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I Love You (Miss Robot)

"I Love You (Miss Robot)"
Song by The Buggles from the album The Age of Plastic
Released 1980
Recorded 1979
Genre
Length 4:58
Label Island Records
Writer(s) The Buggles
Producer(s) The Buggles
The Age of Plastic track listing
  1. "Living in the Plastic Age"
  2. "Video Killed the Radio Star"
  3. "Kid Dynamo"
  4. "I Love You (Miss Robot)"
  5. "Clean, Clean"
  6. "Elstree"
  7. "Astroboy (And the Proles on Parade)"
  8. "Johnny on the Monorail"
The Age of Plastic track listing
"Kid Dynamo"
(3)
"I Love You (Miss Robot)"
(4)
"Clean, Clean"
(5)
The first verse of "I Love You (Miss Robot".

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"I Love You (Miss Robot)" is a song written, performed and produced by the Buggles, a duo of Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes, for their 1980 debut studio album The Age of Plastic. It was not released as a single. The song is, according to Downes, about "being on the road and making love to someone you don't really like", although music critics consider the song's subject having to do with a robot. The song was performed live in 2010, as part of the first performance of all the tracks from The Age of Plastic.

"I Love You" is the fourth track of The Buggles' debut studio album The Age of Plastic, although it was not released as a single. Plastic was recorded in 1979, and was made on a budget of £60,000. The backing track of "I Love You" was recorded at Virgin's Town House in West London, with mixing and recording of vocals held at Sarm East Studios.Gary Langan mixed the song on a Sunday in 1979, between 11:00 pm/12:00 am and 3:00/4:00 am. Langan has said that the song was "one of the best mixes I've ever done", and considered the song to be a "pukka mix".

When performing "I Love You" at the Ladbroke Grove's Supperclub, a live performance known as "The Lost Gig", Horn said that he conceived the idea of the song after playing Moon River on a bass guitar every Tuesday night.

"I Love You" is an electropop new wave song. Downes is also a vocalist on the track, which he sings through a vocoder. He said that "I Love You" was really about "being on the road and making love to someone you don't really like, while all the time you're wanting to phone someone who's a long way off."

Despite this, AllMusic, in their review of The Age of Plastic, considered the song to be about "a metaphorical love affair with a robot" that "explores modern man's relationship to, and dependence on, technology", and Craven Lovelace of the Grand Junction Free Press noted the song as an example of the increased popularity of robots as a musical subject in the early 1980s. Theo Cateforis wrote in his book, Are We Not New Wave?: Modern Pop at the Turn of the 1980s, that the title of The Age of Plastic and the songs "I Love You" and "Astroboy" "picture the arrival of the 1980s as a novelty era of playful futurism".Chuck Eddy from Spin viewed the song title as a proof The Age of Plastic was "firmly in Kraftwerk's future-tech tradition".


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