Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (2024)

ByMark Savage,BBC music reporter

Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (1)Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (2)Getty Images

Daft Punk, who were responsible for some of the most influential dance tracks of all time, have announced their retirement after nearly 30 years.

The duo broke the news in a typically-enigmatic video, titled Epilogue.

In the clip, musicians Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, dressed in their iconic robot costumes, bid each other farewell in the desert, before one of them self-destructed.

The band's longtime publicist confirmed the split to the BBC.

Formed in Paris in 1993, the group brought the French underground house scene into the charts with hits like One More Time, Da Funk and Around The World.

Their debut album, Homework, is considered a landmark in dance music; while they scored a worldwide hit in 2013 with the retro-disco single Get Lucky, featuring Pharrell Williams and Nile Rodgers.

The song was taken from their most recent record, Random Access Memories, which won the Grammy for album of the year in 2014.

Since then, the band have kept a relatively low profile - although they collaborated with R&B star The Weeknd on two tracks, Starboy and I Feel It Coming, in 2016.

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Famously publicity-shy, the musicians were seldom seen in public without their robot headgear, and used processed, computerised vocals on almost all of their biggest hits.

"We're not performers, we're not models - it would not be enjoyable for humanity to see our features," de Homem-Christo once told Rolling Stone magazine, "but the robots are exciting to people."

As they called time on their career, dozens of artists recognised Daft Punk's impact on dance music.

"Eternally grateful," wrote Christine and the Queens on Twitter. "Thank you Daft Punk for everything! We will miss you!" added Swedish DJ Alesso.

"Thankful to be a part of the journey," said The Weeknd on his Instagram Story.

Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (3)Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (4)Getty Images

Bangalter and de Homem-Christo met at school in Paris, and began making music together as teenagers alongside Laurent Brancowicz - later of the indie band Phoenix.

Originally called Darlin', the trio released some incredibly basic garage rock songs on a UK compilation album, Shimmies In Super 8, in 1993.

A review in Melody Maker called the music "a daft punky thrash" - indirectly christening the band's second incarnation.

Pretty soon, they had abandoned rock for dance music. A subsequent Darlin' song called Untitled 18 sampled David Bowie's Starman and marked their first experimentation with robotic vocals.

Bidding war

A year later, they passed a cassette of their music to Stuart MacMillan, co-founder of the Scottish techno label Soma, at a rave in Disneyland Paris. On it was the first official Daft Punk song - The New Wave, an uncompromising techno assault on the senses which Soma released in 1994.

But it was Da Funk's infectiously zany mix of G-funk and acid house that really put them on the map.

Originally pressed in a limited run of 2,000 12-inch records, it was virtually ignored until The Chemical Brothers started playing it in their DJ sets. By the end of 1995, it had sold 30,000 copies and as voted song of the year by French club magazine Soda.

A record label bidding war ensued, with the band eventually signing to Virgin Records and releasing Homework - recorded in Bangalter's bedroom - in 1996.

There was something cartoonish about the band's early singles that compensated for the anonymity of the men behind them. It was an idea compounded by Michel Gondry's mesmerising video for Around The World, where every instrument is represented by a groups of dancers (skeletons represent the guitar line, mummies act out the drum pattern and synchronised swimmers are the synths).

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It took three years for the band to record a follow-up, during which time Bangalter also scored a major hit - Music Sounds Better with You - with his side project Stardust.

Discovery, released in 2001, was almost wilfully anti-cool, steeped in references to 70s disco and 80s crooners. At one point it even samples Barry Manilow's Who's Been Sleeping in My Bed.

But the band chopped, spliced, filtered and filleted those sounds to create audacious new songs, with a sense of fun and showmanship that dance music often lacks. If you can listen to the ridiculous guitar arpeggios of Aerodynamic or the party-starting chants of Crescendolls without cracking a smile, they seemed to be saying, maybe it's you who's the robot.

The album's most enduring song, however, is Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger.

Based entirely around Edwin Birdsong's Cola Bottle Baby, a forgotten 70s funk track, it adds a simple vocal line ("Work it harder, make it better / Do it faster, makes us stronger") that is twisted and manipulated in increasingly inventive ways until it's barely recognisable as anything but signal noise.

Kanye West later lifted the track and used it as the basis for his own song, Stronger. Daft Punk were unaware of the sample until they heard it on the radio in Los Angeles.

"The DJ had made an edit of our song at the beginning and then it turned into his song," de Homem-Christo told Billboard in 2007.

"Our song had a good sound, but when he put Kanye's record on, the sound was really fat. It sounds really big. It's not a collaboration in the studio, but the vibe of the music we do separately connected in what he did with the song."

Another four years passed before the release of their third and least essential album, Human After All, after which they wrote the soundtrack to Disney's sci-fi sequel Tron: Legacy.

Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (5)Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (6)Shutterstock

They returned to form with 2013's Random Access Memories - a lush, opulent tribute to the music they grew up with, recorded entirely on live instruments, and featuring guest appearances from Chic's Nile Rodgers, Muppets composer Paul Williams and disco innovator Giorgio Moroder, who narrated his own life story over nine minutes of interlocking dance grooves.

The album, which cost more than a million dollars to make, was preceded by the hit single Get Lucky. Speaking to NPR, Bangalter said the song represented the record's theme of connecting the past, present and future of dance music.

"It was somehow maybe a child's dream to possibly one day be able to make music with one of the musicians we really love," he explained.

"So Get Lucky is really about this encounter between Nile [Rodgers] and also Pharrell Williams, [who] we've been friends with and which we've worked with in the past, but about really teaming up and getting outside of our home studio and really reaching out to other musicians and performers and making music and having fun in the studio making music together."

The album brought the duo to a whole new audience, but now it also appears to be a full stop. The end point in their disco odyssey.

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The video announcing their split was based on an excerpt from their 2006 film Electroma.

As one of the robot bodies disintegrated, a caption appeared stating "1993 - 2021". The clip closed with one of the musicians walking into the sunset, accompanied by the song Touch, including the choral refrain: "Hold on. If love is the answer you're home."

Tributes from the stars

The band's publicist Kathryn Frazier offered no explanation for the break-up - but fans flooded social media with tributes.

French media tracking service Visibrain said there were 27 tweets posted every second about the band on Monday afternoon.

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Pharrell Williams was among them, simply posting the phrase: "Forever legends".

"Daft Punk left the game with a flawless legacy. I would say enviable but impossibly unattainable is more appropriate," said Mark Ronson.

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Producer Erol Alkan wrote, "Respect to Thomas and Guy-Man. Farewell"; while Dutch DJ Don Diablo thanked the duo "for inspiring me to make music when I was a kid".

"THE greatest to EVER do it," said UK dance act Disclosure. "Words can't describe the inspiration & knowledge we gained from listening to the 2 robots over the years. Wishing them nothing but good energy & positivity for the future."

"As a French producer its hard to describe the huge impact Daft Punk had on my life, my music and career," added DJ/producer Habstrakt. "Thank you for forever changing the landscape of music."

"Daft Punk's Discovery album was critical to my development." said Maurice Peebles, editor-in-chief of Complex magazine. "[It] opened up an entire universe I didn't know existed. forever grateful."

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Music

Daft Punk announce split after 28 years (2024)

FAQs

When did Daft Punk announce their breakup? ›

In 2015, Rolling Stone ranked them the 12th greatest musical duo of all time; the same publication has included two of their albums on their list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. They announced their split in 2021.

Has Daft Punk done a face reveal? ›

Thomas Bangalter, half of the pioneering French electronic duo Daft Punk, who announced their split in 2021, has announced his first orchestral solo album — and has revealed his face for the first time in a public context, albeit as a realistic illustration.

Is Daft Punk gone for good? ›

The Parisian duo announced their separation in February 2021, leaving behind an enormous legacy. Contact with mankind was re-established on February 22, 2021. But this time, it was to announce that Daft Punk was calling it quits.

Why did Daft Punk break up with BBC? ›

Bangalter also told the BBC that he wanted the relationship between humanity and technology to be “absolute”, and was worried about the real-life rise in artificial intelligence. "It was an exploration, I would say, starting with the machines and going away from them.

Why did Daft Punk split apart? ›

"My concerns about the rise of artificial intelligence go beyond its use in music creation," Bangalter added, explaining how some fans have misunderstood Daft Punk intentions when it comes to digital culture. "[Daft Punk] was an exploration, I would say, starting with the machines and going away from them."

How long were Daft Punk anonymous? ›

For 28 years, dance music's most influential duo kept their faces and identities hidden. They said there was a simple reason for the mystery.

Who quit Daft Punk? ›

Daft Punk's Thomas Bangalter on why the group decided to split after 28 years. The French electronic music duo, who formed in Paris in 1993, split in 2021. Daft Punk musician Thomas Bangalter said he is relieved he can look back on the group's nearly 30-year career feeling like they “didn't mess it up too much”.

What is Daft Punk's last song? ›

Listen to the last Daft Punk song ever, “Infinity Repeating

Will Daft Punk ever be back? ›

This is a rumor and not true,” a rep for the robots tells Rolling Stone. The twosome disbanded in 2021.

What is Daft Punk doing today? ›

What is Daft Punk doing now? After Daft Punk's split, Thomas Bangalter announced Mythologies - his first solo album in over two years. The album, which debuted on Friday 7th April 2023 has spawned two singles so far L'Accouchement and Le Minotaure.

How many Grammys does Daft Punk have? ›

The Grammy Awards are awarded annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States. Daft Punk has received thirteen nominations; seven of which resulted in awards.

Does Daft Punk like stronger? ›

Daft Punk voiced their approval of the song, finding West made the sample suitable for his personality as he ventured outside of hip hop.

When did Daft Punk retire? ›

The pioneering French electronic dance duo called it quits in 2021 after nearly three decades of anonymous music-making from underneath their signature shiny robot helmets.

Did Daft Punk break up because of AI? ›

During an interview with the BBC, Bangalter says that their futuristic, robot-like personas were a primary drive behind the group's disbanding, commenting that they were beginning to lean too far into the world of artificial intelligence, adding that “As much as I love this character the last thing I would want to be, ...

Why doesn't Daft Punk make music? ›

Speaking to the BBC, Bangalter revealed that the increasing intersection between humans and technology was the reason behind Daft Punk's demise, and that the core of the duo was that there should be a clear separation between the two.

When was Daft Punk identity revealed? ›

The identity of Daft Punk was never a secret. The real names of the musicians are Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo. PEOPLE published an article in 2014, revealing what the robot duo looked like unmasked.

Did Daft Punk get back together? ›

Daft Punk will not be playing at your house, and they most certainly will not be reuniting next summer for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Paris, Rolling Stone has confirmed. “This is a rumor and not true,” a rep for the robots tells Rolling Stone. The twosome disbanded in 2021.

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