As far as I'm aware, Scooter's debut single was "Hyper Hyper", released in 1994, which features (as the second line) "I wanna see you sweat". The song also contains a long list of names (in true "IGUN" fashion) of people involved in dance music. However, I remember Scooter best from around 1996 - particularly "Friends" and "Endless Summer" - which I never really associated with the KLF at all. Their music always seemed more a throw-back to the "happy hardcore" days of '93, and bands like Technohead and the "Thunderdome" compilations. Their resurgence in the last two years was a bit of a puzzle to start with. When I started teaching in schools, I was really surprised to see that most of the kids (particularly the 12 year olds - true arbiters of rock'n'roll) ADORED Scooter. At the risk of sounding like a corduroy-clad trendy teacher, it seemed quite heartening that they were listening to the same type of music (if not the same records) that I had just a few years earlier. And none, incidentally, gave a toss about the KLF. But then - why should they? The same adrelain rush that caused some of us to draw the "White Room" speaker stacks on their school folders with Tipp-Ex, is now in another generation - and in different bands. And if Bill and Jimmy are daft enough to make their music extraordinarily difficult and expensive to buy (unlike many of their contemporaries, which you can still buy in Woolworths) - then why should people care? Oh, and Scooter aren't the KLF's Rutles (that would mean they are better than the original). If Scooter are anything, they are the KLF's Oasis. John Not Scots, just Scott-ish.