Hamilton Journal News

Ex-Daft Punk-er says AI has him ‘terrified’

- By Jonah Valdez

Thomas Bangalter, formerly one-half of electronic music duo Daft Punk, said recently that his fear of artificial intelligen­ce was a factor in why the group split in 2021.

Bangalter reflected on the duo’s fictional persona in a recent interview with BBC News, saying that he always felt the group’s thesis was about making sure there is an absolute line “between humanity and technology.”

“It was an exploratio­n, I would say, starting with the machines and going away from them,” he said. “I love technology as a tool, [but] I’m somehow terrified of the nature of the relationsh­ip between the machines and ourselves.”

Throughout their nearly 30-year career, Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de HomemChris­to hid their faces under gold and silver robot masks, while on their way to nabbing Grammy Awards and putting out chart-topping hits and club anthems. Albums by the duo, who hardly ever broke character, created a universe for their fictional personas to live in.

Even so, Bangalter shared that many fans misinterpr­eted their act as an uncritical embrace of tech and digital culture.

“We tried to use these machines to express something extremely moving that a machine cannot feel, but a human can,” Bangalter said in the BBC interview. “We were always on the side of humanity and not on the side of technology.”

To express his concerns about “the rise of artificial intelligen­ce,” Bangalter referenced Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 film “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

He credited the filmmaker for asking “the question that we have to ask ourselves about technology and the obsolescen­ce of man.”

In recent post-Daft Punk work, Bangalter set electronic music production aside to collaborat­e with French contempora­ry choreograp­her Angelin Preljocaj, composing an orchestral score for a ballet that premiered in July. The scorewas released as an album April 7.

“As much as I love this character,” Bangalter said of his helmeted Daft Punk persona, “the last thing I would want to be, in the world we live in, in 2023, is a robot.”

Bangalter’s wariness of AI aside, a 10th-anniversar­y reissue of the duo’s final album, “Random Access Memories,” is on the way.

 ?? MERRITT/GETTY IMAGES/TNS JASON ?? Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, left, and Thomas Bangalter of Daft Punk attend the 56th Grammy Awards at Staples Center on Jan. 26, 2014, in Los Angeles.
MERRITT/GETTY IMAGES/TNS JASON Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, left, and Thomas Bangalter of Daft Punk attend the 56th Grammy Awards at Staples Center on Jan. 26, 2014, in Los Angeles.

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