Category Archives: CJS Group Discussions

The Album of the Noughties: Daft Punk’s Discovery

For me an album of a decade must meet some crucial criteria:

  • It must sound as fresh at the New Year’s Eve party at the end of that decade as it did when it came out.
  • It should have been ground breaking on its release
  • It should have easily recognisable songs to the music fan
  • And it should still make you smile.

Daft Punk’s Discovery, released March 13, 2001, is not just all of these points but also genre defining.

The album gave birth to a new strand of electronic music, as dance was injected with catchy hooks, big bass lines, synths and vocals. The birth of particularly the French electronic or electro scene was born, which has spread across continents and now dominates dance floors and inspires DJs across the world.

The second album from the Parisian duo was in stark contrast to their earlier Homework as they moved towards a more electronic-disco sound.

Justice and other Ed Banger artists have been obviously directly inspired, Chromeo, A-Trak, Gorillaz, Hot Chip and Mylo’s equally important album Destroy Rock and Roll would not have existed as they are without Discovery.

Look at the UK Top 40 Charts towards the end of 2009, pop-princesses Little Boots and La Roux have used the combination of synths and beats begun in Discovery in their electro-pop albums; Calvin Harris, Dizzee Rascal and even Alexandra Burke’s latest track shows touches; and Daft Punk are almost always mentioned in MySpace influences or ‘Top Friends’.

The tracks from Fools Gold’s latest EP –Duck Sauce – which was the sound of Ibiza ’09 could easily fit into the album without standing out to much in sound – highlighting both the importance the album has had to dance music the best part of a decade on and the longevity it has had.

The album can be seen in two parts largely – the first contains the singles, those with catchy lyrics which dominated radio playlists from Radio 1 to student radio; while the second half is perhaps slightly less accessible, though once one has fallen in love with the tracks before they keep on listening, wanting more, and continuing the infatuation with the mysterious DJ/producers.

The opening track ‘One More Time’ will instantly receive a shout of excitement the first time the lyrics are dropped into any DJ set or played at on a stereo at a house party; ‘Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger’ has been remixed, sampled and reused more times than it is possible to keep track of – most famously of late by Kanye West (though they never beat the original); and ‘Digital Love’ could even be seen as a dance ballad – how many times has that happened.

So let’s fast forward a month to this year’s NYE party to bring in the Tens (?). At house parties and work do’s ‘One More Time’ (as mentioned), ‘Digital Love’, Aerodynamic’ and ‘Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger’ will be lapped up.

‘Crescendolls’, ‘Face to Face’ and ‘Superheroes’ will produce the same reaction in clubs, for the more electronically minded music fan.

Daft Punk will often not be known as a band, or their track names will not be recognised by the average person, but play the chorus of one of the opening four tracks from Discovery to your most people between 13 and 50 and they will know, and probably love the song.

I think Discovery matches all the criteria set out at the beginning of this post. Like a good comedy film, every listen makes you pick up an extra little riff which was hiding behind a big bass line, or brings back memories.

The album sounds as fresh today as it did 104 months ago, and will continue to inspire, drive and pleasure bedroom DJs to established producers, dance floors to radios and those looking back at past nights to those about to embark on nightlife for the first time.

Daft Punk’s Discovery, defined a genre, defined an ideology and defines the Noughties.

Tracklist:

  1. “One More Time”
  2. “Aerodynamic”
  3. “Digital Love”
  4. “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger”
  5. “Crescendolls”
  6. “Nightvision”
  7. “Superheroes”
  8. “High Life”
  9. Something About Us
  10. “Voyager”
  11. “Veridis Quo”
  12. “Short Circuit”
  13. Face to Face
  14. “Too Long”

___________

Other Contenders:

The Libertines – Up The Bracket

Arctic Monkeys – Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not

Brand New – The Devil and God are Raging Inside Me

Sufjan Stevens – Come on Feel the Illinoise

Bloc Party – Silent Alarm

At the Drive In – Relationship of Command

Bon Iver – For Emma Forever Ago

The Killers – Ht Fuss

The Greatest Sporting Icon of the Noughties

An online debate was sparked by Josh Pettitt in the Cardiff Journalism School newsroom which has spread across WordPress and Twitter flaming debate.

The Greatest Sporting Icon of the Noughties is the issue, and personally I feel there is only one possible choice.

Men such as Michael Schumacher, Lance Armstrong and Ricky Pointing have all been hugely successful since 2000.

Though Michael Brown’s suggestion of Usain Bolt raised a very valid point, and one which goes straight to the crux of the issue.

Bolt, since blasting onto the sprinting scene with his blistering world-record times at Beijing of 9.69s (100m) and 19.30s (200m), has seen the Jamaican become a sporting icon: as an example to youngsters; a remarkable and unique physical specimen; but also with his trademark bolt stance.

Usain and his trademark Bolt

Icons

Cathy Freeman was iconic at the Sydney Olympics. In her head-to-toe suit she carried the hopes of Australia and her Aboriginal heritage.

Freeman iconic at Sydney in 2000

There are many images of Andrew Flintoff during the 2005 Ashes, from celebrating wickets to consoling Brett Lee at Trent Bridge after the Australian tail-end almost pulled off a remarkable victory.

There are many other examples but frankly only David Beckham can really justify the tag of The Greatest Sporting Icon of the Noughties.

The Player

For a start: the cornrows, the shaved head, the mohawk and now the mullet.

Beckham’s hair alone and the attention it has received and inspired others to follow is probably enough to give him this accolade, but his actions have been far more important over ten-years.

Since scoring from the half-way against Neil Sullivan’s Wimbledon on 17th August 1996, he was an instant superstar.
His last-gasp-goal at Old Trafford against Greece in 2001 shattered the ill feeling the nation felt towards him after that incident against Argentina in 1998.

Steve McClaren’s decision to leave him out of his teams for the failed qualification campaign for the 2008 European Championships was later seen as a huge factor in England’s poor performance; and the reinstatement of Beckham to win a record number of caps for an outfield England player (109) by Fabio Capello – a world renowned manager and judge of ability – shows the class the man oozes.

He has played for four of the most glamorous clubs in the world: Manchester United, Real Madrid, AC Milan and LA Galaxy and enjoyed success at all (the Galaxy having just reached the final of MLS).

Although the latter may not be the most famous or decorated club, the money they spent on Brand Beckham put previous feeble attempts by US franchises to promote the sport with the likes of Franz Beckenbauer, Pele, Johan Cruff and George Best – some of the greatest players to have ever played the game – into perspective, and demonstrate the importance the man carries as an icon and player second.

He has been BBC Sports Personality of the Year, inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame and twice runner-up in FIFA’s World Player of the Year.

The Brand

His marriage to Posh Spice propelled him even further into superstardom in 1999, for a decade which was to see Beckham move the attention on footballers from the back pages to gossip columns and magazines.

He has fronted multi-million pound advertising campaigns from Police, Calvin Kline, Gillette to even Sharpie pens, and was even reportedly bought by Real over Ronaldinhio because of his ability to sell shirts as a world-wide sporting icon.

He was one of football’s pioneers to negotiate image rights into his contracts: simply, put a picture of David Beckham and any other sports star to anyone in the world – and Beckham will be recognised considerably more.

He was named in the Time 100 last year, has been recognised by the Queen with a CBE and has been a goodwill ambassador for UNICEF.

***

Beckham may not be the most loved, or may not have won the most amount of football’s prizes since 1st January 2000, but as a sporting icon, he is light-years ahead.

Though he may not be the sharpest knife in the draw

The other contenders:

Roger Federer

Ryan Giggs

Zinedine Zidane

Lance Armstrong

Michael Schumacher

Usian Bolt

Cristiano Ronaldo

Shane Warne

Henrik Larsson