Re: [KLF] KLF Not so FAQ No 1 (of 2)
Now, this is ringing a bell. I'm sure I saw an auction for a soundtrack to Airwolf on CD that went for £300 or more a few weeks back ... maybe I'm mixing things up here, but maybe it was a very, very early soundtrack CD. The general rule with CDs, I suppose, is if they don't have a barcode, and aren't bootlegs, then they must be old (I have two or three like that, by artists like Paul Simon, so they're not boots). John
Message Received: Oct 04 2005, 07:04 PM From: TheRitesOfMu@aol.com To: klf@mailman.xmission.com Cc: Subject: Re: [KLF] KLF Not so FAQ No 1 (of 2)
In a message dated 04/10/2005 13:23:52 GMT Standard Time, chris@k23productions.com writes:
CDs didn't really make it big until 1989/90 and then it was only albums. I think the idea of CD singles was even more new (does anyone have a CD single from _before_ 1989?) so maybe it was a cost thing? Given that "1987" had been banned and they were facing legal action from the MCPS, I don't suppose they had much cash when they did the PT series...
ah but cds were used in 1985 by the Hit TV show Airwolf.... You often saw dominic santini pop in the old cd.... not sure if it was for the music tho... LOL
Wizard
Keep Listening forever
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John Milne