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Soul/Club/Rap
LPレコード

Human After All (Vinyl)

4.8

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3,490
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フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2022年09月09日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルADA/Daft Life Ltd.
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 9029661190
SKU 190296611902

構成数 : 2枚

1. Human After All
2. The Prime Time of Your Life
3. Robot Rock
4. Steam Machine
5. Make Love
6. The Brainwasher
7. On/Off
8. Television Rules the Nation
9. Technologic
10. Emotion

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
  2. 2.[LPレコード]

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Daft Punk

オリジナル発売日:2005年

商品の紹介

Daft Punk has always been one of dance music's most flexible -- and accessible -- acts, spanning the relentless pulse of Homework and the lush, sprawling Discovery with a distinctive wit and playfulness that made fans of electronic music diehards and indie rockers alike. Though the long-awaited Human After All retains that playfulness, it's the duo's simplest album, which oddly enough, makes it their most difficult to embrace at first. Human After All was made in six weeks, and sounds like it -- and not always in a good way: the quick-and-dirty recording process and limited palette of grainy synths, vocoders, and guitars do lend a stripped-down, spontaneous feel, but just as often, this minimal approach feels like it's supporting minimal ideas. Most of Human After All's tracks concentrate on one or two heavily repeated motifs, giving some of the tracks the feeling of demos copied and pasted to a full song length (even more uncharitably, you could say that they sound like parts of a Daft Punk beats-and-loops construction kit). "Steam Machine," for example, starts off strong with a low-slung, low-rent drum machine beat and aptly hissy whispering, but fails to do much over the course of five minutes. Repetition and simplicity, or at least a certain kind of innocence, have been at the heart of Daft Punk's music since the beginning, but this formula doesn't always work on Human After All; this is particularly true on the album's softer songs, "Make Love" and "Emotion," both of which are pretty and evocative, but never quite pack the emotional punch that they threaten to. And though Human After All's linear quality is superficially like the duo's more danceable work, many of the tracks are too slow to ignite the dancefloor (however, "Television Rules the Nation"'s robotic, "Smoke on the Water" meets "Iron Man" guitar riff nails the cleverly stupid vibe that doesn't always connect on the rest of the album). All of this makes the album something of an odd beast, and the baffled reactions of some fans -- some of whom suggested that Human After All was a fake album by the band made to foil digital piracy when it leaked several months before its official release date -- is understandable. Daft Punk aren't responsible for their listeners' expectations, but they release music so rarely that this low-res album with just ten songs (or nine, if you don't count the 19-second channel-surfing blip that is "On/Off") does, initially, feel like a disappointment. However, Human After All's best tracks do make the duo's somewhat confounding aesthetic choices work: "The Brainwasher"'s trippy opening and mischievous riffs have a real sense of tension and momentum; "Robot Rock" takes Discovery's guitar worship even further, forging it into cybernetic metal; and the irresistible "Technologic," with its catchy technobabble and cheap-and-cheerful disco beat, feels like the next evolution of tracks like "Teachers" and "Harder, Faster, Better, Stronger." Since the album is on a smaller scale than Daft Punk's previous albums, it's not surprising that its pleasures are smaller too. The way that the synth, guitar, and vocoder lines blur into mecha-orga unity on the oddly bittersweet title track, and the way that the schaffel beat on "Prime Time of Your Life" gradually overtakes the song, eventually speeding up and devouring it, may not change the way listeners think about music the way that Discovery or Homework did, but that doesn't make them any less enjoyable. Human After All ends up being just not-bad (a first for Daft Punk); that may be hard to accept for fans that demand nothing less than brilliance from them, but just because it isn't an instant classic doesn't mean that it's totally unworthy, either. ~ Heather Phares
Rovi

ここ最近はフランツ・フェルディナンドのリミックスを手掛けたのが目立つ程度だったダフト・パンクが4年ぶりのアルバムで帰還。先行シングルの“Robot Rock”はブレイクウォーターの“Release The Beast”をサンプルしたファンキーなギター・サウンドでしたが、アルバム自体は初期の彼らを思わせるシンプルなビートと、調子に乗りすぎなヴォコーダー・ヴォイスの合体ロボット的。イイ意味で完成未満のような音がスリリング!
bounce (C)轟 ひろみ
タワーレコード(2005年04月号掲載 (P72))

メンバーズレビュー

6件のレビューがあります
4.8
83%
17%
0%
0%
0%
隠れ名曲の宝庫?聴けば聴くほど沼にハマる、ダフトパンク作品の中で一番ロボット的部分が感じれる一枚。というのも、前作“ディスカバリー”がヒューマノイドである彼らの“人間への憧れ”という意思表示な作りになっていて、今作に関しては、その真逆。ロボ的感性を携えている彼らだからこそ作る事が出来た電子音たっぷりの唯一無二の大作。並みの人間がこんな音楽造れるワケがない。
2020/04/28 ズンさん
0
Human After All|CDアルバム
当時はエド・バンガーやジャスティスといったエレクトロ勢の台頭もあり、その文脈で語られることも多い3作目だが、“Robot Rock”などロッキンなイメージを押し出していたあたり、あえて時流に乗って遊んでみていたのでは?
0
必聴:The Prime Time Of Your Life 頭に直接くる。
2006/09/23 muge3さん
0

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