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The KLF

The KLF[n 1] (also known as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, the JAMs, the Timelords and other names) are a British electronic band who originated in Liverpool and London[10][11] in the late 1980s. Scottish musician Bill Drummond (alias King Boy D) and English musician Jimmy Cauty (alias Rockman Rock) began by releasing hip hop-inspired and sample-heavy records as the JAMs. As the Timelords, they recorded the British number-one single "Doctorin' the Tardis", and documented the process of making a hit record in a book The Manual (How to Have a Number One the Easy Way). As the KLF, Drummond and Cauty pioneered stadium house (rave music with a pop-rock production and sampled crowd noise) and, with their 1990 LP Chill Out, the ambient house genre.[12] The KLF released a series of international hits on their own KLF Communications record label and became the biggest selling singles act in the world in 1991.[13][14]

The KLF
2K's 23-minute performance at the Barbican Arts Centre, London, on 2 September 1997
Background information
Also known as
OriginLiverpool and London, England
Genres
DiscographyThe KLF discography
Years active
  • 1987–1992
  • 1993–1995
  • 1997
  • 2017–present
Labels
Members

From the outset, the KLF adopted the philosophy espoused by esoteric novels The Illuminatus! Trilogy, making anarchic situationist manifestations, including the defacement of billboard adverts, the posting of cryptic advertisements in New Musical Express (NME) and the mainstream press, as well as unusual performances on Top of the Pops. In collaboration with Extreme Noise Terror at the BRIT Awards in February 1992, they fired machine gun blanks into the audience and dumped a dead sheep at the aftershow party. This performance pre-announced the KLF's departure from the music business and, in May of that year, they deleted their entire back-catalogue. Drummond and Cauty established the K Foundation and sought to subvert the art world, staging an alternative art award for the Worst Artist of the Year, and burning one million pounds sterling (approximately £2.35m as of 2022).

The duo have released a small number of new tracks since 1992, as the K Foundation, the One World Orchestra, and in 1997, as 2K. Drummond and Cauty reappeared in 2017 as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, releasing the novel 2023, and rebooting an earlier campaign to build a "People's Pyramid". In January 2021, the band began uploading their previously deleted catalogue onto streaming services, in compilations.[15]

History edit

Background edit

Bill Drummond was an established figure within the British music industry, having co-founded Zoo Records,[16] played guitar in the Liverpool band Big in Japan,[17] and worked as manager of Echo & the Bunnymen and the Teardrop Explodes.[18][19] Artist and musician Jimmy Cauty was the guitarist in the three-piece Brilliant – an act that Drummond had signed to WEA Records and managed.[20][21]

In July 1986, Drummond resigned from his position as an A&R man at record label WEA, citing that he was nearly 33⅓ years old (33⅓ revolutions per minute being the speed at which a vinyl LP revolves), and that it was "time for a revolution in my life. There is a mountain to climb the hard way, and I want to see the world from the top".[22] In the same year he released a solo LP, The Man.[23][24] Drummond intended to focus on writing books once The Man had been issued but, as he recalled in 1990, "That only lasted three months, until I had an[other] idea for a record and got dragged back into it all".[25] Recalling that moment in a later interview, Drummond said that the plan came to him in an instant: he would form a hip-hop band with former colleague Cauty, and they would be called the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu:

It was New Year's Day... 1987. I was at home with my parents, I was going for a walk in the morning, it was, like, bright blue sky, and I thought "I'm going to make a hip-hop record. Who can I make a hip-hop record with?". I wasn't brave enough to go and do it myself, 'cause, although I can play the guitar, and I can knock out a few things on the piano, I knew nothing, personally, about the technology. And, I thought, I knew [Jimmy], I knew he was a like spirit, we share similar tastes and backgrounds in music and things. So I phoned him up that day and said "Let's form a band called The Justified Ancients of Mu-Mu". And he knew exactly, to coin a phrase, "where I was coming from"... Within a week we had recorded our first single.[26]

The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu edit

Early in 1987, Drummond and Cauty's collaborations began. They assumed alter egos – King Boy D and Rockman Rock respectively – and adopted the name the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (the JAMs), after the fictional conspiratorial group "The Justified Ancients of Mummu" from The Illuminatus! Trilogy.[27][28] The JAMs' primary instrument was the digital sampler with which they would plagiarise the history of popular music, cutting chunks from existing works and pasting them into new contexts, underpinned by rudimentary beatbox rhythms and overlaid with Drummond's raps, of social commentary, esoteric metaphors and mockery.[24][13]

The JAMs' debut single "All You Need Is Love" dealt with the media coverage given to AIDS, sampling heavily from the Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" and Samantha Fox's "Touch Me (I Want Your Body)". Although it was declined by distributors fearful of prosecution, and threatened with lawsuits, copies of the one-sided white label 12" were sent to the music press; it received positive reviews and was made "single of the week" in Sounds.[29] A later piece in the same magazine called the JAMs "the hottest, most exhilarating band this year .... It's hard to understand what it feels like to come across something you believe to be totally new; I have never been so wholeheartedly convinced that a band are so good and exciting."[30]

The JAMs re-edited and re-released "All You Need Is Love" in May 1987, removing or doctoring the most antagonistic samples; lyrics from the song appeared as promotional graffiti, defacing selected billboards. The re-release rewarded the JAMs with praise (including NME 's "single of the week")[31] and the funds necessary to record their debut album. The album, 1987 (What the F**k Is Going On?), was released in June 1987. Included was a song called "The Queen and I", which sampled the ABBA single "Dancing Queen".[32] After a legal showdown with ABBA[33] and the Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society,[34] the 1987 album was forcibly withdrawn from sale. Drummond and Cauty travelled to Sweden in hope of meeting ABBA and coming to some agreement, taking an NME journalist and photographer with them, along with most of the remaining copies of the LP.[35] They failed to meet ABBA, who they didn't realize already lived in Britain at the time,[36] so they disposed of the copies by burning most of them in a field and throwing the rest overboard on the North Sea ferry trip home. In a December 1987 interview, Cauty maintained that they "felt that what [they]'d done was artistically justified."[37]

Two new singles followed on the JAMs' "KLF Communications" independent record label.[38] Both reflected a shift towards house rhythms. According to NME, the JAMs' choice of samples for the first of these, "Whitney Joins the JAMs" saw them leaving behind their strategy of "collision course" to "move straight onto the art of super selective theft".[39] The song uses samples of the Mission: Impossible and Shaft themes alongside Whitney Houston's "I Wanna Dance with Somebody". Drummond has claimed that the KLF were later offered the job of producing or remixing a new Whitney Houston album as an inducement from her record label boss (Clive Davis of Arista Records) to sign with them.[40][41][42] The second single in this sequence – Drummond and Cauty's third and final single of 1987 – was "Down Town", a dance record built around a gospel choir and "Downtown" by 1960s star Petula Clark, with lyrics that commented on poverty and homelessness.[43] These early works were later collected on the compilation album Shag Times.

A second album, Who Killed the JAMs?, was released in early 1988. Who Killed the JAMs? earned the duo a five-star review from Sounds magazine, who called it "a masterpiece of pathos".[44]

The Timelords edit

In 1988, Drummond and Cauty released a 'novelty' pop single, "Doctorin' the Tardis" as the Timelords.[45] The song is predominantly a mash-up of the Doctor Who theme music, "Block Buster!" by Sweet and Gary Glitter's "Rock and Roll (Part Two)".[46]

Credited on the record was "Ford Timelord", Cauty's 1968 Ford Galaxie American police car, and "Lord Rock" (Cauty) and "Time Boy" (Drummond).[47] The Timelords claimed that Ford Timelord was the "Talent" in the band[47] and had given them instructions on how to make the record;[45][48] Ford fronted the promotional campaign for the single and was "interviewed" on TV.[49] The car would later be banger raced at Swaffham Raceway in 1991.

They later portrayed the song as the result of a deliberate effort to write a number one hit single.[50] In interviews with Snub TV[50] and BBC Radio 1,[25] Drummond said that they had intended to make a house record using the Doctor Who theme. After Cauty had laid down a basic track, Drummond observed that their house idea wasn't working and what they actually had was a Glitter beat.[25] Sensing the opportunity to make a commercial pop record they went instead for the lowest common denominator.[25] According to the British music press, the result was "rancid",[45] "pure, unadulterated agony" and "excruciating"[51] and from Sounds "a record so noxious that a top ten place can be its only destiny".[45] A single of the Timelords' remixes of the song was released: "Gary Joins the JAMs" featured original vocal contributions from Glitter, who also appeared on Top of the Pops to promote the song with the Timelords. "Doctorin' the Tardis" sold over one million copies.[5]

The Timelords released one other product, a 1989 book called The Manual (How to Have a Number One the Easy Way), a step-by-step guide to achieving a number one hit single with little money or talent.[52]

The KLF edit

By the time the JAMs' single "Whitney Joins the JAMs" was released in September 1987, their record label had been renamed "KLF Communications" (from the earlier The Sound of Mu(sic)).[38] The duo's first release as the KLF was in March 1988, with the single "Burn the Bastards"/"Burn the Beat" (KLF 002).[38] Although the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu name was not retired, most future Drummond and Cauty releases went under the name "The KLF".

The name change accompanied a change in Drummond and Cauty's musical direction. As 'King Boy D', Drummond said in January 1988, "We might put out a couple of 12" records under the name The K.L.F., these will be rap free just pure dance music, so don't expect to see them reviewed in the music papers". King Boy D also said that he and Rockman Rock were "pissed off at [them]selves" for letting "people expect us to lead some sort of crusade for sampling."[53] In 1990, he recalled that "We wanted to make [as the KLF] something that was... pure dance music, without any reference points, without any nod to the history of rock and roll. It was the type of music that by early '87 was really exciting me... [although] we weren't able to get our first KLF records out until late '88."[25]

The 12" records subsequently released in 1988 and 1989 by the KLF were indeed rap free and house-oriented; remixes of some of the JAMs tracks, and new singles, the largely instrumental acid house anthems "What Time Is Love?" and "3 a.m. Eternal", the first incarnations of later international chart successes. The KLF described the new tracks as "Pure Trance". In 1989, the KLF appeared at the Helter Skelter rave in Oxfordshire. "They wooed the crowd", wrote Scotland on Sunday some years later, "by pelting them with... £1,000 worth of Scottish pound notes, each of which bore the message 'Children we love you'".[54]

 
The KLF's 'Trancentral' logo: speakers arranged in a 'T' shape.

Also in 1989, the KLF embarked upon the creation of a road movie and soundtrack album, both titled The White Room, funded by the profits of "Doctorin' the Tardis".[55] Neither the film nor its soundtrack were formally released, although bootleg copies exist. The soundtrack album contained pop-house versions of some of the "pure trance" singles, as well as new songs, most of which would appear (in radically reworked form) on the version of the album which was eventually released to mainstream success. A single from the original album was released: "Kylie Said to Jason", an electropop record featuring references to Todd Terry, Rolf Harris, Skippy the Bush Kangaroo and BBC comedy programme The Good Life. In reference to that song, Drummond and Cauty noted that they had worn "Pet Shop Boys infatuations brazenly on [their] sleeves."[56]

The film project was fraught with difficulties and setbacks, including dwindling funds. "Kylie Said to Jason", which Drummond and Cauty were hoping could "rescue them from the jaws of bankruptcy", flopped commercially, failing even to make the UK top 100. In consequence, The White Room film project was put on hold, and the KLF abandoned the musical direction of the soundtrack and single.[57] Meanwhile, "What Time Is Love?" was generating acclaim within the underground clubs of continental Europe; according to KLF Communications, "The KLF were being feted by all the 'right' DJs".[57] This prompted Drummond and Cauty to pursue the acid house tone of their Pure Trance series. A further Pure Trance release, "Last Train to Trancentral", followed. By this time, Cauty had co-founded the Orb as an ambient side-project with Alex Paterson.[58][59] Cauty's ambient album Space[60][61] and the KLF's "ambient house" LP Chill Out ambient video Waiting were released in 1990, as was a dance track, "It's Grim Up North", under the JAMs' moniker.[38]

Throughout 1990, the KLF launched a series of singles with an upbeat pop-house sound which they dubbed "stadium house".[62] Songs from The White Room soundtrack were re-recorded with rap and more vocals (by guests labelled "Additional Communicators"), a sample-heavy pop-rock production and crowd noise samples.[63] The first "stadium house" single, "What Time Is Love? (Live from Trancentral)", released in October 1990, reached #5 on the UK Singles Chart and hit the top-ten internationally. The follow-up, "3 a.m. Eternal (Live at the S.S.L.)", was an international top-five hit in January 1991, reaching #1 in the UK and #5 on the US Billboard Hot 100. The album The White Room followed in March 1991,[64] reaching #3 in the UK. A substantial reworking of the aborted soundtrack, the album featured a segued series of "stadium house" songs followed by downtempo tracks.[63]The KLF's chart success continued with the single "Last Train to Trancentral" hitting number two in the UK, and number three on the Eurochart Hot 100.[citation needed] In December 1991, a re-working of a song from 1987, "Justified & Ancient" was released, featuring Tammy Wynette. It was another international hit – peaking at number two in the UK, and number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 – as was "America: What Time Is Love?",[citation needed] a hard, guitar-laden reworking of "What Time Is Love?". In 1990 and 1991, the KLF also remixed tracks by Depeche Mode ("Policy of Truth"), the Moody Boys ("What Is Dub?"), and Pet Shop Boys ("So Hard" from the Behaviour album, and "It Must Be Obvious"). Neil Tennant described the process: "When they did the remix of 'So Hard', they didn't do a remix at all, they re-wrote the record ... I had to go and sing the vocals again, they did it in a different way. I was impressed that Bill Drummond had written all the chords out and played it on an acoustic guitar, very thorough."[65]

The "stadium house" singles trilogy was characterised by Tom Ewing of Freaky Trigger as applying "the possibilities for mass lunacy" to "awe-inpsiring, colossal, unprecedented dancefloor bulldozers." He adds: "For novelty scam-mongers and pranksters, they knew the public well, particularly that strain in British pop listening which likes an occasional brush with the gigantic. The KLF did to house what Jim Steinman did to rock – they turned it into a thing of tottering grand opera absurdity, pushed the excitement in the music to hysteria, traded content for ever-huger gesture. The difference being that the KLF never lost track of what made the music special in the first place. Maybe because there's less inherent 'meaning' in the KLF's music, or maybe just because the 'meaning' in house music is less fragile".[66]

After successive name changes and dance records, Drummond and Cauty ultimately became, as the KLF, the biggest-selling singles act in the world for 1991,[13][14] still incorporating the work of other artists but in less gratuitous ways and predominantly without legal problems.

BRIT Awards and retirement from the music business edit

On 12 February 1992, the KLF and grindcore group Extreme Noise Terror performed a live version of "3 a.m. Eternal" at the BRIT Awards, the British Phonographic Industry's annual awards show.[67] Drummond and Cauty had planned to throw buckets of blood over the audience, or to disembowel a dead sheep on stage, but were prevented from doing so due to opposition from BBC lawyers and vegetarians Extreme Noise Terror;[68][69][5][4] Sheep were a symbol of the KLF,[5] and Drummond conceded that the "sheep hacking" idea was akin to a suicide.[4] Associates reasoned that the plan was to generate such revulsion towards the KLF that they would be ostracised from the music industry and a comeback would be impossible.[5] The dead sheep purchased but the plan thwarted, Drummond considered chopping his hand off with an axe live on stage.[21][70]

The performance was instead concluded with a limping, kilted, cigar-chomping Drummond firing blanks from an automatic weapon over the heads of the crowd. As the band left the stage, the KLF's promoter and narrator Scott Piering proclaimed over the PA system that "The KLF have now left the music business".[21] Later in the evening the band dumped the dead sheep, with the message "I died for you – bon appetit" tied around its waist, at the entrance to one of the post-ceremony parties.[21][4] Piering's PA announcement was largely not taken seriously at the time;[49] even he and other close associates of the band thought the announcement was a joke.[5] NME's detailed piece on the events at the BRIT Awards and the after-party, which included an interview with Drummond the day after, assured readers that the "tensions and contradictions" would continue to "push and spark" the KLF and that more "musical treasure" would be the result.[4]

In the weeks following the BRITs performance, the KLF continued working with Extreme Noise Terror on the album The Black Room, but it was never finished.[5] On 14 May 1992, the KLF announced their immediate retirement from the music industry and the deletion of their back catalogue:

We have been following a wild and wounded, glum and glorious, shit but shining path these past five years. The last two of which has [sic] led us up onto the commercial high ground – we are at a point where the path is about to take a sharp turn from these sunny uplands down into a netherworld of we know not what. For the foreseeable future there will be no further record releases from The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, The Timelords, The KLF and any other past, present and future name attached to our activities. As of now all our past releases are deleted .... If we meet further along be prepared ... our disguise may be complete.[14][71]

In a comprehensive examination of the KLF's announcement and its context, Select called it "the last grand gesture, the most heroic act of public self destruction in the history of pop. And it's also Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty's final extravagant howl of self disgust, defiance and contempt for a music world gone foul and corrupt."[5] Many of the KLF's friends and collaborators gave their reactions in the magazine. Movie director Bill Butt said that "Like everything, they're dealing with it in a very realistic way, a fresh, unbitter way, which is very often not the case. A lot of bands disappear with such a terrible loss of dignity". Scott Piering said that "They've got a huge buzz off this, that's for sure, because it's something that's finally thrilling. It's scary to have thrown away a fortune which I know they have. Just the idea of starting over is exciting. Starting over on what? Well, they have such great ideas, like buying submarines". Even Kenny Gates, who as a director of the KLF's distributors APT stood to lose financially from the move, called it "Conceptually and philosophically... absolutely brilliant". Mark Stent reported the doubts of many when he said that "I [have] had so many people who I know, heads of record companies, A&R men saying, 'Come on, It's a big scam.' But I firmly believe it's over". "For the very last spectacularly insane time", the magazine concluded, "The KLF have done what was least expected of them".

The final KLF Info sheet discussed the retirement in a typically offbeat fashion, and asked "What happens to 'Footnotes in rock legend'? Do they gather dust with Ashton, Gardner and Dyke, the Vapors, and the Utah Saints, or does their influence live on in unseen ways, permeating future cultures? A passing general of a private army has the answer. 'No', he whispers 'but the dust they gather is of the rarest quality. Each speck a universe awaiting creation, Big Bang just a dawn away'."[72] There have been numerous suggestions that in 1992 Drummond was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.[5][73][21] Drummond himself said that he was on the edge of the "abyss".[74] The KLF's BRITs statuette for "Best British Group" of 1992 was later found buried in a field near Stonehenge.[75]

K Foundation and other pre-millennium projects edit

The K Foundation was an arts foundation established by Drummond and Cauty in 1993 following their 'retirement' from the music industry. From 1993 to 1995 they engaged in art projects and media campaigns, including the high-profile K Foundation art award (for the "worst artist of the year"),[76][77] and in 1993 released a limited edition single – "K Cera Cera" – in Israel and Palestine "to create awareness of peace in the world".[78] They burnt what was left of their KLF earnings – a million pounds sterling in cash (equivalent to £2.35m as of 2022) – and filmed the performance.[79][80][81] Cauty and Drummond announced a 23-year moratorium on all K Foundation activities in November 1995.[82]

 
The KLF come out of retirement for 23 minutes to make an appearance as 2K.

Also in 1995, Drummond and Cauty contributed a song to The Help Album as The One World Orchestra ("featuring The Massed Pipes and Drums of the Children's Free Revolutionary Volunteer Guards").[83] "The Magnificent" is a drum'n'bass version of the theme tune from The Magnificent Seven, with vocal samples from DJ Fleka of Serbian radio station B92: "Humans against killing... that sounds like a junkie against dope".

On 17 September 1997, Drummond and Cauty re-emerged briefly as 2K.[84] 2K made a one-off performance at London's Barbican Arts Centre with Mark Manning, Acid Brass, the Liverpool Dockers and Gimpo;[85] a performance at which "Two elderly gentlemen, reeking of Dettol, caused havoc in their motorised wheelchairs. These old reprobates, bearing a grandfatherly resemblance to messrs Cauty and Drummond, claimed to have just been asked along."[86] The song performed at the Barbican – "***k the Millennium" (a remix of "What Time Is Love?" featuring Acid Brass and incorporating elements of the hymn "Eternal Father, Strong to Save") – was also released as a single. These activities were accompanied by the usual full page press adverts, this time asking readers "***k The Millennium: Yes/No?" with a telephone number provided for voting. At the same time, Drummond and Cauty were also K2 Plant Hire, with plans to build a "People's Pyramid" from used house bricks; this plan never reached fruition.[87][88] K2 Plant Hire Ltd had been registered at Companies House since 1995; Cauty and Drummond are directors.[89] The Directors' Report for the period ending 31 March 1996 listed the company's activities as "a music company," and the accompanying accounts noted a transaction with "KLF Communications Residual Royalties", a Cauty-Drummond partnership.[90][91]

The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu return edit

On 23 August 2017, in Liverpool, 23 years after they burnt a million pounds, Drummond and Cauty returned as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu.[92][93] The duo launched a novel, 2023: A Trilogy,[94][95] and staged a three day event, "Welcome to the Dark Ages".[93][94][96] Ending their self-imposed moratorium, the festival included a debate asking "Why Did The K Foundation Burn A Million Quid?"[94][97] The JAMs also announced new plans for a People's Pyramid[96] to be built from bricks each containing 23 grams of human ashes.[98][99] New bricks will be laid at the annual "Toxteth Day Of The Dead".[100][101][102]

Cauty emphasised to the BBC in 2018 that the People's Pyramid project, inspired by his brother's death, is serious: "It's easy to make it sound like a joke", he said, "but it isn't a joke, it's deadly serious and it's a long-term project."[100] He also confirmed that The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu are a going concern: "It's interesting to be in a band that doesn't make records but only makes pyramids of dead people.[100]

Samplecity thru Trancentral edit

On 31 December 2020, the release of series of remastered compilations under the collective title Samplecity thru Trancentral was announced on a graffiti and posters hung under a railway bridge on Kingsland Road in Shoreditch, East London. The 30-minute collection of eight remastered singles Solid State Logik 1 appeared at midnight 1 January 2021, on streaming platforms, while high-definition videos were published for the first time on the band's official YouTube channel, marking the first activity of Cauty and Drummond as the KLF since 1992.[103] On 23 March 2021, the collection was followed by its part 2 featuring 12" versions of the singles.[104]

On 4 February 2021, a re-edited version of Chill Out was released, retitled Come Down Dawn, with previously unlicensed samples from the original release removed,[105] and added "What Time Is Love? (Virtual Reality Mix)," originally from the 1990 remix EP What Time Is Love? (Remodelled & Remixed), integrated in the new mix.

On 23 April 2021, The White Room (Director's Cut) was officially released as the fourth part of the series. The album's edition includes tracks from the unreleased 1989 album, as well as an extended version of "Last Train to Trancentral" from the 1991 album.

The documentary Who Killed the KLF?, directed by Chris Atkins, was released on April 4 2022.[106] Atkins began creating the documentary against Drummond's and Cauty's wishes, but was incarcerated in 2016 for tax fraud for two years;[36][107] he continued editing the film while in prison.[36][107] According to Atkins, the duo eventually claimed they "love" the film, though they pointed out some minor inaccuracies.[36]

The band's master tapes were donated to the British Library in 2023.[108]

KLF Communications edit

 
The Pyramid Blaster – the logo of KLF Communications

From their very earliest releases as The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu until their retirement in 1992, the music of Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty was independently released in their home country (the UK).[109] Their debut releases – the single "All You Need Is Love" and the album 1987 – were released under the label name "The Sound Of Mu(sic)". By the end of 1987 Drummond and Cauty had renamed their label to "KLF Communications" and, in October 1987, the first of many "information sheets" (self written missives from the KLF to fans and the media) was sent out by the label.[27]

KLF Communications releases were distributed by Rough Trade Distribution[110] (a spinoff of Rough Trade Records) in the South East of England, and across the wider UK by the Cartel. As Drummond and Cauty explained, "The Cartel is, as the name implies, a group of independent distributors across the country who work in conjunction with each other providing a solid network of distribution without stepping on each other's toes. We are distributed by the Cartel."[52] When Rough Trade Distribution collapsed in 1991 it was reported that they owed KLF Communications £500,000.[111] Plugging (the promotion to TV and radio) was handled by longtime associate Scott Piering.[52]

Outside the UK, KLF releases were issued under licence by local labels. In the US, the licensees were Wax Trax (the Chill Out album[112]), TVT (early releases including The History of The JAMs a.k.a. The Timelords[113]), and Arista Records (The White Room and singles[114][n 2]). The KLF Communications physical catalogue remains deleted in the United Kingdom.

Themes edit

Several threads and themes unify the many incarnations of Drummond and Cauty's creative partnership, many of these influenced by The Illuminatus! Trilogy; combined, these themes, threads and their activities over the years have been said to form a "mythology."[12][4][115] Drummond and Cauty made heavy references to Discordianism, popularised by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson in the Illuminatus! books, Situationism, and tactics often interpreted by media commentators as "Situationist pranks.[116]

In a 2000 review of Drummond's book 45, and an appraisal of the duo's career to date, writer Steven Poole stated that Drummond and Cauty "are the only true conceptual artists of the [1990s]. And for all the eldritch beauty of their art, their most successful creation is the myth they have built around themselves."[115] This deep and perplexing mythology, he suggested, results in all their subsequent activities (as a partnership or otherwise) being absorbed into their mystique:

A myth like the KLF's is peculiarly omnivorous. Just as there can never be any evidence to disprove a conspiracy theory because the fabrication of such evidence – don't you see? – is itself part of the conspiracy, so the pop myth of the KLF can never be blown apart by anything they do, no matter how dumb or embarrassing. The myth will suck it up, like a black hole.

Drummond and Cauty have also been compared to Stewart Home and the Neoists.[117] Home himself said that the duo's work "has much more in common with the Neoist, Plagiarist and Art Strike movements of the nineteen-eighties than with the Situationist avant-garde of the fifties and sixties." Drummond and Cauty "represent a vital and innovative strand within contemporary culture", he added.[118]

Illuminatus! edit

Drummond was the set designer on Ken Campbell's 1976 stage production of The Illuminatus! Trilogy.[17][116] In the first KLF Communications Info Sheet, Drummond explained that The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu name was "pinched" from Illuminatus! which he had been reading the year before.[27]

A notable theme of Illuminatus! is the number 23, placed overtly and surreptitiously, both in the book and later throughout the band's career:

  • In lyrics to the song "Next" from the album 1987: "23 years is a mighty long time".
  • They announced they had signed a contract preventing either of them from publicly discussing the burning of a million pounds for a period of 23 years;[119]
  • The 1997 return as 2K was "for 23 minutes only".[120]
  • In numbering schemes: for instance, the debut single "All You Need Is Love" took the catalogue number JAMS 23, while the final KLF Communications Information Sheet was numbered 23; and Cauty's Ford Galaxie police car had on its roof the identification mark 23.
  • In significant dates during their work: for instance, a rare public appearance by the KLF, at the Liverpool Festival of Comedy, was on 23 June 1991; they announced the winner of the K Foundation award on 23 November 1993;[121] and they burned one million pounds on 23 August 1994.[81]
  • The 2017 reunion happened at 00:23 on 23 August 23 years after the burning, with the release of a book entitled 2023: A Trilogy. The numerals of the date – 23 August 2017 – also sum to 23 (2+3+0+8+2+0+1+7=23).[95]

When questioned on the importance that he attaches to this number, Drummond has been evasive, responding enigmatically "I know. But I'm not going to tell, because then other people would have to stop having to wonder and the thing about beauty is for other people to wonder at it. It's not very beautiful once you know."[122]

The "Pyramid Blaster" is a logo and icon frequently and prominently depicted within the duo's collective work: a pyramid, in front of which is suspended a ghetto blaster displaying the word "Justified".[57][116] This references the Eye of Providence icon, often depicted as an eye within a triangle or pyramid, a significant symbol of Illuminatus![123] The pyramid was also a theme of the duo's 1997 and 2017 reunions, with the proposed building by K2 Plant Hire of a "People's Pyramid" (in 1997, a pyramid built with as many bricks as there were births in the 20th century in the UK,[88] and in 2017 a pyramid built from bricks containing the ashes of dead people).[100]

Trancentral edit

Trancentral (a.k.a. the Benio)[124] was the band's studios. Despite the grandiose lyrics of "Last Train to Trancentral", the Trancentral was in fact Cauty's residence in Stockwell, South London (51°28′17″N 0°07′41″W / 51.471373°N 0.128167°W / 51.471373; -0.128167 (55 Jeffrey's Road, Stockwell, London)), "a large and rather grotty squat." According to Melody Maker's David Stubbs, "Jimmy has lived [there] for 12 years. There's little evidence of fame or fortune. The kitchen is heated by means of leaving the three functioning gas rings on at full blast until the fumes make us all feel stoned... And pinned just above a working top cluttered with chipped mugs is a letter from a five-year-old fan featuring a crayon drawing of the band."[125]

Sheep edit

Following the February 1990 release of Chill Out (the press release for which credited sheep as guest vocalists[126]), sheep had recurring roles in the duo's output until their 1992 retirement.[4] Drummond has claimed that the use of sheep on the Chill Out cover was intended to evoke contemporary rural raves[40] and the cover of the Pink Floyd album Atom Heart Mother.[127]

Ceremonies and journeys edit

Drummond and Cauty's work often involved notions of ceremony and journey. Journeys are the subject of the KLF Communications recordings Chill Out, Space, "Last Train to Trancentral", "Justified & Ancient" and "America: What Time Is Love?", as well as the aborted film project The White Room. The Chill Out album depicts a journey across the U.S. Gulf Coast.[112] In his book 45, Drummond expressed his admiration for the work of artist Richard Long, who incorporates physical journeys into his art.[128]

Fire and sacrifice were recurring ceremonial themes: Drummond and Cauty made fires to dispose of their illegal debut album and to sacrifice the KLF's profits; their dead sheep gesture of 1992 carried a sacrificial message. The KLF's short film The Rites of Mu depicts their celebration of the 1991 summer solstice on the Hebridean island of Jura: a 60-foot (18 m) tall wicker man was burnt at a ceremony in which journalists were asked to wear yellow and grey robes and join a chant;[122][129] the journalists' money was also burnt.[79][130]

Promotion edit

 
A K2 Plant Hire advertisement, exhibiting the stark quality of Drummond and Cauty's press adverts, and the characteristic typeface

Drummond and Cauty were renowned for their distinctive and humorous public appearances (including several on Top of the Pops), at which they were often costumed.[125][131] They granted few interviews, communicating instead via semi-regular newsletters, or cryptically phrased full-page adverts in UK national newspapers and the music press. Such adverts were typically stark, comprising large white lettering on black.[132]

From the outset of their collaborations, Drummond and Cauty practised the guerrilla communication tactic that they described as "illegal but effective use of graffiti on billboards and public buildings" in which "the original meaning of the advert would be totally subverted".[32] Much as the JAMs' early recordings carried messages on the back of existing musical works, their promotional graffiti often derived its potency from the context in which it was placed. For instance, The JAMs' "SHAG SHAG SHAG" graffiti, coinciding with their release of "All You Need Is Love", was drawn over the "HALO HALO HALO" slogan of a Today billboard that depicted Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable James Anderton,[30] who had decried homosexuals amidst the UK media's AIDS furore.[n 3]

Music press journalists were occasionally invited to witness the defacements. In December 1987, a Melody Maker reporter was in attendance to see Cauty reverse his car Ford Timelord alongside a billboard and stand on its roof to graffiti a Christmas message from the JAMs.[37] In February 1991, another Melody Maker journalist watched the KLF deface a billboard advertising The Sunday Times, doctoring the slogan "THE GULF: the coverage, the analysis, the facts" by painting a 'K' over the 'GU'. Drummond and Cauty were, on this occasion, caught at the scene by police and arrested, later to be released without charge.[125]

In November 1991, the JAMs placed a photograph of graffiti with the slogan "It's Grim Up North" – which had appeared on the junction of London's M25 orbital motorway with the M1 that runs to Northern England[134] – as an advert in the NME.[135] The graffiti, for which the JAMs denied responsibility,[134][136] had been the subject of an early day motion in the British House of Commons on 21 October 1991.[134][137] In September 1997, on the day after Drummond and Cauty's brief remergence as 2K, the graffiti "1997: What The Fuck's Going On?" appeared on the outside wall of London's National Theatre, ten years after the slogan "1987: What The Fuck's Going On?" had been similarly placed to mark the release of the JAMs' debut album.[138]

Reputation as "pranksters" edit

Cauty and Drummond's tactics have often been labelled by media commentators as "pranks" or "publicity stunts".[84][97][125] In 1991, Drummond told an NME journalist that "we never felt we went out and did things to get reactions. Everything we've done has just been on a gut level instinct", whilst acknowledging that people would likely not believe him.[7] On the morning after the BRITs performance, an impassioned Drummond told the NME that "I really hate it when people go on about us being 'schemers' and 'scammers'. We do all this stuff from the very depths of our soul and people make out its some sort of game. It depresses me."[4] Cauty has expressed similar feelings, saying of the KLF, "I think it worked because we really meant it."[80]

Legacy edit

 
KLF Communications' advert for "Justified & Ancient", with a quote from the lyrics: "They travel the world in their ice cream van, they've voyaged to the bottom of time. They've been to the place where the Mu-Mu mate, and the children still cry 'Mine's a 99!'"

Chill Out is cited by AllMusic as "one of the essential ambient albums".[112] In 1996, Mixmag named Chill Out the fifth best "dance" album of all time, describing Cauty's DJ sets with the Orb's Alex Paterson as "seminal".[139] The Guardian has credited the KLF with inventing "stadium house";[132] NME named the KLF's stadium house album The White Room the 81st best album of all time[140] whilst Q listed it as the 89th best British album of all time, in 2000.[141]

Opinions of contemporaries edit

In 1991, Chris Lowe of Pet Shop Boys said that he considered the only other worthwhile group in the UK to be the KLF. Neil Tennant added that "They have an incredibly recognisable sound. I liked it when they said EMF nicked the F from KLF.[7] They're from a different tradition to us in that they're pranksters and we've never been pranksters."[65]

At the time of the KLF's retirement announcement, Drummond's old friend and colleague David Balfe said of Drummond's KLF career that "the path he's trod[den] is a more artistic one than mine. I know that deep down I like the idea of building up a very successful career, where Bill is more interested in weird stuff ... I think the very avoidance of cliché has become their particular cliché".[5]

In March 1994, members of the anarchist band Chumbawamba expressed their respect for the KLF. Vocalist and percussionist Alice Nutter referred to the KLF as "real situationists" categorising them as political musicians alongside the Sex Pistols and Public Enemy. Dunst Bruce lauded the K Foundation, concluding "I think the things the KLF do are fantastic. I'm a vegetarian but I wish they'd sawn an elephant's legs off at the BRIT Awards."[142]

Direct influence edit

The KLF have been imitated to some degree by German techno band Scooter, being sampled on virtually every album Scooter have released.[143]

In the weeks leading up to the 1996 FA Cup Final, a group called "1300 Drums featuring the Unjustified Ancients of M.U." released a novelty single to cash-in on the popularity of Manchester United footballer Eric Cantona.[38]

The Timelords' book, The Manual, was used by the one-hit-wonders Edelweiss to secure their hit "Bring Me Edelweiss".[19][40][144]

The duo "The FLK" released two albums and several singles in the 2010s, appropriating the KLF's aesthetic and musical style and mixing it with samples and references from folk music.[145] Their anonymity, along with details such as their use of a Ford Timelord which was very similar to the original in their videos and promotional material, led some to believe that the FLK actually were the KLF. However, it emerged in 2018 that they were two ex-members of the Leeds-based indie band The Hollow Men.[146]

Career retrospectives edit

Drummond and Cauty have appeared frequently in British broadsheets and music papers since the KLF's retirement, most often in connection with the K Foundation and their burning of one million pounds. The NME called them "masters of manipulating media and perceptions of themselves".[147]

In 1992, NME referred to the KLF as "Britain's greatest pop group" and "the two most brilliant minds in pop today",[4] and in 2002 listed the duo in their "Top 50 Icons" at number 48.[148] The British music paper also listed the KLF's 1992 BRIT Awards appearance at number 4 in their "top 100 rock moments of all time".[149] "What's unique about Drummond and Cauty", the paper said in 1993, "is the way that, under all the slogans and the sampling and the smart hits and the dead sheep and the costumes, they appear not only to care, but to have some idea of how to achieve what they want."[18]

"[Of their many aliases,] it is as the KLF that they will go down in pop history," wrote Alix Sharkey in 1994, "for a variety of reasons, the most important being the resolute purity of their self-abnegation, and their visionary understanding of pop." He added: "By early 1992 the KLF was easily the best-selling, probably the most innovative, and undoubtedly the most exhilarating pop phenomenon in Britain. In five years it had gone from pressing up 500 copies of its debut recording to being one of the world's top singles acts." The same piece also quoted Sheryl Garratt, editor of The Face: "the music hasn't dated. I still get an adrenaline rush listening to it." Garratt believes their influence on the British house and rap scene cannot be overestimated. "Their attitude was shaped by the rave scene, but they also love pop music. So many people who make pop actually despise it, and it shows."[46]

Trouser Press reviewer Ira Robbins referred to the KLF's body of work as "a series of colorful sonic marketing experiments".[24] The Face called them "the kings of cultural anarchy".[150] Robert Sandall wrote in 1993 that one of the KLF's "maxims" was "making the unthinkable happen".[151] In 1999, Ewing wrote: "Even before they put their money where their matches were, the KLF, also known as the Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu, furthermore known as the JAMMS, were the most brilliant pop-artists of the decade. They were witty with the left hand and baffling with the right; they had a sense of timing and event like nobody since Maclaren; they appeared to not give even the merest hint of a fuck; and they made records which were the best shotgun wedding of concept to rhythm this side of Kraftwerk."[152]

In 2003, The Observer named the KLF's departure from the music business (and the BRITs performance in which the newspaper says "their legend was sealed") the fifth greatest "publicity stunt" in the history of popular music.[153] A 2000 piece in The Daily Telegraph called the BRITs performance "violently antagonistic" and reported that the "music-business audience" was "stunned";[67] on the other hand, Piers Morgan writing shortly after the performance called the KLF "pop's biggest wallies".[70] A 2004 listener poll by BBC 6 Music saw the KLF/K Foundation placed second in a list of "rock excesses", after The Who.[154]

A 2017 piece in The Guardian, pondering the rumoured return of The KLF, noted that "in the 25 years since their disappearance, nobody else has come up with anything that matches the duo's extraordinary career";[62] another piece in the same newspaper in the same year, by a different author, called them "abstruse" and "pop's greatest provocateurs", and their career "anarchic, anti-commercial and mostly ludicrous".[95]

Instrumentation edit

Early releases by the JAMs, including the album 1987, were performed using an Apple II computer with a Greengate DS3 sampler peripheral card, and a Roland TR-808 drum machine.[155][156] On later releases, the Greengate DS3 and Apple II were replaced with an Akai S900 sampler and Atari ST computers respectively.[157]

The KLF's 1990–1992 singles were mixed by Mark Stent, using a Solid State Logic automated mixing desk, and The White Room album mixed by J. Gordon-Hastings using an analogue desk. The SSL is referenced in the subtitle of the KLF single "3 a.m. Eternal (Live at the S.S.L.)", and the title of their 2021 digital compilation albums Solid State Logik 1 and Solid State Logik 2.

The house music of Space and the KLF involved much original instrumentation, for which the Oberheim OB-8 analogue synthesiser was prominently used.[158] Drummond played a Gibson ES-330 semi-acoustic guitar on "America: What Time Is Love?",[159] and Cauty played electric guitar on "Justified & Ancient (Stand by The JAMs)" and "America: What Time Is Love?". Graham Lee provided prominent pedal steel contributions to the KLF's Chill Out and "Build a Fire". Duy Khiem played clarinet on "3 a.m. Eternal" and "Make It Rain".[158] The KLF track "America No More" features a pipe band.[159] The Roland TB-303 bassline and Roland TR-909 drum machine feature on "What Time Is Love (Live at Trancentral)".[158]

Discography edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ KLF has been reported as being an initialism for "Kopyright Liberation Front",[4][5][6] or "Kings of the Low Frequencies".[7][8] Sleevenotes from 1991 said that Cauty and Drummond have "yet to find out what K.L.F. stands for".[9]
  2. ^ Bill Drummond explained the licensing situation – and inducements made by Arista – in an interview by Ernie Longmire, X Magazine, July 1991.[40]
  3. ^ For a general overview see: "The 1980s AIDS campaign" by Panorama on the BBC News website.[133] A fuller set of references are available in the article "All You Need Is Love (The JAMs song)".

References edit

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  3. ^ McClean, Andrew (3 December 2013). "KLF co-founder Bill Drummond to rock Volume in Library of Birmingham Discovery Season". Culture24. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kelly, Danny (29 February 1992). . NME. Archived (via the Library of Mu) on 16 September 2016.Wikipedia:WikiProject The KLF/LibraryOfMu/297
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Shaw, William (July 1992). . Select. Archived (via the Library of Mu) on 11 October 2016.Wikipedia:WikiProject The KLF/LibraryOfMu/315
  6. ^ Strong, Martin C. (1999) The Great Alternative & Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 0-86241-913-1, p. 356
  7. ^ a b c Morton, Roger (12 January 1991). . NME. Archived (via the Library of Mu) on 4 October 2016.Wikipedia:WikiProject The KLF/LibraryOfMu/191
  8. ^ What Is Dub? (The KLF And Apollo 440 Remixes) (Media notes). The Moody Boys introduce Screamer. Love Records. 1991. EVOLR 3. "Kings Of Low Frequency Dub Version"{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
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  43. ^ Reviewed by NME writer James Brown in the 28 November 1987 edition.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • KLF mailing list
  • The KLF at AllMusic
  •  – including a list of their references to the number 23

other, uses, disambiguation, jams, redirects, here, waterfall, lake, county, california, jams, also, known, justified, ancients, jams, timelords, other, names, british, electronic, band, originated, liverpool, london, late, 1980s, scottish, musician, bill, dru. For other uses see KLF disambiguation The JAMs redirects here For the waterfall in Lake County California see The Jams The KLF n 1 also known as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu the JAMs the Timelords and other names are a British electronic band who originated in Liverpool and London 10 11 in the late 1980s Scottish musician Bill Drummond alias King Boy D and English musician Jimmy Cauty alias Rockman Rock began by releasing hip hop inspired and sample heavy records as the JAMs As the Timelords they recorded the British number one single Doctorin the Tardis and documented the process of making a hit record in a book The Manual How to Have a Number One the Easy Way As the KLF Drummond and Cauty pioneered stadium house rave music with a pop rock production and sampled crowd noise and with their 1990 LP Chill Out the ambient house genre 12 The KLF released a series of international hits on their own KLF Communications record label and became the biggest selling singles act in the world in 1991 13 14 The KLF2K s 23 minute performance at the Barbican Arts Centre London on 2 September 1997Background informationAlso known asThe Justified Ancients of Mu MuThe JAMsThe TimelordsK Foundation2KK2 Plant HireOriginLiverpool and London EnglandGenresElectronichouseambientdanceeurodancestadium houseavant garde 1 2 3 alternative danceDiscographyThe KLF discographyYears active1987 19921993 199519972017 presentLabelsKLF CommunicationsArista BMGDeutsche Grammophon Universal ClassicsWax Trax TVTMembersBill Drummond Jimmy Cauty From the outset the KLF adopted the philosophy espoused by esoteric novels The Illuminatus Trilogy making anarchic situationist manifestations including the defacement of billboard adverts the posting of cryptic advertisements in New Musical Express NME and the mainstream press as well as unusual performances on Top of the Pops In collaboration with Extreme Noise Terror at the BRIT Awards in February 1992 they fired machine gun blanks into the audience and dumped a dead sheep at the aftershow party This performance pre announced the KLF s departure from the music business and in May of that year they deleted their entire back catalogue Drummond and Cauty established the K Foundation and sought to subvert the art world staging an alternative art award for the Worst Artist of the Year and burning one million pounds sterling approximately 2 35m as of 2022 The duo have released a small number of new tracks since 1992 as the K Foundation the One World Orchestra and in 1997 as 2K Drummond and Cauty reappeared in 2017 as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu releasing the novel 2023 and rebooting an earlier campaign to build a People s Pyramid In January 2021 the band began uploading their previously deleted catalogue onto streaming services in compilations 15 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu 1 3 The Timelords 1 4 The KLF 1 5 BRIT Awards and retirement from the music business 1 6 K Foundation and other pre millennium projects 1 7 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu return 1 8 Samplecity thru Trancentral 2 KLF Communications 3 Themes 3 1 Illuminatus 3 2 Trancentral 3 3 Sheep 3 4 Ceremonies and journeys 3 5 Promotion 3 6 Reputation as pranksters 4 Legacy 4 1 Opinions of contemporaries 4 2 Direct influence 4 3 Career retrospectives 5 Instrumentation 6 Discography 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editBackground edit Bill Drummond was an established figure within the British music industry having co founded Zoo Records 16 played guitar in the Liverpool band Big in Japan 17 and worked as manager of Echo amp the Bunnymen and the Teardrop Explodes 18 19 Artist and musician Jimmy Cauty was the guitarist in the three piece Brilliant an act that Drummond had signed to WEA Records and managed 20 21 In July 1986 Drummond resigned from his position as an A amp R man at record label WEA citing that he was nearly 33 years old 33 revolutions per minute being the speed at which a vinyl LP revolves and that it was time for a revolution in my life There is a mountain to climb the hard way and I want to see the world from the top 22 In the same year he released a solo LP The Man 23 24 Drummond intended to focus on writing books once The Man had been issued but as he recalled in 1990 That only lasted three months until I had an other idea for a record and got dragged back into it all 25 Recalling that moment in a later interview Drummond said that the plan came to him in an instant he would form a hip hop band with former colleague Cauty and they would be called the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu It was New Year s Day 1987 I was at home with my parents I was going for a walk in the morning it was like bright blue sky and I thought I m going to make a hip hop record Who can I make a hip hop record with I wasn t brave enough to go and do it myself cause although I can play the guitar and I can knock out a few things on the piano I knew nothing personally about the technology And I thought I knew Jimmy I knew he was a like spirit we share similar tastes and backgrounds in music and things So I phoned him up that day and said Let s form a band called The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu And he knew exactly to coin a phrase where I was coming from Within a week we had recorded our first single 26 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu edit Early in 1987 Drummond and Cauty s collaborations began They assumed alter egos King Boy D and Rockman Rock respectively and adopted the name the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu the JAMs after the fictional conspiratorial group The Justified Ancients of Mummu from The Illuminatus Trilogy 27 28 The JAMs primary instrument was the digital sampler with which they would plagiarise the history of popular music cutting chunks from existing works and pasting them into new contexts underpinned by rudimentary beatbox rhythms and overlaid with Drummond s raps of social commentary esoteric metaphors and mockery 24 13 The JAMs debut single All You Need Is Love dealt with the media coverage given to AIDS sampling heavily from the Beatles All You Need Is Love and Samantha Fox s Touch Me I Want Your Body Although it was declined by distributors fearful of prosecution and threatened with lawsuits copies of the one sided white label 12 were sent to the music press it received positive reviews and was made single of the week in Sounds 29 A later piece in the same magazine called the JAMs the hottest most exhilarating band this year It s hard to understand what it feels like to come across something you believe to be totally new I have never been so wholeheartedly convinced that a band are so good and exciting 30 The JAMs re edited and re released All You Need Is Love in May 1987 removing or doctoring the most antagonistic samples lyrics from the song appeared as promotional graffiti defacing selected billboards The re release rewarded the JAMs with praise including NME s single of the week 31 and the funds necessary to record their debut album The album 1987 What the F k Is Going On was released in June 1987 Included was a song called The Queen and I which sampled the ABBA single Dancing Queen 32 After a legal showdown with ABBA 33 and the Mechanical Copyright Protection Society 34 the 1987 album was forcibly withdrawn from sale Drummond and Cauty travelled to Sweden in hope of meeting ABBA and coming to some agreement taking an NME journalist and photographer with them along with most of the remaining copies of the LP 35 They failed to meet ABBA who they didn t realize already lived in Britain at the time 36 so they disposed of the copies by burning most of them in a field and throwing the rest overboard on the North Sea ferry trip home In a December 1987 interview Cauty maintained that they felt that what they d done was artistically justified 37 Two new singles followed on the JAMs KLF Communications independent record label 38 Both reflected a shift towards house rhythms According to NME the JAMs choice of samples for the first of these Whitney Joins the JAMs saw them leaving behind their strategy of collision course to move straight onto the art of super selective theft 39 The song uses samples of the Mission Impossible and Shaft themes alongside Whitney Houston s I Wanna Dance with Somebody Drummond has claimed that the KLF were later offered the job of producing or remixing a new Whitney Houston album as an inducement from her record label boss Clive Davis of Arista Records to sign with them 40 41 42 The second single in this sequence Drummond and Cauty s third and final single of 1987 was Down Town a dance record built around a gospel choir and Downtown by 1960s star Petula Clark with lyrics that commented on poverty and homelessness 43 These early works were later collected on the compilation album Shag Times A second album Who Killed the JAMs was released in early 1988 Who Killed the JAMs earned the duo a five star review from Sounds magazine who called it a masterpiece of pathos 44 The Timelords edit In 1988 Drummond and Cauty released a novelty pop single Doctorin the Tardis as the Timelords 45 The song is predominantly a mash up of the Doctor Who theme music Block Buster by Sweet and Gary Glitter s Rock and Roll Part Two 46 Credited on the record was Ford Timelord Cauty s 1968 Ford Galaxie American police car and Lord Rock Cauty and Time Boy Drummond 47 The Timelords claimed that Ford Timelord was the Talent in the band 47 and had given them instructions on how to make the record 45 48 Ford fronted the promotional campaign for the single and was interviewed on TV 49 The car would later be banger raced at Swaffham Raceway in 1991 They later portrayed the song as the result of a deliberate effort to write a number one hit single 50 In interviews with Snub TV 50 and BBC Radio 1 25 Drummond said that they had intended to make a house record using the Doctor Who theme After Cauty had laid down a basic track Drummond observed that their house idea wasn t working and what they actually had was a Glitter beat 25 Sensing the opportunity to make a commercial pop record they went instead for the lowest common denominator 25 According to the British music press the result was rancid 45 pure unadulterated agony and excruciating 51 and from Sounds a record so noxious that a top ten place can be its only destiny 45 A single of the Timelords remixes of the song was released Gary Joins the JAMs featured original vocal contributions from Glitter who also appeared on Top of the Pops to promote the song with the Timelords Doctorin the Tardis sold over one million copies 5 The Timelords released one other product a 1989 book called The Manual How to Have a Number One the Easy Way a step by step guide to achieving a number one hit single with little money or talent 52 The KLF edit By the time the JAMs single Whitney Joins the JAMs was released in September 1987 their record label had been renamed KLF Communications from the earlier The Sound of Mu sic 38 The duo s first release as the KLF was in March 1988 with the single Burn the Bastards Burn the Beat KLF 002 38 Although the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu name was not retired most future Drummond and Cauty releases went under the name The KLF The name change accompanied a change in Drummond and Cauty s musical direction As King Boy D Drummond said in January 1988 We might put out a couple of 12 records under the name The K L F these will be rap free just pure dance music so don t expect to see them reviewed in the music papers King Boy D also said that he and Rockman Rock were pissed off at them selves for letting people expect us to lead some sort of crusade for sampling 53 In 1990 he recalled that We wanted to make as the KLF something that was pure dance music without any reference points without any nod to the history of rock and roll It was the type of music that by early 87 was really exciting me although we weren t able to get our first KLF records out until late 88 25 The 12 records subsequently released in 1988 and 1989 by the KLF were indeed rap free and house oriented remixes of some of the JAMs tracks and new singles the largely instrumental acid house anthems What Time Is Love and 3 a m Eternal the first incarnations of later international chart successes The KLF described the new tracks as Pure Trance In 1989 the KLF appeared at the Helter Skelter rave in Oxfordshire They wooed the crowd wrote Scotland on Sunday some years later by pelting them with 1 000 worth of Scottish pound notes each of which bore the message Children we love you 54 nbsp The KLF s Trancentral logo speakers arranged in a T shape Also in 1989 the KLF embarked upon the creation of a road movie and soundtrack album both titled The White Room funded by the profits of Doctorin the Tardis 55 Neither the film nor its soundtrack were formally released although bootleg copies exist The soundtrack album contained pop house versions of some of the pure trance singles as well as new songs most of which would appear in radically reworked form on the version of the album which was eventually released to mainstream success A single from the original album was released Kylie Said to Jason an electropop record featuring references to Todd Terry Rolf Harris Skippy the Bush Kangaroo and BBC comedy programme The Good Life In reference to that song Drummond and Cauty noted that they had worn Pet Shop Boys infatuations brazenly on their sleeves 56 The film project was fraught with difficulties and setbacks including dwindling funds Kylie Said to Jason which Drummond and Cauty were hoping could rescue them from the jaws of bankruptcy flopped commercially failing even to make the UK top 100 In consequence The White Room film project was put on hold and the KLF abandoned the musical direction of the soundtrack and single 57 Meanwhile What Time Is Love was generating acclaim within the underground clubs of continental Europe according to KLF Communications The KLF were being feted by all the right DJs 57 This prompted Drummond and Cauty to pursue the acid house tone of their Pure Trance series A further Pure Trance release Last Train to Trancentral followed By this time Cauty had co founded the Orb as an ambient side project with Alex Paterson 58 59 Cauty s ambient album Space 60 61 and the KLF s ambient house LP Chill Out ambient video Waiting were released in 1990 as was a dance track It s Grim Up North under the JAMs moniker 38 Throughout 1990 the KLF launched a series of singles with an upbeat pop house sound which they dubbed stadium house 62 Songs from The White Room soundtrack were re recorded with rap and more vocals by guests labelled Additional Communicators a sample heavy pop rock production and crowd noise samples 63 The first stadium house single What Time Is Love Live from Trancentral released in October 1990 reached 5 on the UK Singles Chart and hit the top ten internationally The follow up 3 a m Eternal Live at the S S L was an international top five hit in January 1991 reaching 1 in the UK and 5 on the US Billboard Hot 100 The album The White Room followed in March 1991 64 reaching 3 in the UK A substantial reworking of the aborted soundtrack the album featured a segued series of stadium house songs followed by downtempo tracks 63 The KLF s chart success continued with the single Last Train to Trancentral hitting number two in the UK and number three on the Eurochart Hot 100 citation needed In December 1991 a re working of a song from 1987 Justified amp Ancient was released featuring Tammy Wynette It was another international hit peaking at number two in the UK and number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 as was America What Time Is Love citation needed a hard guitar laden reworking of What Time Is Love In 1990 and 1991 the KLF also remixed tracks by Depeche Mode Policy of Truth the Moody Boys What Is Dub and Pet Shop Boys So Hard from the Behaviour album and It Must Be Obvious Neil Tennant described the process When they did the remix of So Hard they didn t do a remix at all they re wrote the record I had to go and sing the vocals again they did it in a different way I was impressed that Bill Drummond had written all the chords out and played it on an acoustic guitar very thorough 65 The stadium house singles trilogy was characterised by Tom Ewing of Freaky Trigger as applying the possibilities for mass lunacy to awe inpsiring colossal unprecedented dancefloor bulldozers He adds For novelty scam mongers and pranksters they knew the public well particularly that strain in British pop listening which likes an occasional brush with the gigantic The KLF did to house what Jim Steinman did to rock they turned it into a thing of tottering grand opera absurdity pushed the excitement in the music to hysteria traded content for ever huger gesture The difference being that the KLF never lost track of what made the music special in the first place Maybe because there s less inherent meaning in the KLF s music or maybe just because the meaning in house music is less fragile 66 After successive name changes and dance records Drummond and Cauty ultimately became as the KLF the biggest selling singles act in the world for 1991 13 14 still incorporating the work of other artists but in less gratuitous ways and predominantly without legal problems BRIT Awards and retirement from the music business edit On 12 February 1992 the KLF and grindcore group Extreme Noise Terror performed a live version of 3 a m Eternal at the BRIT Awards the British Phonographic Industry s annual awards show 67 Drummond and Cauty had planned to throw buckets of blood over the audience or to disembowel a dead sheep on stage but were prevented from doing so due to opposition from BBC lawyers and vegetarians Extreme Noise Terror 68 69 5 4 Sheep were a symbol of the KLF 5 and Drummond conceded that the sheep hacking idea was akin to a suicide 4 Associates reasoned that the plan was to generate such revulsion towards the KLF that they would be ostracised from the music industry and a comeback would be impossible 5 The dead sheep purchased but the plan thwarted Drummond considered chopping his hand off with an axe live on stage 21 70 The performance was instead concluded with a limping kilted cigar chomping Drummond firing blanks from an automatic weapon over the heads of the crowd As the band left the stage the KLF s promoter and narrator Scott Piering proclaimed over the PA system that The KLF have now left the music business 21 Later in the evening the band dumped the dead sheep with the message I died for you bon appetit tied around its waist at the entrance to one of the post ceremony parties 21 4 Piering s PA announcement was largely not taken seriously at the time 49 even he and other close associates of the band thought the announcement was a joke 5 NME s detailed piece on the events at the BRIT Awards and the after party which included an interview with Drummond the day after assured readers that the tensions and contradictions would continue to push and spark the KLF and that more musical treasure would be the result 4 In the weeks following the BRITs performance the KLF continued working with Extreme Noise Terror on the album The Black Room but it was never finished 5 On 14 May 1992 the KLF announced their immediate retirement from the music industry and the deletion of their back catalogue We have been following a wild and wounded glum and glorious shit but shining path these past five years The last two of which has sic led us up onto the commercial high ground we are at a point where the path is about to take a sharp turn from these sunny uplands down into a netherworld of we know not what For the foreseeable future there will be no further record releases from The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu The Timelords The KLF and any other past present and future name attached to our activities As of now all our past releases are deleted If we meet further along be prepared our disguise may be complete 14 71 In a comprehensive examination of the KLF s announcement and its context Select called it the last grand gesture the most heroic act of public self destruction in the history of pop And it s also Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty s final extravagant howl of self disgust defiance and contempt for a music world gone foul and corrupt 5 Many of the KLF s friends and collaborators gave their reactions in the magazine Movie director Bill Butt said that Like everything they re dealing with it in a very realistic way a fresh unbitter way which is very often not the case A lot of bands disappear with such a terrible loss of dignity Scott Piering said that They ve got a huge buzz off this that s for sure because it s something that s finally thrilling It s scary to have thrown away a fortune which I know they have Just the idea of starting over is exciting Starting over on what Well they have such great ideas like buying submarines Even Kenny Gates who as a director of the KLF s distributors APT stood to lose financially from the move called it Conceptually and philosophically absolutely brilliant Mark Stent reported the doubts of many when he said that I have had so many people who I know heads of record companies A amp R men saying Come on It s a big scam But I firmly believe it s over For the very last spectacularly insane time the magazine concluded The KLF have done what was least expected of them The final KLF Info sheet discussed the retirement in a typically offbeat fashion and asked What happens to Footnotes in rock legend Do they gather dust with Ashton Gardner and Dyke the Vapors and the Utah Saints or does their influence live on in unseen ways permeating future cultures A passing general of a private army has the answer No he whispers but the dust they gather is of the rarest quality Each speck a universe awaiting creation Big Bang just a dawn away 72 There have been numerous suggestions that in 1992 Drummond was on the verge of a nervous breakdown 5 73 21 Drummond himself said that he was on the edge of the abyss 74 The KLF s BRITs statuette for Best British Group of 1992 was later found buried in a field near Stonehenge 75 K Foundation and other pre millennium projects edit Main articles K Foundation and Fuck the Millennium The K Foundation was an arts foundation established by Drummond and Cauty in 1993 following their retirement from the music industry From 1993 to 1995 they engaged in art projects and media campaigns including the high profile K Foundation art award for the worst artist of the year 76 77 and in 1993 released a limited edition single K Cera Cera in Israel and Palestine to create awareness of peace in the world 78 They burnt what was left of their KLF earnings a million pounds sterling in cash equivalent to 2 35m as of 2022 and filmed the performance 79 80 81 Cauty and Drummond announced a 23 year moratorium on all K Foundation activities in November 1995 82 nbsp The KLF come out of retirement for 23 minutes to make an appearance as 2K Also in 1995 Drummond and Cauty contributed a song to The Help Album as The One World Orchestra featuring The Massed Pipes and Drums of the Children s Free Revolutionary Volunteer Guards 83 The Magnificent is a drum n bass version of the theme tune from The Magnificent Seven with vocal samples from DJ Fleka of Serbian radio station B92 Humans against killing that sounds like a junkie against dope On 17 September 1997 Drummond and Cauty re emerged briefly as 2K 84 2K made a one off performance at London s Barbican Arts Centre with Mark Manning Acid Brass the Liverpool Dockers and Gimpo 85 a performance at which Two elderly gentlemen reeking of Dettol caused havoc in their motorised wheelchairs These old reprobates bearing a grandfatherly resemblance to messrs Cauty and Drummond claimed to have just been asked along 86 The song performed at the Barbican k the Millennium a remix of What Time Is Love featuring Acid Brass and incorporating elements of the hymn Eternal Father Strong to Save was also released as a single These activities were accompanied by the usual full page press adverts this time asking readers k The Millennium Yes No with a telephone number provided for voting At the same time Drummond and Cauty were also K2 Plant Hire with plans to build a People s Pyramid from used house bricks this plan never reached fruition 87 88 K2 Plant Hire Ltd had been registered at Companies House since 1995 Cauty and Drummond are directors 89 The Directors Report for the period ending 31 March 1996 listed the company s activities as a music company and the accompanying accounts noted a transaction with KLF Communications Residual Royalties a Cauty Drummond partnership 90 91 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu return edit Further information Welcome to the Dark Ages and 2023 A Trilogy On 23 August 2017 in Liverpool 23 years after they burnt a million pounds Drummond and Cauty returned as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu 92 93 The duo launched a novel 2023 A Trilogy 94 95 and staged a three day event Welcome to the Dark Ages 93 94 96 Ending their self imposed moratorium the festival included a debate asking Why Did The K Foundation Burn A Million Quid 94 97 The JAMs also announced new plans for a People s Pyramid 96 to be built from bricks each containing 23 grams of human ashes 98 99 New bricks will be laid at the annual Toxteth Day Of The Dead 100 101 102 Cauty emphasised to the BBC in 2018 that the People s Pyramid project inspired by his brother s death is serious It s easy to make it sound like a joke he said but it isn t a joke it s deadly serious and it s a long term project 100 He also confirmed that The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu are a going concern It s interesting to be in a band that doesn t make records but only makes pyramids of dead people 100 Samplecity thru Trancentral edit On 31 December 2020 the release of series of remastered compilations under the collective title Samplecity thru Trancentral was announced on a graffiti and posters hung under a railway bridge on Kingsland Road in Shoreditch East London The 30 minute collection of eight remastered singles Solid State Logik 1 appeared at midnight 1 January 2021 on streaming platforms while high definition videos were published for the first time on the band s official YouTube channel marking the first activity of Cauty and Drummond as the KLF since 1992 103 On 23 March 2021 the collection was followed by its part 2 featuring 12 versions of the singles 104 On 4 February 2021 a re edited version of Chill Out was released retitled Come Down Dawn with previously unlicensed samples from the original release removed 105 and added What Time Is Love Virtual Reality Mix originally from the 1990 remix EP What Time Is Love Remodelled amp Remixed integrated in the new mix On 23 April 2021 The White Room Director s Cut was officially released as the fourth part of the series The album s edition includes tracks from the unreleased 1989 album as well as an extended version of Last Train to Trancentral from the 1991 album The documentary Who Killed the KLF directed by Chris Atkins was released on April 4 2022 106 Atkins began creating the documentary against Drummond s and Cauty s wishes but was incarcerated in 2016 for tax fraud for two years 36 107 he continued editing the film while in prison 36 107 According to Atkins the duo eventually claimed they love the film though they pointed out some minor inaccuracies 36 The band s master tapes were donated to the British Library in 2023 108 KLF Communications edit nbsp The Pyramid Blaster the logo of KLF Communications From their very earliest releases as The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu until their retirement in 1992 the music of Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty was independently released in their home country the UK 109 Their debut releases the single All You Need Is Love and the album 1987 were released under the label name The Sound Of Mu sic By the end of 1987 Drummond and Cauty had renamed their label to KLF Communications and in October 1987 the first of many information sheets self written missives from the KLF to fans and the media was sent out by the label 27 KLF Communications releases were distributed by Rough Trade Distribution 110 a spinoff of Rough Trade Records in the South East of England and across the wider UK by the Cartel As Drummond and Cauty explained The Cartel is as the name implies a group of independent distributors across the country who work in conjunction with each other providing a solid network of distribution without stepping on each other s toes We are distributed by the Cartel 52 When Rough Trade Distribution collapsed in 1991 it was reported that they owed KLF Communications 500 000 111 Plugging the promotion to TV and radio was handled by longtime associate Scott Piering 52 Outside the UK KLF releases were issued under licence by local labels In the US the licensees were Wax Trax the Chill Out album 112 TVT early releases including The History of The JAMs a k a The Timelords 113 and Arista Records The White Room and singles 114 n 2 The KLF Communications physical catalogue remains deleted in the United Kingdom Themes editSeveral threads and themes unify the many incarnations of Drummond and Cauty s creative partnership many of these influenced by The Illuminatus Trilogy combined these themes threads and their activities over the years have been said to form a mythology 12 4 115 Drummond and Cauty made heavy references to Discordianism popularised by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson in the Illuminatus books Situationism and tactics often interpreted by media commentators as Situationist pranks 116 In a 2000 review of Drummond s book 45 and an appraisal of the duo s career to date writer Steven Poole stated that Drummond and Cauty are the only true conceptual artists of the 1990s And for all the eldritch beauty of their art their most successful creation is the myth they have built around themselves 115 This deep and perplexing mythology he suggested results in all their subsequent activities as a partnership or otherwise being absorbed into their mystique A myth like the KLF s is peculiarly omnivorous Just as there can never be any evidence to disprove a conspiracy theory because the fabrication of such evidence don t you see is itself part of the conspiracy so the pop myth of the KLF can never be blown apart by anything they do no matter how dumb or embarrassing The myth will suck it up like a black hole Drummond and Cauty have also been compared to Stewart Home and the Neoists 117 Home himself said that the duo s work has much more in common with the Neoist Plagiarist and Art Strike movements of the nineteen eighties than with the Situationist avant garde of the fifties and sixties Drummond and Cauty represent a vital and innovative strand within contemporary culture he added 118 Illuminatus edit Drummond was the set designer on Ken Campbell s 1976 stage production of The Illuminatus Trilogy 17 116 In the first KLF Communications Info Sheet Drummond explained that The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu name was pinched from Illuminatus which he had been reading the year before 27 A notable theme of Illuminatus is the number 23 placed overtly and surreptitiously both in the book and later throughout the band s career In lyrics to the song Next from the album 1987 23 years is a mighty long time They announced they had signed a contract preventing either of them from publicly discussing the burning of a million pounds for a period of 23 years 119 The 1997 return as 2K was for 23 minutes only 120 In numbering schemes for instance the debut single All You Need Is Love took the catalogue number JAMS 23 while the final KLF Communications Information Sheet was numbered 23 and Cauty s Ford Galaxie police car had on its roof the identification mark 23 In significant dates during their work for instance a rare public appearance by the KLF at the Liverpool Festival of Comedy was on 23 June 1991 they announced the winner of the K Foundation award on 23 November 1993 121 and they burned one million pounds on 23 August 1994 81 The 2017 reunion happened at 00 23 on 23 August 23 years after the burning with the release of a book entitled 2023 A Trilogy The numerals of the date 23 August 2017 also sum to 23 2 3 0 8 2 0 1 7 23 95 When questioned on the importance that he attaches to this number Drummond has been evasive responding enigmatically I know But I m not going to tell because then other people would have to stop having to wonder and the thing about beauty is for other people to wonder at it It s not very beautiful once you know 122 The Pyramid Blaster is a logo and icon frequently and prominently depicted within the duo s collective work a pyramid in front of which is suspended a ghetto blaster displaying the word Justified 57 116 This references the Eye of Providence icon often depicted as an eye within a triangle or pyramid a significant symbol of Illuminatus 123 The pyramid was also a theme of the duo s 1997 and 2017 reunions with the proposed building by K2 Plant Hire of a People s Pyramid in 1997 a pyramid built with as many bricks as there were births in the 20th century in the UK 88 and in 2017 a pyramid built from bricks containing the ashes of dead people 100 Trancentral edit Trancentral a k a the Benio 124 was the band s studios Despite the grandiose lyrics of Last Train to Trancentral the Trancentral was in fact Cauty s residence in Stockwell South London 51 28 17 N 0 07 41 W 51 471373 N 0 128167 W 51 471373 0 128167 55 Jeffrey s Road Stockwell London a large and rather grotty squat According to Melody Maker s David Stubbs Jimmy has lived there for 12 years There s little evidence of fame or fortune The kitchen is heated by means of leaving the three functioning gas rings on at full blast until the fumes make us all feel stoned And pinned just above a working top cluttered with chipped mugs is a letter from a five year old fan featuring a crayon drawing of the band 125 Sheep edit Following the February 1990 release of Chill Out the press release for which credited sheep as guest vocalists 126 sheep had recurring roles in the duo s output until their 1992 retirement 4 Drummond has claimed that the use of sheep on the Chill Out cover was intended to evoke contemporary rural raves 40 and the cover of the Pink Floyd album Atom Heart Mother 127 Ceremonies and journeys edit Drummond and Cauty s work often involved notions of ceremony and journey Journeys are the subject of the KLF Communications recordings Chill Out Space Last Train to Trancentral Justified amp Ancient and America What Time Is Love as well as the aborted film project The White Room The Chill Out album depicts a journey across the U S Gulf Coast 112 In his book 45 Drummond expressed his admiration for the work of artist Richard Long who incorporates physical journeys into his art 128 Fire and sacrifice were recurring ceremonial themes Drummond and Cauty made fires to dispose of their illegal debut album and to sacrifice the KLF s profits their dead sheep gesture of 1992 carried a sacrificial message The KLF s short film The Rites of Mu depicts their celebration of the 1991 summer solstice on the Hebridean island of Jura a 60 foot 18 m tall wicker man was burnt at a ceremony in which journalists were asked to wear yellow and grey robes and join a chant 122 129 the journalists money was also burnt 79 130 Promotion edit nbsp A K2 Plant Hire advertisement exhibiting the stark quality of Drummond and Cauty s press adverts and the characteristic typeface Drummond and Cauty were renowned for their distinctive and humorous public appearances including several on Top of the Pops at which they were often costumed 125 131 They granted few interviews communicating instead via semi regular newsletters or cryptically phrased full page adverts in UK national newspapers and the music press Such adverts were typically stark comprising large white lettering on black 132 From the outset of their collaborations Drummond and Cauty practised the guerrilla communication tactic that they described as illegal but effective use of graffiti on billboards and public buildings in which the original meaning of the advert would be totally subverted 32 Much as the JAMs early recordings carried messages on the back of existing musical works their promotional graffiti often derived its potency from the context in which it was placed For instance The JAMs SHAG SHAG SHAG graffiti coinciding with their release of All You Need Is Love was drawn over the HALO HALO HALO slogan of a Today billboard that depicted Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable James Anderton 30 who had decried homosexuals amidst the UK media s AIDS furore n 3 Music press journalists were occasionally invited to witness the defacements In December 1987 a Melody Maker reporter was in attendance to see Cauty reverse his car Ford Timelord alongside a billboard and stand on its roof to graffiti a Christmas message from the JAMs 37 In February 1991 another Melody Maker journalist watched the KLF deface a billboard advertising The Sunday Times doctoring the slogan THE GULF the coverage the analysis the facts by painting a K over the GU Drummond and Cauty were on this occasion caught at the scene by police and arrested later to be released without charge 125 In November 1991 the JAMs placed a photograph of graffiti with the slogan It s Grim Up North which had appeared on the junction of London s M25 orbital motorway with the M1 that runs to Northern England 134 as an advert in the NME 135 The graffiti for which the JAMs denied responsibility 134 136 had been the subject of an early day motion in the British House of Commons on 21 October 1991 134 137 In September 1997 on the day after Drummond and Cauty s brief remergence as 2K the graffiti 1997 What The Fuck s Going On appeared on the outside wall of London s National Theatre ten years after the slogan 1987 What The Fuck s Going On had been similarly placed to mark the release of the JAMs debut album 138 Reputation as pranksters edit Cauty and Drummond s tactics have often been labelled by media commentators as pranks or publicity stunts 84 97 125 In 1991 Drummond told an NME journalist that we never felt we went out and did things to get reactions Everything we ve done has just been on a gut level instinct whilst acknowledging that people would likely not believe him 7 On the morning after the BRITs performance an impassioned Drummond told the NME that I really hate it when people go on about us being schemers and scammers We do all this stuff from the very depths of our soul and people make out its some sort of game It depresses me 4 Cauty has expressed similar feelings saying of the KLF I think it worked because we really meant it 80 Legacy edit nbsp KLF Communications advert for Justified amp Ancient with a quote from the lyrics They travel the world in their ice cream van they ve voyaged to the bottom of time They ve been to the place where the Mu Mu mate and the children still cry Mine s a 99 Chill Out is cited by AllMusic as one of the essential ambient albums 112 In 1996 Mixmag named Chill Out the fifth best dance album of all time describing Cauty s DJ sets with the Orb s Alex Paterson as seminal 139 The Guardian has credited the KLF with inventing stadium house 132 NME named the KLF s stadium house album The White Room the 81st best album of all time 140 whilst Q listed it as the 89th best British album of all time in 2000 141 Opinions of contemporaries edit In 1991 Chris Lowe of Pet Shop Boys said that he considered the only other worthwhile group in the UK to be the KLF Neil Tennant added that They have an incredibly recognisable sound I liked it when they said EMF nicked the F from KLF 7 They re from a different tradition to us in that they re pranksters and we ve never been pranksters 65 At the time of the KLF s retirement announcement Drummond s old friend and colleague David Balfe said of Drummond s KLF career that the path he s trod den is a more artistic one than mine I know that deep down I like the idea of building up a very successful career where Bill is more interested in weird stuff I think the very avoidance of cliche has become their particular cliche 5 In March 1994 members of the anarchist band Chumbawamba expressed their respect for the KLF Vocalist and percussionist Alice Nutter referred to the KLF as real situationists categorising them as political musicians alongside the Sex Pistols and Public Enemy Dunst Bruce lauded the K Foundation concluding I think the things the KLF do are fantastic I m a vegetarian but I wish they d sawn an elephant s legs off at the BRIT Awards 142 Direct influence edit The KLF have been imitated to some degree by German techno band Scooter being sampled on virtually every album Scooter have released 143 In the weeks leading up to the 1996 FA Cup Final a group called 1300 Drums featuring the Unjustified Ancients of M U released a novelty single to cash in on the popularity of Manchester United footballer Eric Cantona 38 The Timelords book The Manual was used by the one hit wonders Edelweiss to secure their hit Bring Me Edelweiss 19 40 144 The duo The FLK released two albums and several singles in the 2010s appropriating the KLF s aesthetic and musical style and mixing it with samples and references from folk music 145 Their anonymity along with details such as their use of a Ford Timelord which was very similar to the original in their videos and promotional material led some to believe that the FLK actually were the KLF However it emerged in 2018 that they were two ex members of the Leeds based indie band The Hollow Men 146 Career retrospectives edit Drummond and Cauty have appeared frequently in British broadsheets and music papers since the KLF s retirement most often in connection with the K Foundation and their burning of one million pounds The NME called them masters of manipulating media and perceptions of themselves 147 In 1992 NME referred to the KLF as Britain s greatest pop group and the two most brilliant minds in pop today 4 and in 2002 listed the duo in their Top 50 Icons at number 48 148 The British music paper also listed the KLF s 1992 BRIT Awards appearance at number 4 in their top 100 rock moments of all time 149 What s unique about Drummond and Cauty the paper said in 1993 is the way that under all the slogans and the sampling and the smart hits and the dead sheep and the costumes they appear not only to care but to have some idea of how to achieve what they want 18 Of their many aliases it is as the KLF that they will go down in pop history wrote Alix Sharkey in 1994 for a variety of reasons the most important being the resolute purity of their self abnegation and their visionary understanding of pop He added By early 1992 the KLF was easily the best selling probably the most innovative and undoubtedly the most exhilarating pop phenomenon in Britain In five years it had gone from pressing up 500 copies of its debut recording to being one of the world s top singles acts The same piece also quoted Sheryl Garratt editor of The Face the music hasn t dated I still get an adrenaline rush listening to it Garratt believes their influence on the British house and rap scene cannot be overestimated Their attitude was shaped by the rave scene but they also love pop music So many people who make pop actually despise it and it shows 46 Trouser Press reviewer Ira Robbins referred to the KLF s body of work as a series of colorful sonic marketing experiments 24 The Face called them the kings of cultural anarchy 150 Robert Sandall wrote in 1993 that one of the KLF s maxims was making the unthinkable happen 151 In 1999 Ewing wrote Even before they put their money where their matches were the KLF also known as the Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu furthermore known as the JAMMS were the most brilliant pop artists of the decade They were witty with the left hand and baffling with the right they had a sense of timing and event like nobody since Maclaren they appeared to not give even the merest hint of a fuck and they made records which were the best shotgun wedding of concept to rhythm this side of Kraftwerk 152 In 2003 The Observer named the KLF s departure from the music business and the BRITs performance in which the newspaper says their legend was sealed the fifth greatest publicity stunt in the history of popular music 153 A 2000 piece in The Daily Telegraph called the BRITs performance violently antagonistic and reported that the music business audience was stunned 67 on the other hand Piers Morgan writing shortly after the performance called the KLF pop s biggest wallies 70 A 2004 listener poll by BBC 6 Music saw the KLF K Foundation placed second in a list of rock excesses after The Who 154 A 2017 piece in The Guardian pondering the rumoured return of The KLF noted that in the 25 years since their disappearance nobody else has come up with anything that matches the duo s extraordinary career 62 another piece in the same newspaper in the same year by a different author called them abstruse and pop s greatest provocateurs and their career anarchic anti commercial and mostly ludicrous 95 Instrumentation editEarly releases by the JAMs including the album 1987 were performed using an Apple II computer with a Greengate DS3 sampler peripheral card and a Roland TR 808 drum machine 155 156 On later releases the Greengate DS3 and Apple II were replaced with an Akai S900 sampler and Atari ST computers respectively 157 The KLF s 1990 1992 singles were mixed by Mark Stent using a Solid State Logic automated mixing desk and The White Room album mixed by J Gordon Hastings using an analogue desk The SSL is referenced in the subtitle of the KLF single 3 a m Eternal Live at the S S L and the title of their 2021 digital compilation albums Solid State Logik 1 and Solid State Logik 2 The house music of Space and the KLF involved much original instrumentation for which the Oberheim OB 8 analogue synthesiser was prominently used 158 Drummond played a Gibson ES 330 semi acoustic guitar on America What Time Is Love 159 and Cauty played electric guitar on Justified amp Ancient Stand by The JAMs and America What Time Is Love Graham Lee provided prominent pedal steel contributions to the KLF s Chill Out and Build a Fire Duy Khiem played clarinet on 3 a m Eternal and Make It Rain 158 The KLF track America No More features a pipe band 159 The Roland TB 303 bassline and Roland TR 909 drum machine feature on What Time Is Love Live at Trancentral 158 Discography editMain article The KLF discography The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu 1987 What the Fuck Is Going On The Sound of Mu sic 1987 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu Who Killed The JAMs KLF Communications 1988 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu The KLF The Timelords Shag Times KLF Communications 1988 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu The KLF The Timelords The History of The JAMs a k a The Timelords TVT Records 1989 The KLF Various Artists The What Time Is Love Story KLF Communications 1989 The KLF Chill Out KLF Communications 1990 Space Space KLF Communications 1990 The KLF The White Room KLF Communications 1991 The KLF Solid State Logik 1 KLF Communications 2021 The KLF Come Down Dawn KLF Communications 2021 The KLF Solid State Logik 2 KLF Communications 2021 The KLF The White Room The KLF 1989 Director s Cut KLF Communications 2021 See also editList of ambient music artists List of The KLF s creative associates Anti artNotes edit KLF has been reported as being an initialism for Kopyright Liberation Front 4 5 6 or Kings of the Low Frequencies 7 8 Sleevenotes from 1991 said that Cauty and Drummond have yet to find out what K L F stands for 9 Bill Drummond explained the licensing situation and inducements made by Arista in an interview by Ernie Longmire X Magazine July 1991 40 For a general overview see The 1980s AIDS campaign by Panorama on the BBC News website 133 A fuller set of references are available in the article All You Need Is Love The JAMs song References edit Slingerland Calum 5 January 2017 The KLF Confirm 2017 Reunion as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu Exclaim Retrieved 17 October 2020 Morrison Richard 17 November 2007 Just Shut Up The Times Retrieved 17 October 2020 McClean Andrew 3 December 2013 KLF co founder Bill Drummond to rock Volume in Library of Birmingham Discovery Season Culture24 Retrieved 17 October 2020 a b c d e f g h i Kelly Danny 29 February 1992 Welcome To The Sheep Seats NME Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 297 a b c d e f g h i j Shaw William July 1992 Who Killed The KLF Select Archived via the Library of Mu on 11 October 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 315 Strong Martin C 1999 The Great Alternative amp Indie Discography Canongate ISBN 0 86241 913 1 p 356 a b c Morton Roger 12 January 1991 One Coronation Under A Groove NME Archived via the Library of Mu on 4 October 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 191 What Is Dub The KLF And Apollo 440 Remixes Media notes The Moody Boys introduce Screamer Love Records 1991 EVOLR 3 Kings Of Low Frequency Dub Version a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link MU Sleeve notes History Rewritten The KLF Biography Autumn 1991 The KLF Japan Toshiba EMI KLF Communications 1991 TOCP 6916 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 519 Eric s and the rise of Liverpool Punk www cultureliverpool medium com 6 March 2020 Bill Drummond Agent provocateur www independent co uk 21 November 2005 a b Staunton Terry Turn Up The Strobe The KLF The Jams The Timelords A History review Retrieved 2 March 2020 a b c Bush John KLF at AllMusic Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b c Timelords gentlemen please NME 16 May 1992 Archived via the Library of Mu on 11 October 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 309 Savage Mark 1 January 2021 The KLF s songs are finally available to stream BBC News Online Retrieved 1 January 2021 Reynolds Simon 2005 Rip It Up And Start Again Post punk 1978 1984 Faber amp Faber ISBN 0 571 21569 6 a b Big in Japan Where are they now Q January 1992 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 271 a b Tate tat and arty NME 20 November 1993 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 359 a b Drummond Bill 19 October 1996 Shelf life Bill Drummond reviews his own back catalogue The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 27 February 2020 Leroy Dan Brilliant at AllMusic Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b c d e Harrison Andrew 27 April 2017 Return of the KLF They were agents of chaos Now the world they anticipated is here The Guardian Retrieved 1 March 2020 Shaw William April 1995 Special K GQ Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 397 Wilkinson Roy 8 November 1986 The Man Sounds review Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 15 a b c Robbins Ira KLF Trouser Press Retrieved 20 April 2006 a b c d e Drummond Bill December 1990 Saturday Sequence Interview Interviewed by Richard Skinner BBC Radio 1 Archived from the original on 24 May 2006 Bill Drummond It s a Steal Sampling The Story of Pop Episode 48 31 minutes in BBC Radio 1 First broadcast in 1994 per The Story Of Pop BBC Radio 6 Music Retrieved 9 March 2020 a b c Drummond Bill October 1987 KLF Info Sheet Oct 1987 Archived via the Library of Mu on 11 March 2007 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 500 Cranna Ian 1987 1987 What the Fuck Is Going On review Q Archived via the Library of Mu on 4 October 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 479 All You Need Is Love Sounds review 14 March 1987 a b The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu Sounds 16 May 1987 Kelly Danny 23 May 1987 All You Need Is Love NME review a b The KLF Biography as of 20th July 1990 KLF BIOG 012 KLF Communications December 1990 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 512 Didcock Barry 21 October 2001 Bitter Swede symphony Sunday Herald Glasgow p 4 News item Sounds 12 September 1987 Brown James 17 October 1987 Thank you for the music NME a b c d Atkins Chris 8 April 2022 Prison lawsuits and a glovebox of fake cash the film the KLF didn t want you to see the Guardian a b Smith Mat 12 December 1987 The Great TUNE Robbery Melody Maker Archived via the Library of Mu on 4 October 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 52 a b c d e Longmire Ernie et al 2020 1998 Discography The KLF including The JAMS The Timelords 2K etc Archived from the original on 29 February 2020 Whitney Joins The JAMs NME review 22 August 1987 a b c d Longmire Ernie Lazlo Nibble 1 April 1991 KLF is Gonna Rock Ya X Magazine Interview with Bill Drummond Archived via the Library of Mu on 1 April 1991 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 229 Drummond Bill September 1991 Bomlagadafshipoing Interview Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation Radio 2 Transcript archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 521 Public NME NME News item about the KLF turning down Whitney Houston 16 November 1991 Archived via the Library of Mu on September 16 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 261 Reviewed by NME writer James Brown in the 28 November 1987 edition Who Killed The JAMs Sounds review 13 February 1988 a b c d Wilkinson Roy 28 May 1988 Ford Every Scheme Sounds Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 81 a b Sharkey Alix 21 May 1994 Trash Art amp Kreation The Guardian Weekend Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 384 a b Doctorin The Tardis Sleeve notes The Timelords KLF Communications 1988 KLF 003T a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Houghton Mick 2 July 2019 Fried amp Justified Hits Myths Break Ups and Breakdowns in the Record Business 1978 98 Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 33684 5 a b The KLF Rip It Up Unwrapped Season 1 Episode 5 BBC BBC Scotland a b The KLF interview Snub TV 30 January 1989 Doctorin the Tardis Melody Maker review May 1988 a b c Drummond B amp Cauty J 1989 The Manual How To Have a Number One The Easy Way KLF Publications KLF 009B UK ISBN 0 86359 616 9 Link to full text Archived 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Drummond Bill 22 January 1988 KLF Info Sheet KLF Communications Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 501 Rimmer L 8 July 2001 T in the Park Greatest festival stories ever EG Magazine Edition Scotland on Sunday p 7 Mellor Christopher February 1989 Beam Me Up Scotty How to have a number one The JAMs way Offbeat Archived via the Library of Mu on 24 August 2007 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 94 Indie Top 20 Volume 8 Sleeve notes Various Artists Beechwood Music 1990 TT08 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b c The White Room Information Sheet Eight KLF Communications August 1990 Archived via the Library of Mu on 5 October 2007 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 508 Prendergast Mark 2003 The Ambient Century From Mahler to Moby The Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age Bloomsbury Publishing PLC pp 407 412 ISBN 1 58234 323 3 Simpson Dave 7 June 2016 How we made the Orb s Little Fluffy Clouds The Guardian Interview with Youth and Alex Paterson Retrieved 7 March 2020 The KLF Enigmatic Dance Duo Record Collector 1 April 1991 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 226 Bush John The KLF at AllMusic Retrieved 6 March 2020 a b Robinson Peter 5 January 2017 The KLF are back sort of and it s exactly what 2017 needs The Guardian Retrieved 25 February 2020 a b Harrison Allan The White Room Splendid review Archived from the original on 12 November 2006 Bush John The White Room The KLF at AllMusic Retrieved 7 March 2020 a b Brown James 25 May 1991 The Pet Shop Boys Versus The World NME Ewing Tom 28 October 1999 42 KLF Last Train To Transcentral Freaky Trigger Retrieved 19 October 2023 a b McCormick Neil 2 March 2000 My name is Bill and I m a popaholic The Arts The Daily Telegraph London p 27 Archived from the original on 27 February 2016 Retrieved 11 March 2020 Baa nned KLF sheep chopped by BBC NME 22 February 1992 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 292 Brits behaving badly BBC News 4 March 2000 Retrieved 16 March 2020 a b Sandall Robert 19 August 2008 Bill Drummond pop s prankster heads for destruction The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 2 March 2020 KLF Communications advertisement in NME 16 May 1992 KLF Communications Information Sheet 23 KLF Communications May 1992 Archived via the Library of Mu on 5 October 2007 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 514 Martin Gavin December 1996 The Chronicled Mutineers Vox 1992 had been the year of Bill s breakdown when the KLF perched on the peak of greater than ever success quit the music business toy machine gunned the tuxedo d twats in the front row of that year s BRIT Awards ceremony and dumped a sheep s carcass on the steps at the after show party Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 430 Drummond Bill Manning Mark 1996 Bad Wisdom London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 026118 9 BRITs statuette dug up Q February 1993 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 322 The Best Of Artists The Worst of Artists New York Times 29 November 1993 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 366 Ellison Mike 24 November 1993 Terror strikes at the Turner Prize Art at its very best or worst The Guardian Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 362 Yasser they can boogie NME 13 November 1993 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 356 a b Reid Jim 25 September 1994 Money to burn The Observer Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 387 This article is a first hand account by freelance journalist Jim Reid the only independent witness to the burning a b Butler Ben 18 June 2003 Interview The KLF s James Cauty Rocknerd interview with Jimmy Cauty for The Big Issue Australia Archived from the original on 10 December 2007 For Cauty s actual words a breakdown of The KLF s earnings and spending see K Foundation Burn a Million Quid a b Smith Andrew 13 February 2000 Burning question The Observer Retrieved 30 May 2015 Home Stewart Winter 1996 There s no success like failure PDF Variant Vol 2 no 1 p 18 Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2007 Help LP diary Select January 1996 a b Flint Charlie 2 September 1997 Media Pranksters KLF Re emerge As 2K Billboard Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 496 Justified and Very Ancient Melody Maker 20 August 1997 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 439 2K press release amp biography Mute Records Archived from the original on 27 March 2006 People s Pyramid Melody Maker News item 15 November 1997 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 499 a b 2K Brickin it NME News item 8 November 1997 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 457 K2 PLANT HIRE LIMITED Overview free company information from Companies House beta companieshouse gov uk K2 Plant Hire Limited Unaudited Report and Accounts Companies House 31 March 1996 Sawyer Miranda 26 October 1997 They set fire to 1m and they re still not happy The Observer Jimmy and Bill aren t an art foundation any more We re K2 Plant Hire announces Jimmy We have been for two to three years We re a limited company Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 452 Paterson Colin 23 August 2017 The KLF return 23 years after bowing out of the music industry BBC News video Retrieved 27 February 2020 a b Pilley Max 24 August 2017 The Ice Kream Van Kometh The Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu Return Drowned in Sound Archived from the original on 26 February 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2020 a b c Ray Josh 30 August 2017 Welcome To The Dark Ages The JAMs Return Super Weird Substance Retrieved 26 February 2020 a b c Ellis Petersen Hannah The return of the KLF pop s greatest provocateurs take on a post truth world The Guardian Retrieved 23 August 2017 a b Ellen Barbara 26 August 2017 KLF Welcome to the Dark Ages review what time is chaos The Guardian Retrieved 4 March 2020 a b The KLF Pop s saboteurs return after 23 years BBC News 23 August 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Richards Sam 16 November 2018 The KLF unveil plans to build a pyramid from dead people s ashes Uncut Retrieved 26 February 2020 Sodomsky Sam 15 November 2018 The KLF Announce Plans to Build Pyramid Out of 34 592 Dead People Pitchfork Retrieved 26 February 2020 a b c d Youngs Ian 26 November 2018 KLF s Jimmy Cauty We don t make records we make pyramids out of dead people BBC News Retrieved 26 February 2020 Davis Laura 15 November 2018 Why a pyramid of bricks containing the ashes of dead people is being built in Toxteth Liverpool Echo Retrieved 26 February 2020 Rand Lisa 9 October 2019 Day of the Dead street procession coming to Toxteth Liverpool Echo Retrieved 26 February 2020 Beaumont Thomas Ben 1 January 2021 The KLF reissue music for first time since 1992 The Guardian Retrieved 2 January 2021 Krol Charlotte 23 March 2021 The KLF add compilation including unreleased Jarvis Cocker collab to streaming NME Retrieved 23 March 2021 The KLF release new reworked album Come Down Dawn NME Music Film TV Gaming amp Pop Culture News 4 February 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Watch the trailer for controversial new documentary Who Killed The KLF NME 5 April 2022 a b New documentary Who Killed The KLF is out now Mixmag Gecsoyler Sammy 23 August 2023 KLF donate copy of reconstructed 1987 album to British Library Music The Guardian ISSN 1756 3224 OCLC 60623878 Retrieved 23 August 2023 KLF Communications profile at Discogs com link Archived 15 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine King Richard 22 March 2012 How indie labels changed the world The Guardian KLF chase money and McCulloch NME 29 February 1992 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 295 a b c Bush John Chill Out at AllMusic Retrieved 5 March 2020 Bush John The History of the JAMS a k a The Timelords at AllMusic Retrieved 5 March 2020 The White Room Justified amp Ancient at AllMusic Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b Poole Steven 26 February 2000 Hit man myth maker 45 The Observer Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 487 a b c Graham Ben 1 February 2017 Embrace The Contradictions The Strange World Of The KLF The Quietus Retrieved 10 March 2020 Extract from a feature on Stewart Home Cornwell J i D Magazine Nov 1993 link Archived 16 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Home Stewart Doctorin Our Culture published on the website of The Stewart Home Society link Archived 14 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine K Foundation 8 December 1995 Cape Wrath The Guardian advertisement Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 519 They re Back mutelibtech com Mute Records Archived from the original on 27 March 2006 K Foundation nailed NME 11 December 1993 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 368 a b Freak Show i D December 1994 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 392 Adams Cecil 23 May 1997 Is the dollar bill s eye on a pyramid the symbol of a secret society The Straight Dope Retrieved 9 March 2020 Mead Helen 27 January 1990 Chill Out NME review Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 123 a b c d Stubbs David 16 February 1991 Pranks for the Memory Melody Maker Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 202 The KLF Chill Out Ambient house LP Press release Appearing media consultants 1990 So what you might ask does this have to do with sheep The KLF have discovered in working with the guest vocalist sheep on Chill Out that sheep far from being the mindless lazy animals of easy virtue that is their stereotype are spiritually highly evolved creatures who are totally at one with their universe If you doubt this just gaze at the cover of Chill Out whilst listening to it and share the serenity Drummond Bill 2008 17 Beautiful Books p 410 ISBN 978 1 905636 26 6 Drummond Bill 2000 45 Little Brown ISBN 0 316 85385 2 Roux Caroline 12 August 2006 On location The isle of Jura The Guardian Retrieved 25 February 2020 The KLF 1991 The Rites Of Mu VHS KLF Communications KLF VT014 Frith Mark October 1997 The Return of The KLF SKY Magazine Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 445 a b O Reilly John 29 August 1997 The horny old devils The Guardian Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 437 The 1980s AIDS campaign BBC News 16 October 2005 Retrieved 27 February 2020 a b c The JAMs centre of political interest NME 9 November 1991 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 258 It s Grim Up North Graffiti Advert NME advertisement 2 November 1991 It s Grim Up North NME Single of the Week 2 November 1991 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 257 MOTORWAY GRAFFITI Early Day Motions Early Day Motion by Joe Ashton MP House of Commons 21 October 1991 Retrieved 29 February 2020 That this House calls on the Secretary of State for Transport to remove the huge white painted graffiti on the bridge over the M1 on the northbound carriageway just north of the M25 junction which reads Its Grim Up North or alternatively arrange to add the words Gruesome in the Midlands and Nowt but Homeless Folk in Cardboard Boxes in London to restore a fair regional balance during the next election Pre millennium tension hits new high NME 27 September 1997 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 465 Phillips Dom 1 March 1996 50 greatest dance albums No 5 Chill Out The KLF Mixmag Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 478 nme com Top 100 Of All Times October 1993 Archived from the original on 5 March 2001 Kelso Paul 2 May 2000 Beatles still rule the rockers roost The Guardian Manchester p 9 Retrieved 19 March 2020 Maconie Stuart March 1994 Chumbawamba interview Select Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 378 Baxxter H P March 2013 Style Icons H P Baxxter on The KLF Electronic Beats No 35 Reighley Kurt B 26 May 1999 Hear No Evil Seattle Weekly Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Si Forster 1 September 2015 The FLK Mummers Echoes and Dust Retrieved 10 July 2020 Smith Mat August 2020 Time Machine Electronic Sound Norwich UK Pam Communications Limited pp 16 17 Bychawski Adam 6 September 2001 Fresh JAMMs NME Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Top 50 NME Icons NME Archived from the original on 29 May 2002 Top 100 Rock Moments of All Time NME com NME Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 K Foundation Nailed To The Wall The Face January 1994 Archived via the Library of Mu on 16 September 2016 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 374 Sandall Robert 12 September 1993 Adding to the confusion K Foundation s new ads Features section The Times Archived via the Library of Mu on 27 August 2007 Wikipedia WikiProject The KLF LibraryOfMu 549 Ewing Tom 12 September 1999 75 The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu It s Grim Up North Freaky Trigger Retrieved 19 October 2023 Thompson Ben 27 September 2003 The 10 greatest publicity stunts The Observer Archived from the original on 15 March 2007 Barnes Anthony 20 June 2004 The Who top rock s hall of shame The Independent on Sunday London p 5 Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 17 March 2020 1987 The JAMs 45 Edits Sleeve notes KLF Communications 1987 JAMS 23T Down Town NME review 28 November 1987 The Kings of The Greengate Sampler Tingen Paul January 1999 Spike Stent The Work of a Top Flight Mixer Sound on Sound Retrieved 17 March 2020 a b c The White Room Sleeve notes KLF Communications 1991 JAMS LP6 a b America What Time Is Love Sleeve notes KLF Communications 1992 KLF USA4 Further reading editDrummond Bill 2000 45 Little Brown ISBN 0 316 85385 2 Higgs John 26 September 2013 The KLF Chaos Magic and the Band who Burned a Million Pounds Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 1 78022 655 2 Shirley Ian 7 August 2017 Turn Up The Strobe The KLF The JAMMs The Timelords A History Cherry Red Books ISBN 978 1 909454 63 7 External links editKLF mailing list The KLF at AllMusic The KLF and Illuminatus including a list of their references to the number 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The KLF amp oldid 1222327676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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