The English journo who in 1995 dubbed the young Parisian duo "daft punks" after listening to their first single can little have imagined quite how far the group would go; a few years later and Daft Punk is the electronic group which has taken techno out of the clubs and given it to the masses across the planet.
After their "Homework" album achieved sales of over 2 million (including 400,000 in France alone), and having been acclaimed as much by fellow musicians as by the record-buying public, the duo composed of Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem Christo have proved, if proof were needed, that there are no hard and fast rules when it comes to success in the music industry.
Instead of showing their faces all over the place and appearing on television, Daft Punk settled on a different method of getting themselves known: writing songs that captured the spirit of the moment and blasting their way through the traditional boundaries separating House, Disco and Funk, making videos that were both fun and inventive with a raft of leading young directors (Spike Jonze, Michel Gondry, Roman Copolla, Seb Janiak, among others), and stage shows that held nothing back in terms of spectacle, with above all else a desire to keep pushing back the boundaries of the possible.
In 1999, before the format had swept all before it, Daft Punk released a DVD that was the first music release to fully explore the possibilities of interactivity. They then disappeared from the scene to spend two years preparing their new album, "Discovery", in the greatest secrecy.