"Mr. Roboto" is a song written by Dennis DeYoung of the bandStyx, and recorded on the Styx album Kilroy Was Here. It was also released as a 45 RPM single in a 4:44 single edit, which has the synthesizer intro and a bar at the finale removed, with the song "Snowblind" as the B-side. In Canada, it went to #1 on the RPM national singles chart. In the U.S., it reached #3 on the BillboardHot 100 in April 1983.
Thank you very much, Mr. Roboto Until the day we meet again Thank you very much, Mr. Roboto I want to know your secret
The lyric "Dōmo arigatō, Mr. Roboto" has entered popular culture as a catchphrase, appearing in media such as The Simpsons, Futurama, Archer, My Life as a Teenage Robot, Arrested Development, Eight Crazy Nights, Austin Powers in Goldmember, , Man With A Plan, The Perfect Man and Mr. Robot. The song tells part of the story of Robert Orin Charles Kilroy, in the rock opera Kilroy Was Here. The song is performed by Kilroy, a rock and roll performer who was placed in a futuristic prison for "rock and roll misfits" by the anti-rock-and-roll group the Majority for Musical Morality and its founder Dr. Everett Righteous. The Roboto is a model of robot which does menial jobs in the prison. Kilroy escapes the prison by overpowering a Roboto prison guard and hiding inside its emptied-out metal shell. When Jonathan Chance finally meets Kilroy at the very end of the song, Kilroy unmasks and yells "I'm Kilroy! Kilroy!", ending the song. The robot-like catchphrase was created with a vocoder. Stan Winston, who would become well-known through his work on Jurassic Park, designed the Roboto costume and mask, which are displayed prominently on the cover of the album Kilroy Was Here. The song's writer Dennis DeYoung did not think of the song as a single until his wife Suzanne, Dennis's friend Dave, and the staff at A&M suggested it as a good candidate. The track was released as the first single from the album at the last minute instead of "Don't Let It End" and turned out to be the band's last Top 5 US hit for eight years. As a result of this song, the Japanese phrase "domo arigato" entered popular American vernacular. In addition, many have cited this song and the album as potentially having alienated older fans, some calling it "jumping the shark" for the band. Though the song and album may not have resonated with older fans at the time, it remained relevant for younger generations, and James Young has said that due to the song, "we're a part of pop culture." "Mr. Roboto" has been described as synthpop.
Composition
The song is not in any one key and is instead in a related set of modes. The intro begins in A-flat Mixolydian mode, ending in an F. The singing begins, the chords alternating between a second-inversion B-flat and G-flat Lydian mode. Out of the "Domo" part, the song bursts into G-flat Lydian. It changes to E-flat minor Aeolian mode at "I am the Modren Man", and this is the dominant key for the remainder of the song. Some portions of the song transition to E-flat major as a transition point. It transitions back to the familiar G-flat Lydian and then E-flat minor as the singer introduces himself as Kilroy.
Personnel
Dennis DeYoung - lead vocals, keyboards, synthesizer
The song's video, directed by Brian Gibson, depicts Jonathan Chance walking into the Rock Museum to meet Kilroy, and a robot approaches. After this, it morphs into five robots moving and dancing. Shortly thereafter, the robots transform into the members of Styx, including a clean-shaven Dennis DeYoung. The video then alternates between the band playing the song on a stage and scenes from the Kilroy Was Here backdrop film. Then, the members of Styx morph back into the robots and DeYoung confronts the robots, screaming in the ear of one of the robots before collapsing. DeYoung awakens to see he is being experimented on and runs off. The video cuts back to the ending of the first scene and Jonathan Chance climbs on to the stage. Before the robot removes his mask to reveal Kilroy, another shot of the robot with lights on is used to end the clip. Playing Mr. Roboto in the video was mime Robert Griffard.