It’ll be interesting to see how they developed it in the 11 years since when the album drops later this month. It cost the duo and Sony, at a conservative estimate. Daft Punk continue to parcel out crumbs of information about the French house duo’s May 21 album Random Access Memories, but one clear theme so far is that the album will draw on older sounds. Sleuthing and speculation aside, the (questionable) demo sounds like what it says it is: a prototype Daft Punk song slipped in a DJ mix at some club in Amsterdam circa 2002. Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories was recorded over the span of five years and in three cities. In their interview with Rolling Stone, Daft Punk revealed that “R.A.M.” will only feature one sample: a cut from an Australian rock record in the opening of the final track. Moreover, unconfirmed tracklists list him as a collaborator for the final song.Īnother quasi-clue comes in the demo’s sample of “We Ride Tonight,” a track by Australian band the Sherbs. Daft Punk’s new album, Random Access Memories, finds them leaving behind the highly influential, riff-heavy EDM they originated to luxuriate in the sounds, styles, and production. First, we know from the album’s trailer that DJ Falcon has an album credit. And though we can’t confirm the rumor, there are signs of legitimacy here. Saturday, August 5th 2023 Home Page Close MenuĪnother track off Daft Punk’s insanely anticipated comeback LP “Random Access Memories” has apparently (purportedly, supposedly, possibly) been discovered through the collective effort of the internet.Īccording to FACT magazine, who recently previewed the album, a snippet of a 2002 DJ set by Daft Punk’s Thomas Bangalter, DJ Cassius and DJ Falcon sounds “pretty damn similar” to the final version of “R.A.M.” closer, “Contact.”īecause everyone and their cool uncle has released a pet project under the guise of a “R.A.M.” leak, rumors like this have been a dime a dozen. Random Access Memories reportedly uses first-rate session hands who have performed on records by Michael Jackson and Herbie Hancock, reflecting Daft Punk’s love of ’70s-’80s funk, soft.
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