Friday, August 13, 2010

This is Television Freedom


London by night, oh no...

Probably disgusted by the commercial success gained in the last year or so and feeling their art terrorist poise being compromised, Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty decided to storm the 1992 BRIT awards ceremony where a kilted, crutched, limping Drummond shared the stage with the band Extreme Noise Terror to perform a grind-core punk metal version of 3 AM Eternal with all new lyrics. Near the end of the performance Drummond briefly left the stage only to return with an automatic rifle in his hands and a fat cigar in his mouth, and just before leaving, started firing blanks over the top of audience's heads. As they were headed to leave the building came the announcement;
"Ladies and Gentlemen, The KLF has now left the music business". But their art terrorism agenda was carried forward...

Click here to download and watch The K Foundation Burn a Million Quid

Thursday, August 12, 2010

The Original 1989 Pure Trance LP Version


Towards the end of the track you can hear, South African-born Scottish half of the duo, Bill Drummond mumbling "Sometimes I feel I almost know, sometimes I know it's time to go" which is not on the 1991 hit Maxi-Single "Live at the S.S.L." version posted (much) earlier

Monday, March 1, 2010

Time is Eternal

Ladies and Gentlemen, The KLF has now left the building...

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Umkhonto we Sizwe



"This is Radio Freedom, the voice of the African National Congress, South Africa's time-tested revolutionary movement. Born of the people into the front lines to spearhead the people's struggle for the seizure of power from the oppressors. A product of the battles of the African Continent for liberation."

(Şu an Radyo Özgürlük'ü dinliyorsunuz, Güney Afrika'nın zamanın sınavından geçmiş devrimci hareketi Afrika Ulusal Kongresinin sesi. Halkın içinden; halkın, iktidarı zalimlerin elinden alma mücadelesine bayrak tutmak için ön saflara doğan, Afrika kıtasının özgürlük için verdiği savaşların bir ürünü)