Right, here's my KLF story. I was a kid. One day, living in Paisley, Scotland, I found my parents rubbing graffiti off my front door. Someone had spraypainted "KLF" on our front door. Apparently several cars on the street had it done too. They were scraping and scraping and I asked my dad, what does KLF mean. He played me Last Train To Trancentral. He had a KLF tape. I remember how deep the biro was on the tape label. It was serious. K. L. F. He played them to me. They started my journey into being creative, being a musician, being an artist. My first album was The While Room. The KLF are sacred to me, almost holy. Thank you for thus video. Because I always had this patchy recollection of the KLF. All I know is that they started my creative career. Thank you so much for doing this video. I'm going to send it to my dad.
What I respect about the KLF is their integrity. It's inarguable. They're the most punk band ever, without being punk. They worked out the nonsense, contrived music business and could write banging tunes with a captivating element of mystique. Quitting at the top, after firing a machine gun over the heads, quite literally, of the pop music establishment they understood and loathed. Disillusionment done right. Perfect.
As a kid in the early 90's, watching all these great tunes roll out on the radio and music video shows... I might even go as far as calling the KLF "THE SOUND OF 1991".... I had no idea all this anarchy was going on. Mucho, mucho respeto.
I'm 50 years old, I'm a New Yorker, I'm a musician, I'm an avid music lover of multiple genres, I've been in bands, I've worked as a recording engineer, I've been a music producer, I've been a DJ, I've been an electronics repair guy and a music sales guy. I've worked with famous names and with nobodies. I still find new stuff whenever I watch one of your videos. These are absolutely the best music docs out there.
I was a dumb kid in rural Missouri that was fed a musical diet of Garth Brooks and Mariah Carey: hearing 3 AM Eternal for the first time was a revelation and it broke my preadolescent brain
As a dude in his early 20s in-between pretty much everything is his life, driving through Lake Jackson while listening to Dreamtime in Lake Jackson was a pretty defining experience.
My favorite KLF tangent has to do with German dancepop band Scooter. Apparently when they broke in the UK, people were contacting radio stations and their label demanding they admit that Scooter was secretly a KLF project. HP Baxxter has said in interviews that being compared to The KLF like that is the greatest compliment the band could ever get.
@@djsquarewave Mmmm.. sometimes ive chased that fker down block after block like predator after Arnie only to get a pasteurized creamy milk treat and say.. well i had more enjoyment in the quest rather than the attainment
That’s 36 minutes of absolute music history. I don’t know why I got this in my feed, but after this video I’m fan of yours. I’ve known some of their story, but you gave all the background to it.
“A sound system loud enough to bother the surrounding islands. The event ended with the burning of a wicker man and a rave. As usual, no explanation was given.” Absolute legends.
Their track “It’s Grim Up North” is still a song that gives me the chills. One of the hardest, most raw techno tracks I’ve ever heard. Fucking masterpiece.
LOVE them. LOOOOOVE. The world needs batshit insane pop art geniuses who genuinely don't play by any established rules. I fear we'll not see anyone as remotely talented or frothingly unhinged as these two ever again.
There are a lot of unhinged people, both inside and outside the music industry, but having the talent to make a bunch of top 5 singles doesn't normally come along at the same time as that level of derangement. Most of pop's mad people can only do one or the other. (Syd Barrett, Kurt Cobain, and Kanye West are in the same conversation, but none of those could make pure radio-friendly pop while doped up to the eyeballs in a squat. The KLF were special).
Yeah - yeah... The 90s was the explosion of techno sound in Europe and all the world... I have listen to hundreds talented electronic musician like the KLF...
the KLF / Tammy Wynette combination is, in my humble but correct opinion, the greatest collaboration in the history of popular music. On sheer WTF-ness alone, it stands unrivaled. It's what a collaboration should be: A collision of disparate worlds that, somehow, still works.
Forever i had thought this lady was like a country goddess who had been kidnapped and taken to a country of pyramids and somehow the poor KLF had to also be kidnapped Tammy had to praise the moomooians and say they were justified... having had no knowledge of moomooian culture i had to take her word
I'm so glad you did this one. I was incredibly into their music but as an American I had no idea what the act was about or their non-philosophy. In those days it was pretty rare for Americans even to know about, let alone be into, Dr Who. But it was huge in the nerd culture circles I inhabited, particularly the Tom Baker years. So that hook made The KLF also instant hits in those circles.
Thank you for posting this. As an American, I only knew of some of their music at the time, and none of the peripheral things they had done. Clearly, I missed out on the cleverest people to get into pop!
I bought The White Room on cassette in 1991, and loved all of the songs. Then Justified & Ancient hit the airwaves, and I was further blown away…mind-bending and gloriously insane! 🤯😱😃
And look here, I just discovered your channel when Blue Monday needed a listen to this morning. And now, I see you've done a bit on KLF the greatest two musical genius' to still be walking the earth. I'm saving this video for a uninterrupted listen to this very evening. Again, I thank you for you're doing. I'd salute your hard work producing these, but I've a suspicion your enjoying making these more than referring to them as hard work. 💪
Just last year I watched the documentary on them called Who Killed the KLF? and I am still flabbergasted about how they were the biggest band in the world... and then just decided to stop. Truly made music for the sake of art and when they felt they've said everything they wanted they moved on.
No mention of "America: what time is love"? I blew my speakers with that track back then - twice.. and the video to that one can be descriped with one word: AWESOME
Was surprised by that myself, especially seeing as it managed to pull off another surprise guest appearance by the Voice of Rock himself, Glenn Hughes, singing at the top of his bent with Motorhead's "Ace of Spades" thundering across the track.
Excellent video! Growing up in the Midwest US I fell hard for the The KLF just before my teen years after I heard 3AM Eternal on MTV one day. I was a fan of stuff like Technotronic and Black Box but something about 3AM Eternal really hooked me. I got The White Room on CD and was in heaven! It just so happened that shortly after that I visited a cousin who was a few years older than I and he happened to be playing Chill Out and I recognized one of the melodies in it. Only then did I start to go down the rabbit hole that was The KLF and boy what a ride it was back then! I had to wait until the early 2000s before I got my hands on 1987 via internet file sharing but in the early 90s I had managed to find all the other singles & albums on CD from Doctorin' the Tardis through Justified and Ancient. I still listen to The White Room and Chill Out a couple of times each year!
I remember hearing The KLF in the 90s and really enjoying their music, but i had no idea why they just disappeared until recently. I guess i do now. Thanks for the awesome documentary.
Sounds like a good read ! I have a few books on chaos his and I love the klf ! Going to see if I can find a second hand copy for a decent price!!!! Thanks for the recommendation!!
This is PEAK TH-cam. Definitely the best TH-cam video I have ever watched. Absolutely fascinating! I knew, and at the same time, I had no idea, how brilliant the KLF was. ❤ In my opinion Goa Trance and psy trance pioneers and forefathers. 😮
I'm binge watching your channel and I thank you for what you do. Being a late 60's child you are covering music I grew up and still to this day enjoy and in many cases, play loud. I look forward to learning more.
My god, I just spent 36 min beaming with a MASSIVE grin on my face, as you took me through my Youth... I never knew that about the Orb... FFS... MY Business in SK Was Called Orb s.r.o. after that band, and it's music is still my life. Just incredible when you've nommed a couple of bits of blotting paper... What a totally bangin video.. Cheers Mate!
Inwas a guest at the reunion video at the Barbican centre Did not know it was a video .we where told it was an art installation by " formally known as KLF" was a brilliant show
I was about to turn 14 when 3AM and the rest of the singles hit Spain, my country. Those tracks were huuuge! My parents listened to a lot of classic Jean Michel Jarre and new age synth/quasy ambient music, though that year was the first time I heard both floaty sounds and pumping beats in the same song... I was hooked for life! Many years later I fould a beautiful “Justified Ancients of Mu Mu” picture disc with the pyramid, the submarine and Tammy as the queen. Beautiful photo. Amazing collage of sounds. I also found the “What time is love (America we love you remix)” sleeve with the Viking ship and that redhead girl with sunglasses. I’m sure I didn’t pay more that 3 or 4 euros for each record. They’re now still on my wall, on display and on my playlist... Live from the Trancentral
Cress *was* Jimmy Cauty's partner for over 20 years (she ran the KLF press office for most of it after her earlier pop career with June "Mo" Montana from Brilliant fizzled out), but they split up, she went to college and became a research biologist. Cauty hooked up with Alannah Currie (famous as a member of the Thompson Twins) a few years ago.
Good doco. Grim up North deserves a mention simply for the humour of it. Pounding track with verses simply naming Northern towns and a chorus of Its Grim up North
I still listen to the Chill Out album once a year or so. The first time I heard it was as a teen after a rave in the early 90s coming down from an acid trip and dancing all night. Gorgeous album! Great video here, so interesting to learn their background. I had no idea their history, this is amazing!
Chill Out is amazing. I discovered it when I was almost 30, but it was released right about the time I was born. It's like Chill Out is what the world sounded like when I entered it, and I was on my way to returning to it. It's good music for road trips (duh) but also in dealing with a loss.
Have you heard chill out re-release with no bigger samples? It is mostly the same, all the cool bits are still there, but segments that were changed bring different vibes
As a kid growing up in a small town, 3am Eternal was one of my first introductions to acid house and electronic music as a whole. It blew my mind, and I just couldn't get enough of it
About a year ago I went into a rabbithole reading about The KLF and I'm so stoked you've covered them in even more detail. I can't help but admire them.
If you didn't find Bill Drummond's book 45 in your rabbit hole you should. It's one of the more unique books I've read! I also loved the Youw***res website they did, but I think that has been taken down now. It was a site where people listed ridiculous things they'd do for money and some were absurd, others were satirical. "I'll laugh at your Chihuahua" is a title of one of the entries...
You should read Albert Pikes “Morals and Dogma” page 321 if you really want to know where the rabbit hole goes. Believe me, it’s a very deep and dark destination.
@@memyselfandi8544 I just found this short clip about that page of the book. What does this have to do with the KLF? th-cam.com/video/X0LCq780FPg/w-d-xo.html
I remember my brother purchasing their single on cassette tape when I was 9 years old and being mesmerized by their sound. They've always had a sheen of mystery to me because I had no idea who the "Mumu" were nor how they planned on rocking me. Thank u for the upload. It was interesting hearing their story.
3AM Eternal was a music beacon for me when I discovered it as a 13 yr old in a northern town with no culture. It sounded so unique and futuristic. On clear days a radio station 2hrs south of me came through, and I remember recording it off the radio everyday for the week it was in the top 10 count down so I could listen to it over and over again in a row.
Back in the days, I have been seriously addicted to KLF music (still love and enjoy it). Thanks to this exceptionally perfect documentary, I finally learned a bit about the "ancients of mu mu" and also how come there was an unusually big piece of an ABBA song in that track. Many, many thanks for the hard work behind this
Good doc about a great band. I have definitely appreciated them more as I have gotten older (I was a bit young at the time). Glad they are still doing their thing.
Thanks for this amazingly detailed video. I loved the hell out of KLF and I never understood why did they disappeared. Interestingly enough... I also loved The Orb... not knowing there was a connection. The KLF was more 'punk' than most punk bands. They went out with a bang and I love them even more for it. Legends.
Chill Out and The Orb's Adventures beyond the Ultraworld are some of my favorite albums. I love the random samples of jets, trains, and animals. Thanks for the great video!
I love how the KLF remained subversive whilst having huge hits and pissing off all and sundry. I absolutely love this band and the more and I learn about them as I grow older (they were in their prime when I was about 13-17) the more I love them.
I’ve picked up bits and pieces of this story over the years - owning to the fact 3AM Eternal was the first song dance song I remember hearing at 10 years old - but never knew the whole story! Awesome work🎉
Great video, great story! I loved their hits as a kid and still actually enjoy them, and I knew they went out with some drama....but never knew the extent of that. As for the Timelords, I've seen them only once perform on TV and never seen or heard it again, but that image always stayed with me. Only recently I came across the song again after over 3 decades, but (obviously) immediately recognized it. And that bit about Tammy Wynette and Dolly Parton cracked me up 😂 As much as they joke about it all with their "manual", they made some great, groundbreaking music that stood the test of time.
Jimmy actually had Dolly Parton in mind but as Bill pointed out it wouldn't have worked without Tammy. Try and track down the doco "Who Killed the KLF" you'll thank yourself.
IMHO, great documentary. The subject of such? Somehow a cross between Spinal Tap and a pop version of an “Emperor wears no clothes” sort of phenom. The doc captured my attention far longer than any of the “music” could have.
Loved the songs as a teenager. Had no idea about the chaos. Thank you for a fantastic video essay! Now off to rock out to Justified and Ancient which I STILL know all lyrics of 30+ years later.
Magnificent my man. Well done real pleasure to see that shenanigans in some sort of logical time frame rather than snippets of memories. Essential watch for anyone 50ish years young. What I love the most is the way 'Chill out' rooms and the word Chill out is now used in almost every primary school across the UK. R.I.P Ricardo Da Force
I remember one night when I was a kid i was around 10 years old... The 3 am video played and I was hooked ! I was waiting so bad to see and hear that song again ! Then one day I was watching this show called Dan Gallaghers video hits and he said tomorrow you guys are in for a treat ! We will be showing 2 KLF videos so you dont want to miss that ! I immidiately got my VCR and cassette ready and the very next day I taped the 2 videos 3 AM and What time is love ! And I played them to death ! Even put my sound system against the tvs speaker so I could have it on cassette ! Then one day I walked into Woolcos and there was The White room album on cassette ! Got my mother to buy it and I was so happy ! Played it to death also ! Thank you KLF that was a great part of my life ! 😃
I got the album when I was 13 and fell in love with it. Now I have a six year old kid that will rock out to Last Train to Trancentral with me in the car.
Being of a age-approriate age when The KLF were big, I always saw them as being on the edge, yet somehow important. Cue the subsequent 30 years, all the while loving musical artists, I have come to revisit them here. Thanks for the vid. Glad I subscribed... who knows when.... 👍
Amazing documentary! I was 9/10 when all this was going on and i dint know much about them other than the music i recall fondly. Watching this film has made it abundantly clear that Jeremy & Superhans 'band' in Peep Show is totally modelled on The KLF, brilliant.
In the US, Doctorin the Tardis was an accidentally subversive masterpiece. You used to have these overly serious tough guys dancing to a mix of a nerdy theme song and a glitter rock band, both which were the height of uncool at the time. It was everything those guys would be mortified to be associated with, and were once it was revealed to them. I think that is why it had such a short spike in popularity in the US. Seemed like it was on the radio for one week then it disappeared without a trace. If I had not had taped it off the radio, you could have convinced me it never existed a week later. But it only works because it is genuinely so good, despite the creators apparent disdain for it. It takes a certain mentality, knowledge and talent to successfully meld such disparate forms of music. I've heard a million other attempts to do something similar and it rarely pans out.
At least from about 2000 to 2014, that song was a staple in a legendary club in São Paulo, Brazil, called Madame Satã. The kicker? It's primarily a goth/post-punk club. Just goes to show how wide is the reach of "Doctorin' the Tardis". It was played alongside stuff like "Go" from Tones on Tail and "Rise" from PIL. Good times.
@@50Personas I'm primarily an old punk/post-punk kind of guy that married a gothy girl, so that all checks out. When you really boil it all down, it's all basically the same kind of people with slightly different preferences.
I saw a copy of Doctorin the Tardis at a small town Record Bar. I recognized it thanks to MTV's '120 Minutes' air play but figured I'd come back later and get it. I spent the next 5 years looking for a copy.
Great Video, a mention of the 2017 return of the famous ICE CREAM VAN in Liverpool would have been a nice ending to the video, 23 years to the day after the Million Quid Burning
The JAMs are absolutely more than music, they are extremely important to human civilization. Everyone should read bill drummond’s book 45 for a great inside look at how the British music industry was, but by far his best written work is the incredible schizophrenic and neo-illuminatus not-a-novel Bad Wisdom. Co-written by Mark Manning. Absolutely incredible story about the journey of saving the world by burring a portrait of Elvis at the North Pole
There was a talk show on British TV featuring THE KLF. There they admitted the plan of burning 1 mln quid was to show the ashes on their future gigs. The documentary never really mentions the KLF is Kopyright Liberation Front. It is a great documentary by Trash Theory, definitely one of the best. Kudos for the author!
@@bearhustler Try and find the doco "Who Killed the KLF" all your answers [and prayers] will materialise. i.e. King Lucifer Forever, Kopyright Liberation Front, Kings of Low Frequencies, *Kiss Lick Fuck *more a street interpretation.
Mate! This is actually a great insight into the band. I just wish you mentioned their 2 greatest records: as the JAAMs Its Grim Up North, Bill D just listing Northern towns before mixing into Jerusalem and America: what time is love a rock/trance version of WTIL with Glenn Hughes off Deep Purple on vocals!
No mention of their sample heavy track for the Warchild charity compilation or Fuck the Millennium either ☹️ still a good watch tho. Reminds me that I need to play The White Room to the kids! 😆
"this wasn't the woman I was expecting" sent me 💀💀💀💀 I loved them then and I love them now and Tammy WAS precisely the right choice. Both legends, cool dames and great singers, but Dolly would have taken over the story bc she's more famous
At first I was bewildered by your opening comment “If you’ve heard of The KLF, it’s probably as the band that burned a million pounds”. Eh?! Who hasn’t heard of the KLF? Who doesn’t know them for their brilliant music? But it dawned on me that for those who were too young to remember 1991, the fact that they deleted their catalogue meant that it was easy for their music to slip into oblivion. Some of us kept hold of our copies of the White Room or Chill Out, and never forgot what a timeless series of bangers the Stadium House Trilogy was. There were a lot of great dance tracks in the charts at the time (including Canadian national anthem Pump Up The Jam), but The KLF had a level of bizarre mystique about them that fired the imagination. It’ll be great to have new people introduced to their energy and inventiveness, as well as retelling all their art anarchist bonkers brilliance.
@@doctornova3015 presumably watching the video will help. They had a bunch of hit singles so there's a few you don't remember but felt the need to tell everyone about not remembering.
Has any other band "deleted their catalogue" like this? I was only introduced to EDM and pop music in general in 1994 and missed them entirely. When the re-releases popped up in my feed in 2021, it was ...ear-opening? Over 25 years worth of Scooter tracks had hammered a lot of seemingly nonsensical lyrics and weird samples into my brain - and now I realized that a LOT of those, including their overall "stadium house" style, were references to the KLF. If you will, a continuation of this mass-market EDM segment that KLF had started and now refused to serve.
Thanks for this video! Loved their music and have the White Room album on CD. Played it a lot of times wondering where KLF just disappeared. Thanks for telling their story, these guys are truly geniuses! Greetings from Sweden
AAAAh. Thank you for some of the best memories of my clubbing life. 17 and at 7th Heaven Sundays in Melbourne (Australia) peaking and meeting god in the middle of a tiered dancefloor looking over a sea of pounding hands in the air. Their sounds went beyond masterful and took you to a space of absolute pure joy. All bound for mu mu land.
Thank you so much for this. They never had a huge following in North America so growing up I only ever heard White Room. I always thought it was a brilliant album and never knew why they never did more. Now I know I only saw the brief end of their career and missed all of the best stuff. Awesome video
Jesus... I had no idea the Orb and the KLF were even loosely related. And never really understood where either band came from or went after their rise in the early 1990's.
Sadly no mention of one of the masterpieces of this band "It's Grim Up North", a song like absolutely no other and even nostalgic for those of us who have had the privilege of living near the Yorkshire Moors at one time or another. Fucking geniuses.
Anyone who wants to know more, PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE read the John Higgs book “KLF: Chaos, Magick, and the Band Who Burned A Million Pounds”. It’s incredible.
I know its down to personal taste...and you can say what you like about the group/band but....they made some bl33din well awesome sounds...that sounded GREAT with a sub
Luv and Peace. To understand the KLF you need to read the Illuminatus trilogy by Robert Anton Wilson. They are like the house band for that series. Probably the headline at lake Totenkopf. Ewige Blumenkraft. Luv and Peace.
Thank you for make this documentary about KLF! The future generations must know and appreciate their legacy, not only in the music aspect, but how the music industry is about
I am so thankful that I lived through everything that the KLF did, and I am still a fan and have their produce, which is an incredible experience of my early musical education 🎉
I absolutely devoured that string of KLF hits in 1991 and often wondered why they vanished so suddenly. Thanks for this brilliant account of what happened 👍😀
So glad to have been there when all this was in the charts. That Brit performance, the albums and singles.. and chill out... so much great music and madness. utter genius. And Bills soup line and choir project the 15? Unique is an understatement.
Right, here's my KLF story. I was a kid. One day, living in Paisley, Scotland, I found my parents rubbing graffiti off my front door. Someone had spraypainted "KLF" on our front door. Apparently several cars on the street had it done too. They were scraping and scraping and I asked my dad, what does KLF mean. He played me Last Train To Trancentral. He had a KLF tape. I remember how deep the biro was on the tape label. It was serious. K. L. F. He played them to me. They started my journey into being creative, being a musician, being an artist. My first album was The While Room. The KLF are sacred to me, almost holy. Thank you for thus video. Because I always had this patchy recollection of the KLF. All I know is that they started my creative career. Thank you so much for doing this video. I'm going to send it to my dad.
Okay, obvious question… was it the KLF who spraypainted “KLF” on your door?
@@DeflatingAtheism I really, really like to think it was.
"Almost" holy? Wanker.
They're sacred to me and my HS friends too. ❤
What I respect about the KLF is their integrity. It's inarguable. They're the most punk band ever, without being punk. They worked out the nonsense, contrived music business and could write banging tunes with a captivating element of mystique. Quitting at the top, after firing a machine gun over the heads, quite literally, of the pop music establishment they understood and loathed. Disillusionment done right. Perfect.
It's literally something I don't think that CAN ever be seen again. They "Player 1" 'd the fuck out of the music industry lmfao AND BEAT THE BOSS
As a kid in the early 90's, watching all these great tunes roll out on the radio and music video shows... I might even go as far as calling the KLF "THE SOUND OF 1991".... I had no idea all this anarchy was going on. Mucho, mucho respeto.
They literally stole an album from a man and you respect their integrity? Ok....
@@Davivd2 exact that, don’t mind sampling on itself, but they sound entitled
@@Davivd2 I typed this before I heard that part. Yeah, that's not on... I didn't once consider them perfect.
I'm 50 years old, I'm a New Yorker, I'm a musician, I'm an avid music lover of multiple genres, I've been in bands, I've worked as a recording engineer, I've been a music producer, I've been a DJ, I've been an electronics repair guy and a music sales guy. I've worked with famous names and with nobodies. I still find new stuff whenever I watch one of your videos. These are absolutely the best music docs out there.
Because it’s witchcraft.
And now I’m subscribing- thanks!
Now that’s a portfolio career 👏😎
@@tim_odonovan I wish, but thanks. At least it's been consistent.
and he didn't even mention The Black Room...
I was a dumb kid in rural Missouri that was fed a musical diet of Garth Brooks and Mariah Carey: hearing 3 AM Eternal for the first time was a revelation and it broke my preadolescent brain
As a dude in his early 20s in-between pretty much everything is his life, driving through Lake Jackson while listening to Dreamtime in Lake Jackson was a pretty defining experience.
Poor you! And congratulations for finding superb music.
Garth brooks ha ha
I hear ya, I was a youth in Montana and heard 3 AM Eternal and was blown away (and hooked)
My favorite KLF tangent has to do with German dancepop band Scooter. Apparently when they broke in the UK, people were contacting radio stations and their label demanding they admit that Scooter was secretly a KLF project. HP Baxxter has said in interviews that being compared to The KLF like that is the greatest compliment the band could ever get.
HOW MUCH IS DA FIIIIISSSSHHH?!?!?
@@misorodzinak8829 IM NOT SURE BUT ITS A SLIPPERY LITTLE SUCKER
Respect to the man in the ice cream van.
@@djsquarewave Mmmm.. sometimes ive chased that fker down block after block like predator after Arnie only to get a pasteurized creamy milk treat and say.. well i had more enjoyment in the quest rather than the attainment
it's nice to be important but it's more important to be nice.
That’s 36 minutes of absolute music history. I don’t know why I got this in my feed, but after this video I’m fan of yours. I’ve known some of their story, but you gave all the background to it.
“A sound system loud enough to bother the surrounding islands. The event ended with the burning of a wicker man and a rave. As usual, no explanation was given.” Absolute legends.
The original Burning Man
@@SignificanceOfThePassageOfTime not really; that happened in 1991, Burning Man started in 1986
+1, er, fuck that : +2k !
@@OriginalGabriel The festival, yup.
Not sure how close it was related to the 1973 movie (The wicker man), based on a 1967 novel 🙂
Legends Definitely
Their track “It’s Grim Up North” is still a song that gives me the chills. One of the hardest, most raw techno tracks I’ve ever heard. Fucking masterpiece.
And funny too [Major] sorry [stranger] Tom.
That breakdown into Jerusalem at the end is 👌
@@acidmack1041 Yup. Couldn’t have been a better ending. The north will rise again
@@tomhekker the north will always be culturally rich but unfortunately will forever be a geographical social backwater.
Yep, banging tune!
LOVE them. LOOOOOVE. The world needs batshit insane pop art geniuses who genuinely don't play by any established rules. I fear we'll not see anyone as remotely talented or frothingly unhinged as these two ever again.
Check out AMM All-Stars, baby.
There are a lot of unhinged people, both inside and outside the music industry, but having the talent to make a bunch of top 5 singles doesn't normally come along at the same time as that level of derangement. Most of pop's mad people can only do one or the other. (Syd Barrett, Kurt Cobain, and Kanye West are in the same conversation, but none of those could make pure radio-friendly pop while doped up to the eyeballs in a squat. The KLF were special).
Yeah - yeah... The 90s was the explosion of techno sound in Europe and all the world... I have listen to hundreds talented electronic musician like the KLF...
Death Grips did a few things like the KLF, mainly only to fuck with the corporate music labels though, not so much the press
If these two blocks were "geniuses", my poop is the holly grail.
the KLF / Tammy Wynette combination is, in my humble but correct opinion, the greatest collaboration in the history of popular music. On sheer WTF-ness alone, it stands unrivaled. It's what a collaboration should be: A collision of disparate worlds that, somehow, still works.
Forever i had thought this lady was like a country goddess who had been kidnapped and taken to a country of pyramids and somehow the poor KLF had to also be kidnapped
Tammy had to praise the moomooians and say they were justified... having had no knowledge of moomooian culture i had to take her word
I also like Ex Page 3 Girl Samantha Fox teaming up with Hawkwind to do a version of Gimme Shelter
It's magic, in every sense including the literal.
In the year of our lord 993.. correction 992
Would you be in reading an article I wrote about this song?
I'm so glad you did this one. I was incredibly into their music but as an American I had no idea what the act was about or their non-philosophy. In those days it was pretty rare for Americans even to know about, let alone be into, Dr Who. But it was huge in the nerd culture circles I inhabited, particularly the Tom Baker years. So that hook made The KLF also instant hits in those circles.
I’m American. I loved Doctering the Tardis and loved KLF. But I had no idea it was their song. This is all so interesting to learn.
Thank you for posting this. As an American, I only knew of some of their music at the time, and none of the peripheral things they had done. Clearly, I missed out on the cleverest people to get into pop!
I bought The White Room on cassette in 1991, and loved all of the songs. Then Justified & Ancient hit the airwaves, and I was further blown away…mind-bending and gloriously insane! 🤯😱😃
And look here, I just discovered your channel when Blue Monday needed a listen to this morning. And now, I see you've done a bit on KLF the greatest two musical genius' to still be walking the earth. I'm saving this video for a uninterrupted listen to this very evening. Again, I thank you for you're doing. I'd salute your hard work producing these, but I've a suspicion your enjoying making these more than referring to them as hard work. 💪
Just last year I watched the documentary on them called Who Killed the KLF? and I am still flabbergasted about how they were the biggest band in the world... and then just decided to stop. Truly made music for the sake of art and when they felt they've said everything they wanted they moved on.
Yeah that is a brilliant documentary.
I just watched that last week and now this one dropped.
Haha, that's why this seemed so familiar, I've seen that.
I definitely wouldn't call them the biggest band in the world, but they were definitely everywhere for a few minutes, and they left their mark.
This documentary is superb. KLF crew needs more love all the time. Thesr guys are legit
This is one of my top channels! When I want to learn something new, here I am. Great voice btw!!
No mention of "America: what time is love"? I blew my speakers with that track back then - twice.. and the video to that one can be descriped with one word: AWESOME
Was surprised by that myself, especially seeing as it managed to pull off another surprise guest appearance by the Voice of Rock himself, Glenn Hughes, singing at the top of his bent with Motorhead's "Ace of Spades" thundering across the track.
Awww. No mention of Glenn Hughes and the heavy metal onslaught that is "America: What time is love?".
Excellent video!
Growing up in the Midwest US I fell hard for the The KLF just before my teen years after I heard 3AM Eternal on MTV one day. I was a fan of stuff like Technotronic and Black Box but something about 3AM Eternal really hooked me. I got The White Room on CD and was in heaven! It just so happened that shortly after that I visited a cousin who was a few years older than I and he happened to be playing Chill Out and I recognized one of the melodies in it. Only then did I start to go down the rabbit hole that was The KLF and boy what a ride it was back then! I had to wait until the early 2000s before I got my hands on 1987 via internet file sharing but in the early 90s I had managed to find all the other singles & albums on CD from Doctorin' the Tardis through Justified and Ancient. I still listen to The White Room and Chill Out a couple of times each year!
This is a really well put together piece of music journalism!
still get chills from 3AM and their other hits
3 AM Eternal KLF
24:23 this hook man it gets me every time
I remember hearing The KLF in the 90s and really enjoying their music, but i had no idea why they just disappeared until recently. I guess i do now. Thanks for the awesome documentary.
Very cool that you covered this. "KLF: Chaos, Magic and the Band who Burned a Million Pounds" is a fantastic book on the subject.
Sounds like a good read ! I have a few books on chaos his and I love the klf ! Going to see if I can find a second hand copy for a decent price!!!! Thanks for the recommendation!!
This is PEAK TH-cam. Definitely the best TH-cam video I have ever watched. Absolutely fascinating! I knew, and at the same time, I had no idea, how brilliant the KLF was. ❤ In my opinion Goa Trance and psy trance pioneers and forefathers. 😮
Chill out is a great album. Never gets old.
Made to be timeless, a fitting masterpiece by the Timelords
I'm binge watching your channel and I thank you for what you do. Being a late 60's child you are covering music I grew up and still to this day enjoy and in many cases, play loud.
I look forward to learning more.
My god, I just spent 36 min beaming with a MASSIVE grin on my face, as you took me through my Youth...
I never knew that about the Orb... FFS... MY Business in SK Was Called Orb s.r.o. after that band, and it's music is still my life. Just incredible when you've nommed a couple of bits of blotting paper...
What a totally bangin video.. Cheers Mate!
Inwas a guest at the reunion video at the Barbican centre
Did not know it was a video .we where told it was an art installation by " formally known as KLF" was a brilliant show
I was about to turn 14 when 3AM and the rest of the singles hit Spain, my country. Those tracks were huuuge! My parents listened to a lot of classic Jean Michel Jarre and new age synth/quasy ambient music, though that year was the first time I heard both floaty sounds and pumping beats in the same song... I was hooked for life!
Many years later I fould a beautiful “Justified Ancients of Mu Mu” picture disc with the pyramid, the submarine and Tammy as the queen. Beautiful photo. Amazing collage of sounds. I also found the “What time is love (America we love you remix)” sleeve with the Viking ship and that redhead girl with sunglasses. I’m sure I didn’t pay more that 3 or 4 euros for each record.
They’re now still on my wall, on display and on my playlist... Live from the Trancentral
That is Jimmy Cauty's wife.
@@izzzzzzzzzzzie i've wondeted who she was almost my whole life... thank you, man, for sure!
Cress *was* Jimmy Cauty's partner for over 20 years (she ran the KLF press office for most of it after her earlier pop career with June "Mo" Montana from Brilliant fizzled out), but they split up, she went to college and became a research biologist. Cauty hooked up with Alannah Currie (famous as a member of the Thompson Twins) a few years ago.
Good doco. Grim up North deserves a mention simply for the humour of it. Pounding track with verses simply naming Northern towns and a chorus of Its Grim up North
I still listen to the Chill Out album once a year or so. The first time I heard it was as a teen after a rave in the early 90s coming down from an acid trip and dancing all night. Gorgeous album! Great video here, so interesting to learn their background. I had no idea their history, this is amazing!
I'd recommend anyone to put it on late coming down with friends, it's brilliant.
Its a great liston to when you're on a journey.
The two and a half hour (or so) re-envisioning of Space (originally an Orb album), This Is Not What Space Is About, is fantastic too
Chill Out is amazing. I discovered it when I was almost 30, but it was released right about the time I was born. It's like Chill Out is what the world sounded like when I entered it, and I was on my way to returning to it.
It's good music for road trips (duh) but also in dealing with a loss.
Have you heard chill out re-release with no bigger samples? It is mostly the same, all the cool bits are still there, but segments that were changed bring different vibes
As a kid growing up in a small town, 3am Eternal was one of my first introductions to acid house and electronic music as a whole. It blew my mind, and I just couldn't get enough of it
Both you and me
Great short story, but missed the "It´s grim up north" part and also no mention of the ice cream van & the 99s :-)
Thank you for all your hard work in putting this all together, it was amazing! I thoroughly enjoyed it.
About a year ago I went into a rabbithole reading about The KLF and I'm so stoked you've covered them in even more detail. I can't help but admire them.
If you didn't find Bill Drummond's book 45 in your rabbit hole you should. It's one of the more unique books I've read! I also loved the Youw***res website they did, but I think that has been taken down now. It was a site where people listed ridiculous things they'd do for money and some were absurd, others were satirical. "I'll laugh at your Chihuahua" is a title of one of the entries...
You should read Albert Pikes “Morals and Dogma” page 321 if you really want to know where the rabbit hole goes. Believe me, it’s a very deep and dark destination.
@@memyselfandi8544
I just found this short clip about that page of the book. What does this have to do with the KLF?
th-cam.com/video/X0LCq780FPg/w-d-xo.html
@@memyselfandi8544 Does this section of the rabbit hole have cliff notes?
@@dbubd th-cam.com/video/XAx5W821tqQ/w-d-xo.html
I remember my brother purchasing their single on cassette tape when I was 9 years old and being mesmerized by their sound.
They've always had a sheen of mystery to me because I had no idea who the "Mumu" were nor how they planned on rocking me.
Thank u for the upload. It was interesting hearing their story.
3AM Eternal was a music beacon for me when I discovered it as a 13 yr old in a northern town with no culture.
It sounded so unique and futuristic. On clear days a radio station 2hrs south of me came through, and I remember recording it off the radio everyday for the week it was in the top 10 count down so I could listen to it over and over again in a row.
Back in the days, I have been seriously addicted to KLF music (still love and enjoy it). Thanks to this exceptionally perfect documentary, I finally learned a bit about the "ancients of mu mu" and also how come there was an unusually big piece of an ABBA song in that track. Many, many thanks for the hard work behind this
Good doc about a great band. I have definitely appreciated them more as I have gotten older (I was a bit young at the time). Glad they are still doing their thing.
Thanks for this amazingly detailed video. I loved the hell out of KLF and I never understood why did they disappeared. Interestingly enough... I also loved The Orb... not knowing there was a connection. The KLF was more 'punk' than most punk bands. They went out with a bang and I love them even more for it. Legends.
An incredibly comprehensive retrospective! Loved The KLF for 30+ years. Thank you! ❤
Chill Out and The Orb's Adventures beyond the Ultraworld are some of my favorite albums. I love the random samples of jets, trains, and animals. Thanks for the great video!
They are mine too, abtu is just genius
Big fan of the KLF and the Chill Out record (I have the CD in my car). Love what you do.
I love how the KLF remained subversive whilst having huge hits and pissing off all and sundry.
I absolutely love this band and the more and I learn about them as I grow older (they were in their prime when I was about 13-17) the more I love them.
I’ve picked up bits and pieces of this story over the years - owning to the fact 3AM Eternal was the first song dance song I remember hearing at 10 years old - but never knew the whole story!
Awesome work🎉
Damn good documentation! So many informations not only about the band but what was going on musically during that time. Really well done!
Great video, great story! I loved their hits as a kid and still actually enjoy them, and I knew they went out with some drama....but never knew the extent of that. As for the Timelords, I've seen them only once perform on TV and never seen or heard it again, but that image always stayed with me. Only recently I came across the song again after over 3 decades, but (obviously) immediately recognized it. And that bit about Tammy Wynette and Dolly Parton cracked me up 😂
As much as they joke about it all with their "manual", they made some great, groundbreaking music that stood the test of time.
Good job on the lil mini doc..most information I have read/seen/lived through. Few nee nuggets there I hadn't come across before. Decent watch.
They deserve my thanks for giving Tammy Wynette one last chart appearance, even if it wasn’t on Country!
I love how she just embraced it totally.
Jimmy actually had Dolly Parton in mind but as Bill pointed out it wouldn't have worked without Tammy. Try and track down the doco "Who Killed the KLF" you'll thank yourself.
I absolutely loved her for getting involved with such pure silliness, it was so joyful.
what a Queen, that was awesome
IMHO, great documentary. The subject of such? Somehow a cross between Spinal Tap and a pop version of an “Emperor wears no clothes” sort of phenom.
The doc captured my attention far longer than any of the “music” could have.
A wonderfull and informative video, thank you.
Loved the songs as a teenager. Had no idea about the chaos. Thank you for a fantastic video essay! Now off to rock out to Justified and Ancient which I STILL know all lyrics of 30+ years later.
Magnificent my man. Well done real pleasure to see that shenanigans in some sort of logical time frame rather than snippets of memories. Essential watch for anyone 50ish years young. What I love the most is the way 'Chill out' rooms and the word Chill out is now used in almost every primary school across the UK. R.I.P Ricardo Da Force
Great video, well researched and narrated skillfully.
I remember one night when I was a kid i was around 10 years old... The 3 am video played and I was hooked ! I was waiting so bad to see and hear that song again ! Then one day I was watching this show called Dan Gallaghers video hits and he said tomorrow you guys are in for a treat ! We will be showing 2 KLF videos so you dont want to miss that ! I immidiately got my VCR and cassette ready and the very next day I taped the 2 videos 3 AM and What time is love ! And I played them to death ! Even put my sound system against the tvs speaker so I could have it on cassette ! Then one day I walked into Woolcos and there was The White room album on cassette ! Got my mother to buy it and I was so happy ! Played it to death also ! Thank you KLF that was a great part of my life ! 😃
I read the title and my brain instantly shouted, "KLF is gonna rock ya!"
One of the greatest bands of all time they refined Mixing to the next level of creativity....Liked:)
I got the album when I was 13 and fell in love with it. Now I have a six year old kid that will rock out to Last Train to Trancentral with me in the car.
Being of a age-approriate age when The KLF were big, I always saw them as being on the edge, yet somehow important.
Cue the subsequent 30 years, all the while loving musical artists, I have come to revisit them here.
Thanks for the vid. Glad I subscribed... who knows when.... 👍
Fantastic mini documentary!! Love it
Amazing documentary! I was 9/10 when all this was going on and i dint know much about them other than the music i recall fondly. Watching this film has made it abundantly clear that Jeremy & Superhans 'band' in Peep Show is totally modelled on The KLF, brilliant.
A legendary band along with 808 State, The Prodigy, Bomb the Bass and The Shamen.
I 100% agree
Wickedly good doc man. Thoroughly enjoyed that.
In the US, Doctorin the Tardis was an accidentally subversive masterpiece. You used to have these overly serious tough guys dancing to a mix of a nerdy theme song and a glitter rock band, both which were the height of uncool at the time. It was everything those guys would be mortified to be associated with, and were once it was revealed to them. I think that is why it had such a short spike in popularity in the US. Seemed like it was on the radio for one week then it disappeared without a trace. If I had not had taped it off the radio, you could have convinced me it never existed a week later.
But it only works because it is genuinely so good, despite the creators apparent disdain for it. It takes a certain mentality, knowledge and talent to successfully meld such disparate forms of music. I've heard a million other attempts to do something similar and it rarely pans out.
At least from about 2000 to 2014, that song was a staple in a legendary club in São Paulo, Brazil, called Madame Satã. The kicker? It's primarily a goth/post-punk club.
Just goes to show how wide is the reach of "Doctorin' the Tardis". It was played alongside stuff like "Go" from Tones on Tail and "Rise" from PIL. Good times.
@@50Personas I'm primarily an old punk/post-punk kind of guy that married a gothy girl, so that all checks out. When you really boil it all down, it's all basically the same kind of people with slightly different preferences.
I saw a copy of Doctorin the Tardis at a small town Record Bar. I recognized it thanks to MTV's '120 Minutes' air play but figured I'd come back later and get it. I spent the next 5 years looking for a copy.
Great Video, a mention of the 2017 return of the famous ICE CREAM VAN in Liverpool would have been a nice ending to the video, 23 years to the day after the Million Quid Burning
The JAMs are absolutely more than music, they are extremely important to human civilization. Everyone should read bill drummond’s book 45 for a great inside look at how the British music industry was, but by far his best written work is the incredible schizophrenic and neo-illuminatus not-a-novel Bad Wisdom. Co-written by Mark Manning. Absolutely incredible story about the journey of saving the world by burring a portrait of Elvis at the North Pole
Always loved 3 am, never could have imagined such a compelling history behind it. Great as usual!! Thanx!!!
Never heard of these guys, gonna check ‘em out, thanks!
If you can try listen to the music first (just put them in a tab) no video
Because... once you watch the videos yo-
I'll let you figure it out
There was a talk show on British TV featuring THE KLF. There they admitted the plan of burning 1 mln quid was to show the ashes on their future gigs. The documentary never really mentions the KLF is Kopyright Liberation Front. It is a great documentary by Trash Theory, definitely one of the best. Kudos for the author!
They changed what KLF meant all the time. At one stage it was the Kallisti Love Foundation.
@@bearhustler Try and find the doco "Who Killed the KLF" all your answers [and prayers] will materialise. i.e. King Lucifer Forever, Kopyright Liberation Front, Kings of Low Frequencies, *Kiss Lick Fuck *more a street interpretation.
@@bearhustler also Kings Of Low Frequencies and King Lucifer Forever.
Truth is The KLF didn't mean anything, like the majority of stuff they did 😂
I think mostly it was Kopyright Liberation Front tho'. With a nod to the Kurds still struggling for freedom in ErdoStan.
Mate! This is actually a great insight into the band. I just wish you mentioned their 2 greatest records: as the JAAMs Its Grim Up North, Bill D just listing Northern towns before mixing into Jerusalem and America: what time is love a rock/trance version of WTIL with Glenn Hughes off Deep Purple on vocals!
Yeah, I thought the same. It should be the national anthem (and I'm not from the North)
No mention of their sample heavy track for the Warchild charity compilation or Fuck the Millennium either ☹️ still a good watch tho. Reminds me that I need to play The White Room to the kids! 😆
"this wasn't the woman I was expecting" sent me 💀💀💀💀
I loved them then and I love them now
and Tammy WAS precisely the right choice. Both legends, cool dames and great singers, but Dolly would have taken over the story bc she's more famous
Fascinating edutainment. Thanks T.T as usual! I get quite the laugh(etc) myself sampling audio from various sources and making semi-non sequiturs.
Fantastic. Thank you.
At first I was bewildered by your opening comment “If you’ve heard of The KLF, it’s probably as the band that burned a million pounds”. Eh?! Who hasn’t heard of the KLF? Who doesn’t know them for their brilliant music? But it dawned on me that for those who were too young to remember 1991, the fact that they deleted their catalogue meant that it was easy for their music to slip into oblivion. Some of us kept hold of our copies of the White Room or Chill Out, and never forgot what a timeless series of bangers the Stadium House Trilogy was. There were a lot of great dance tracks in the charts at the time (including Canadian national anthem Pump Up The Jam), but The KLF had a level of bizarre mystique about them that fired the imagination. It’ll be great to have new people introduced to their energy and inventiveness, as well as retelling all their art anarchist bonkers brilliance.
I barely remember them can't even remember what their annoying hit song was.
@@doctornova3015 presumably watching the video will help. They had a bunch of hit singles so there's a few you don't remember but felt the need to tell everyone about not remembering.
Translation: 'I'm old!' 😅
Has any other band "deleted their catalogue" like this? I was only introduced to EDM and pop music in general in 1994 and missed them entirely. When the re-releases popped up in my feed in 2021, it was ...ear-opening? Over 25 years worth of Scooter tracks had hammered a lot of seemingly nonsensical lyrics and weird samples into my brain - and now I realized that a LOT of those, including their overall "stadium house" style, were references to the KLF. If you will, a continuation of this mass-market EDM segment that KLF had started and now refused to serve.
Thanks for this video! Loved their music and have the White Room album on CD. Played it a lot of times wondering where KLF just disappeared. Thanks for telling their story, these guys are truly geniuses! Greetings from Sweden
The best thing about the klf is all of their remixes and mixes of their songs now available to listen to all over the internet.
They have all been on TH-cam since TH-cam started
Always was available over the internet and the music exchanging programs...
That's because they dropped copyright on everything that was released under their label.
I was so hoping you'd make a vid about the KLF! Thank you! Brilliant vid and such an interesting moment in the British cultural narrative
I’m absolutely loving the dance/edm adjacent topics lately. Fingers crossed we’ll get an episode about Underworld someday ;)
Wow. What a great video. Enjoyed every second
Thank you very much!!!
Loved KLF, they were my gateway drug to so much different music.
Very very good video you make. KLF, it a shame we cannot hear anymore of their new project. Thanks for those music you made.
AAAAh. Thank you for some of the best memories of my clubbing life. 17 and at 7th Heaven Sundays in Melbourne (Australia) peaking and meeting god in the middle of a tiered dancefloor looking over a sea of pounding hands in the air. Their sounds went beyond masterful and took you to a space of absolute pure joy. All bound for
mu
mu
land.
"Do yourself a favour" and track down the doco "Who Killed the KLF" [may still be on SBS play later]
@@izzzzzzzzzzzie thanks man i will do that.
This is your greatest work. OK I'm showing bias, KLF are in my favorites of all time. But this was absolutely magnificent.
This channel is amazeballs👍💙✌️
Thank you so much for this. They never had a huge following in North America so growing up I only ever heard White Room. I always thought it was a brilliant album and never knew why they never did more. Now I know I only saw the brief end of their career and missed all of the best stuff. Awesome video
Jesus... I had no idea the Orb and the KLF were even loosely related. And never really understood where either band came from or went after their rise in the early 1990's.
The orb are also slightly related to the punk new wave band the killing joke !!!
Incerdible occultic showcase from the KLF. Interesting
Sadly no mention of one of the masterpieces of this band "It's Grim Up North", a song like absolutely no other and even nostalgic for those of us who have had the privilege of living near the Yorkshire Moors at one time or another. Fucking geniuses.
This documentary was ace. Thx!
Back again, they never kicked us out. 20,000 years of shout shout shout!
Anyone who wants to know more, PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE read the John Higgs book “KLF: Chaos, Magick, and the Band Who Burned A Million Pounds”. It’s incredible.
Drummond's book 45 (not 33) is a great read too!
@@Bruisewillies 45?
That was my introduction to the band. John Higgs is an incredible writer!
Yes 45! Not sure why I had it in my head that it was 33
@@Bruisewillies
Because Bill was 33 (and ⅓, to be precise) when he decided to kick out the JAMMs.
GAZ Williams sent me here 😊
Enjoyed the documentary !!!!
Subbed and notifications on.
KLF is gonna rock ya ........
I know its down to personal taste...and you can say what you like about the group/band but....they made some bl33din well awesome sounds...that sounded GREAT with a sub
Great doco. I read a book about Drummond and Cauty years back, but their story gets funnier and braver the more I hear it.
Luv and Peace.
To understand the KLF you need to read the Illuminatus trilogy by Robert Anton Wilson.
They are like the house band for that series.
Probably the headline at lake Totenkopf.
Ewige Blumenkraft.
Luv and Peace.
The KLF disappeared the same year Daft Punk appeared.
Daft Punk called it quits and within a month the KLF returned.
🤔
Thank you for make this documentary about KLF!
The future generations must know and appreciate their legacy, not only in the music aspect, but how the music industry is about
I am so thankful that I lived through everything that the KLF did, and I am still a fan and have their produce, which is an incredible experience of my early musical education 🎉
I absolutely devoured that string of KLF hits in 1991 and often wondered why they vanished so suddenly. Thanks for this brilliant account of what happened 👍😀
So glad to have been there when all this was in the charts. That Brit performance, the albums and singles.. and chill out... so much great music and madness. utter genius. And Bills soup line and choir project the 15? Unique is an understatement.
17