would just like to say good luck thomas with whatever you do and i'm sure we will still see you here. thanks for keeping that site alive, it was a great resource for us klf-heads and will be missed but i'm sure we all understand how it is easy to create an online monster and these things can take over everything and even get kinda out of control
Creating a monster... now that's maybe the most fitting description of what happened. Parts of it still consisted of old code, so the whole thing reminded me more of Frankenstein's monster than a homogenous creation. It had become an affair of fixing leaks rather than just coding away, and... well, a complete stop and overhaul should bring back the fun for which I joined KLF Online in the first place.
Anyway, Daniel and me decided to put the last version of the website back online again for everybody, as we feel that others shouldn't be punished for our burn-out (or mine, to be precise). There won't be any updates for quite some time, though.
if jammin wheeler still reads this (i should ask him!) perhaps he would nod in agreement
Just made me think... how long has he been offline now? Ah, the old days of Mancentral... I am getting old.
the funny thing is i think KLF were/are one of very few bands that can kinda take over your life but in a very unique way. its a kind of obsession you dont see very often, particularly when you consider at what they actually produced/achieved, and their own attitude towards their canon of work nowadays. sometimes obsessions can become unhealthy and a little stale
I couldn't even point my finger towards one certain element of KLF history and say, "That's the reason why I became such an obsessive fan in the first place." It just happens and draws you in. Still, that's something special. Not many things have such an impact on my life nowadays.