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    "Robot Rock" is the first single from Daft Punk's 2005 album Human After All. While receiving moderate chart attention, many critics found the song overly repetitive. It prominently features sampled portions of "Release The Beast" performed by Breakwater.


        Robot Rock (song)
            Structure
            Reception
            Additional notes
            Single track listing
    NameRobot Rock
    CoverRobotRock.DaftPunk.single.jpg
    ArtistDaft Punk
    From AlbumHuman After All (album)
    ReleasedApril 11, 2005
    FormatCD, 12"
    Recorded2004
    GenreFrench house, Dance music
    Length4:47
    LabelVirgin Records
    WriterThomas Bangalter
    Guy-Manuel de Homem-Chr...
    ProducerDaft Punk, Cédric Hervet, Gildas Loaëc
    Chart Position* #32 United Kingdom
    Last Single"Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger"<...
    This Single"Robot Rock"
    (2005)

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    Structure
    The track is essentially based on one looped riff sampled from the Breakwater song "Release The Beast" (mp3). In addition, Daft Punk incorporated elements of "Release The Beast" in the production and added the single's titular talk box vocal phrase. The permitted use of the sample is credited in the single's sleeve and on the liner notes included with Human After All. This was not the first time Daft Punk have based a track on a sampled riff ("Digital Love" would be a noted example) but it is the first to introduce very few other elements.

    Notably, the "Maximum Overdrive" remix of the single removes the main Breakwater riff and consists mainly of the track's other sampled elements (which include guitar power chords and percussion) with the vocal for a duration of nearly six minutes. A video for this remix has been shot and included on Daft Punk's Musique Vol. 1 1993-2005 compilation CD/DVD.

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    Reception
    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'."

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    Additional notes

      The same Breakwater sample was previously used in the track "Intro" by Murs.


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    Single track listing
      CD VSCDX1897
      "Robot Rock" (Radio Edit)
      "Robot Rock" (Maximum Overdrive)
      "Robot Rock"

      12" VST1897
      "Robot Rock"
      "Robot Rock" (Soulwax Remix)
      "Robot Rock" (Maximum Overdrive)
      "Rockapella"
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Robot Rock (song)". link