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Very true Jon - I understand but there will be a whole generation who will only have ever heard of the KLF via Ipods or MP3's. It's only us old buggers that relish vinyl & I do not believe that vinyl will last forever, kids nowadays don't own as much vinyl, nor a turntable. You could be looking at this as the future bed room DJ setup
Gone are those heady days of "holding it in your hand" (it already sound mastabatory). Most gen Y kids will not remember where they first heard it as they will be in front of there PC's & where they got it from, I canna remember the last place I downloaded my last KLF song from. Besides most of the gen Y kids will only ever hear of the KLF via history,rumor or a mash up bootleg. Music for the ADD generation.
-------Original Message-------
Hickey wrote:
> Unfortunately due to the Internet this could never be done. All physical copies could be destroyed but those in the virtual net would always exist. Besides LTTT will always exist in it's original form in Andrew Lloyd Webber's, Jesus Christ Superstars, Judas track, after all that's where KLF sampled it from.
I don't think I'm alone on this list if I say there's nothing quite like
holding the original in your hand, remembering where you got it, the
first time you heard it etc.
You can keep your mp3s and your ipods, vinyl lives forever
(until you eat or burn it!)
jon
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"You've been orbed if you're sitting in a room and you get up to look out
the window and you suddenly realize that it was coming from the record."
- Dr. Alex Paterson | |||
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