Outbreaks, part seven: Daft Punk is playing on my iPod, a-my iPod-uh

Originally posted at The Outbreak on Mar. 7th, 2005:

All Killer, No Filler

I think we can all rest assured that there’s a particularly uncomfortable section of Hell reserved for Sum 41 because of how they ruined that phrase for the rest of us. And because of a wide array of other reasons.

“All killer, no filler” is a good way to describe Daft Punk’s new record Human After All, as it turns out. I found this somewhat surprising based on the nature of their last album, Discovery. Now, as anyone who has listened to that album can tell you, the first four songs (“One More Time,” “Aerodynamic,” “Digital Love,” “Harder Better Faster Stronger”) comprise pretty much the best first-four-song sequence on any album whose first four songs are not called “Black Dog,” “Rock and Roll,” “The Battle of Evermore” and “Stairway to Heaven”–I defy you to find me a better suite of hands-in-the-air-there’s-a-party-over-there music on God’s Gray Earth. Unfortunately, the rest of Discovery can’t help but feel like a let-down by way of comparison. Out of the entire 14-song platter, I think around nine are worth listening to. (The others being “Something About Us,” “Voyager,” “Veridis Quo,” (especially) “Face to Face,” and, depending on what mood you’re in, either “Nightvision,” “High Life,” or “Short Circuit.”) And the five (or so) clunkers are real killers, man. That closing song, “Too Long”? Talk about truth in advertising!

So the first thing you notice is that Human After All is pretty much wall-to-wall rockin