem-Christo  to initiate his self-destruct function before going their separate ways. Even for the few who have managed to see the rare avant-garde, sci-fi cult favorite, the clip is a haunting eight minutes, especially whe

Daft Punk: how the mystery music masterminds used their robot disguise to take over the world

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.

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