Daft Punk Went For West Coast Vibe on New Album
. The latest installation features an interview with house music hero Todd Edwards, who revealed that the new Daft Punk album has a "West Coast vibe" a la Fleetwood Mac, the Doobie Brothers and the Eagles. This is not the first time Edwards has worked with the pair, co-writing and singing the song "Face to Face" from 2001′s Discovery, which he references in the video. "It's been very difficult to harbor this secret," Edwards admits in regards to the top-secret recording sessions for Random Access Memories, "and I'm waiting for this album to intoxicate and infect everyone so I'm not making music in a sterile world anymore." The stalwart house music producer, who has a host of dance-floor hits to his credit (including his smash 1995 remix of St. Germain's "Alabama Blues") discusses the painstaking recording process, which found the band working with lots of live instrumentation. "Thomas [Bangaltier] was talking about how they wanted to pick up this West Coast vibe, and at first I didn't really know what that meant," Edwards said. "I'm from Jersey. I've gone to L.A. like twice in my life. But they were saying like going back to the time of like Fleetwood Mac, the Doobie Brothers, just picking up the West Coast vibe, the Eagles," he continued in reference to Daft Punk's approach to the new album. More including the video Radio.com is an official news provider for antiMusic.com.
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