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Electronic & Indietronic Music artist from New York, NY. New songs free to stream or download. Add to your playlist now.

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Robots Eat People

Atomic electronic futurePop energy taking over the world with one human at a time.

4 songs
304 plays
Picture for song 'The Pebble the Will End it All' by artist 'Robots Eat People'

The Pebble the Will End it All The Pebble the Will End it All

A love song for the object that will ultimately bring our destruction.

Indie Pop

Picture for song 'TheHumanResistence 154179' by artist 'Robots Eat People'

TheHumanResistence 154179 TheHumanResistence 154179

Experimental Sounds

Picture for song 'Bob_would_be_a_good_pet' by artist 'Robots Eat People'

Bob_would_be_a_good_pet Bob_would_be_a_good_pet

Robots require entertainment as well. Bob is the ideal vision of a robot pet. Bob would call robots souless, and he would be right.

Experimental Sounds

Picture for song 'Robots Eat People-Melting the Steel' by artist 'Robots Eat People'

Robots Eat People-Melting the Steel Robots Eat People-Melting the Steel

Experimental Sounds

Robots Eat People was formed under the great Yew tree of Stoke Gabriel in South Devon, UK. The original five members of the band, D. Newton Archimedes (DNA), Maxwell James (Quark), Herschel Born (ConCERN), Zachary Smith (The Doctor), and Fermi Rossum (Luke H) all met while attending a lecture of renown physicist Stephen W. Hawking (Quantum Cosmology, M-theory and the Anthropic Principle) in January of 1999 at Cambridge University. The five mates stumbled upon their love of music while experimenting with frequency-locked loops that, due to a malfunction in the equipment, produced a pattern that reminded them of classic sci-fi film scores. This, was the beginning of Robots Eat People. REP's music evolved from lo-fi sample-based macro orchestrations to the current complex arrangements as technology grew (true evolution of music). Their fascination of future-vision and the role of artificial intelligence drives the context of their message, which is simply, "enjoy the moment you are in, it is fleeting." Their songs are a mixture of apocalyptic foreshadowing, to sweet enlightenment for both humans, and for organic and mechanical brethren. Their first album, Robots Creating People Creating Robots - Origins, released April 2005, went straight to #1 on the Billboard Charts in Japan and stayed there for 5 weeks. Receiving little attention in the UK or the States, REP decided to launch a world tour that comprised of small villages, hamlets, and outposts. The tour was a phenomenal success and built their grassroots following one villager at a time. DNA commented on the tour, "It was difficult at times when we would go to a tribal village in Indonesia where there was not electricity. Our laptops were our main instruments, so we had to make sure we were fully charged before the show started. It is not like we are pulling out an acoustic guitar and playing around a campfire. So, basically, at these power-free locations, the show would end, when all our laptop batteries were dead...kinda poetic, isn't it?" REP took a long hiatus after the tragic death of bandmate Fermi Rossum. The irony of his death was the fact that he was killed while preparing a robot to compete in the US during a BattleBot convention. "We know this is how he would have wanted to go, if he had a choice." Said Maxwell James. "Fermi might have argued that he, being a carbon-based lifeform, was actually not eligible for competition with his robot, and his robot should be disqualified for attacking a non-registered human. This was his sick sense of humor, but we all loved it." The band finally returned to the studio in late 2009 and are currently working on their sophomore effort "Waking Up Digital" due out late 2011.
Band/artist history
Robots Eat People was formed under the great Yew tree of Stoke Gabriel in South Devon, UK. The original five members of the band, D. Newton Archimedes (DNA), Maxwell James (Quark), Herschel Born (ConCERN), Zachary Smith (The Doctor), and Fermi Rossum (Luke H) all met while attending a lecture of renown physicist Stephen W. Hawking (Quantum Cosmology, M-theory and the Anthropic Principle) in January of 1999 at Cambridge University. The five mates stumbled upon their love of music while experimenting with frequency-locked loops that, due to a malfunction in the equipment, produced a pattern that reminded them of classic sci-fi film scores. This, was the beginning of Robots Eat People. REP's music evolved from lo-fi sample-based macro orchestrations to the current complex arrangements as technology grew (true evolution of music). Their fascination of future-vision and the role of artificial intelligence drives the context of their message, which is simply, "enjoy the moment you are in, it is fleeting." Their songs are a mixture of apocalyptic foreshadowing, to sweet enlightenment for both humans, and for organic and mechanical brethren. Their first album, Robots Creating People Creating Robots - Origins, released April 2005, went straight to #1 on the Billboard Charts in Japan and stayed there for 5 weeks. Receiving little attention in the UK or the States, REP decided to launch a world tour that comprised of small villages, hamlets, and outposts. The tour was a phenomenal success and built their grassroots following one villager at a time. DNA commented on the tour, "It was difficult at times when we would go to a tribal village in Indonesia where there was not electricity. Our laptops were our main instruments, so we had to make sure we were fully charged before the show started. It is not like we are pulling out an acoustic guitar and playing around a campfire. So, basically, at these power-free locations, the show would end, when all our laptop batteries were dead...kinda poetic, isn't it?" REP took a long hiatus after the tragic death of bandmate Fermi Rossum. The irony of his death was the fact that he was killed while preparing a robot to compete in the US during a BattleBot convention. "We know this is how he would have wanted to go, if he had a choice." Said Maxwell James. "Fermi might have argued that he, being a carbon-based lifeform, was actually not eligible for competition with his robot, and his robot should be disqualified for attacking a non-registered human. This was his sick sense of humor, but we all loved it." The band finally returned to the studio in late 2009 and are currently working on their sophomore effort "Waking Up Digital" due out late 2011.
Have you performed in front of an audience?
We have had several tours of Japan, Serbia and are planning a tour of the US in 2012. Our first show in Tokyo was sold out and it was as if we were the Beatles playing at Shea Stadium. Strange to fear for your life by adoring fans. We suspect there are not many better ways to die.
Your musical influences
Spiritualized, Beck, Iron and Wine, Tony Bennett, U2, DEVO, and the Flying Lizards
What equipment do you use?
Lots and lots of computers, midi devices, and every now and then, actual instruments
Anything else?
Robots Eat People will take over the world...and soon. We apologize in advance for the chaos and brilliance we shall impart on this ball.
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