Another good idea. This is getting too much, i can see a 6 disc boxset at the end of it. LOL Elliott ----- Original Message ----- From: "RiCh!" <rich@j1sproductions.com> To: "'All bound for Mu-Mu Land.'" <klf@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Thursday, January 18, 2007 10:20 AM Subject: RE: [KLF] bring the beat back --> John's proposed track-list
How about a Jams CD and a KLF CD - 2 different eras/styles I think (apart from IGUN).
-----Original Message----- From: klf-bounces+rich=j1sproductions.com@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:klf-bounces+rich=j1sproductions.com@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of John Lunney Sent: 18 January 2007 09:52 To: All bound for Mu-Mu Land. Subject: Re: [KLF] bring the beat back --> John's proposed track-list
Glad to find another person who likes "Disaster Fund Collection"! On reflection, you're that we probably need more JAMs jams on the album, preferably from 1987, since that is the release we are celebrating. Of the tracks that you mention, I think "Next" is maybe slightly more "approachable" than Rockman Rock. If "Fuck The Millennium" were to be removed, both "Next" and "Downtown" could probably be added, so I've gone with that for the track-list. I don't think Disco 2000 should go on, they're not as important as the other songs when we're pressed for time on a CD, and personally I think they might be a bit cheesy today. But if one of their songs were to go on, I think it ought to be I Gotta CD, which I always considered their best.
Since my email program appeared to chew up my last carefully-prepared tracklist, I've decided the updated one online:
http://klf.johnl.org/tracklist.html
Let me know what you all think, John
On 18 Jan 2007, at 09:02, Our Webstuff wrote:
or maybe "rockman rock (parts 2 & 3)" instead of "next"...?
On Jan 18, 2007, at 2:58 AM, Our Webstuff wrote:
I am VERY pleased to see "disaster fund collection" in the proposal, but I think neglecting "downtown" (12") and "next" are unfortunate large omissions
why not dump "mind the gap"? much better suited to a full "1987", in my opinion
another criticism - while I enjoy "fuck the millennium", that's 2K, not KLF - if that's to be included, why not an edit and why not include some disco2000 (one love nation 12")
On Jan 17, 2007, at 10:23 PM, John Lunney <johnlunney@o2.ie> wrote:
1. Brownsville Turnaround On The Tex-Mex Border 1:47 2. Pulling Out Of Ricardo And The Dusk Is Falling Fast 1:29 These two provide a nice lead into the album, being the start of the Chill Out as they are. The ending of Brownsville doesn't fit too well, because it doesn't fall to silence like Ricardo does.
3. America No More 6:05 Still (sadly) politically relevant after all these years. I've always thought this to be one of their most intelligent efforts, and sadly under-appreciated. And it has bagpipes. Segues kind of nicely from the Chill Out stuff. From here on, the track order isn't so important.
4. What Time Is Love 5:17 Of course. What mix isn't terribly important, but it should be something fairly up-to-date. I've put the LP version in the playlist, but I'm not sure if that's the best choice.
5. Build A Fire 4:35 The one from The White Room
6. King Boy's Dream 0:59
7. 3 A.M. Eternal 3:35 I've put the Live At The S.S.L. version in my list, because I like the intro to that version.
8. Madrugada Eterna (Club Mix) 5:19 Gets a bit of the amazing Chill Out on there, while standing on its own four beats.
9. Last Train To Trancentral 3:42 The one I've put in my playlist starts with "Okay everybody, lie down on the floor and keep calm"
10. Mind The Gap 1:05
11. Stand By The Jams 3:39 Nothing wrong with a bit of Tammy, provides a break before the onslaught to follow...
12. Fuck The Millennium
13:57
13. Disaster Fund Collection 5:40
14. Doctorin' The Tardis 3:38 It was their number one after all! Despite all the moral questions about Glitter, I think the disk would be incomplete without it.
15. It's Grim Up North (part 1)
10:02
A classic dance track, I think it's perfect as the last big song on the album, with the big Jerusalem section, and then the birds etc. segue nicely into the Chill Out ending which follows.
16. Rock Radio Into The Nineties And Beyond 1:26 17. Alone Again With The Dawn Coming Up 0:16 The two of them to end the album, because I think Alone Again is too short on its own, and because the vocal sample in Rock Radio is just too apt...
What do people think of that as a KLF retrospective? It's around 70 minutes, and could be made to fit on a CD with a little bit of trimming. I think this track-list a good mix of the famous classics with a few other interesting but approachable tracks. If an unknowing listener came upon it, it could pique their interest and encourage them to check out the site we'll have set up. www.whatthefuckisgoingon.com or something equally KLF-themed. We could mark each CD or case with a sort of serial number, and I could do up a little web application in PHP or MySQL which would allow people to enter the number of the CD they've found, so we can see where each person's planted CDs actually end up. I await your opinions! And let me know if you guys want that site, for managing this, for the tracklist etc. It would take me relatively little time, and might make this a lot easier. I wanna see this done, and I wanna see it done right.
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