People!
I didn't own a KLF record until six months ago. I might have had one or two tracks on early 1990s compilation cassettes. I've now got a nice little box of CDs and most of what's available. Kylie Said to Jason is bloody awful so that's the only thing I've not
bought. A friend leant me his collection and whilst the cheaper option would have been to bootleg it I've sourced original versions as far as possible! KLF Shop provided some very good stuff and yes I know it's provenance is questionable i.e. The White Room OST but if you appreciate what Messrs Cauty and Drummond did its an essential item. The Recovered and Remastered series are a valuable and much appreciated addition to my collection. I don't know where this notion about them being CDRs came from but its wrong and the whole series
have been given serious studio time and its down to choice, if you like your KLF with crackles and glitches stick to the rough stuff, if you want a nice smooth listen I suggest you try one of the Recovered series. Again if you like your KLF pure and 24 years old that's up to you
I don't know how many people are actually on this list and it might well be very limited. If you keep music in a box and get indignant when someone refreshes it you'll end up with a stagnant dwindling audience. My partner is a further education teacher and she's used various KLF tracks in class sessions when they come in, it focusses their attention and the kids (circa 16 to 19) love it, Doctorn the Tardis went down a storm and Grim up North knocked them sideways! Its new to them rather than the KLF being some obscure band that languishes on a
shelf!