List of the KLF's creative associates

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Template:Short description The original music released by The KLF, The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, The Timelords and 2K was written, produced and performed by Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond. However, the duo called upon the services of recurring contributors to provide vocals, instrumentation and production support. This was particularly the case for the output of The KLF, who often referred to such contributors as "additional communicators" and, on some "Stadium House" singles, as "The Children of the Revolution".

Additional communicators

The sleevenotes and labels of KLF Communications releases reveal the following significant contributors:

Guest contributors

Whereas The JAMs' earlier work sampled prominently and illegally from the popular works of established artists, The KLF's international reputation allowed their later releases to feature guest vocals from such established performers as Tammy Wynette (for "Justified and Ancient (Stand by The JAMs)", Gary Glitter (for "Doctorin' the Tardis") and Glenn Hughes (for "America: What Time Is Love?"). Drummond has expressed disgust at this notion in his book 45. In a chapter written in 1998, Drummond professes to have "worshipped" Wynette's voice, yet he nevertheless says, "The whole British tradition of 'young' white artists dragging up some has-been legend to perform with is an evil and corrupt exchange; the young artist wanting to tap into the mythical status and credibility of the has-been, the has-been wanting some of that 'I'm still contemporary, relevant (and will do anything to get back into the charts)' stuff."[17]

Other creative associates

  • Bill Butt - Director of The KLF's unreleased road movie The White Room.
  • Simon Cauty - Jimmy's brother; made many of the KLF's props and the set for the Stadium House Trilogy video[18]
  • Jeremy Deller - Deller's Acid Brass project, featuring the Williams Fairey Band, provided inspiration for Drummond and Cauty's 1997 "Fuck the Millennium" project, under the pseudonym 2K; a performance by 2K was billed as "Jeremy Deller presents 2K", as was the subsequent single release.[19]
  • Echo & the Bunnymen - The band (for whom Drummond had once been manager) are credited with a remix of "What Time Is Love?" on the single "What Time Is Love? (Remodelled & Remixed)".
  • Extreme Noise Terror (ENT) - British grindcore band with whom The KLF collaborated for a version of "3 a.m. Eternal" and the unreleased album The Black Room.
  • Miomir Grujic (DJ Fleka) - Radio DJ on Serbian station B92, DJ Fleka contributed a vocal sample to Drummond and Cauty's track "The Magnificent" (donated by the duo to The Help Album of 1995).[20]
  • Alan Goodrick - Also known as "Gimpo", Goodrick is a friend and associate of Drummond and Cauty. He has made several films used by the duo in their artistic and musical work. He also contributed vocals to "Fuck the Millennium" and, for Cauty's later project Blacksmoke, "Gimpo Gimpo".
  • Mick Houghton - PR man that Drummond has worked with for over 40 years, including on the release of the JAMs' 2017 novel, 2023: A Trilogy.[21] Wrote the book Fried & Justified: Hits, Myths, Break-Ups and Breakdowns in the Record Business 1978-98 in which the Houghton's work with the KLF features and for which Drummond wrote the foreword and Cauty designed the cover.[21]
  • Mark Manning - Also known as "Zodiac Mindwarp" or "Z" from The Love Reaction, Manning contributed vocals to "Fuck the Millennium" and has since accompanied Drummond on expeditions documented in their books Bad Wisdom and Wild Highway.
  • Alex Paterson - Co-founder of The Orb with Jimmy Cauty.[22] In 1989,[16] The Orb produced an ambient remix of "3 a.m. Eternal" entitled "Blue Danube Orbital".[23] Cauty left The Orb in April 1990[22] due to Paterson's concern that The Orb should not be perceived as a side-project of The KLF.[24] Paterson retained and developed 'The Orb' name,[22] while Cauty took recordings originally intended to be The Orb's debut album,[25][26] removed Paterson's contributions,[27] and released Space under the pseudonym 'Space'.[22] Additionally, Simon Reynolds (1999)[28] and Mark Prendergast (2003)[29] claim uncredited involvement of Alex Paterson in the development of The KLF album Chill Out.
  • Pete Wylie featured as lead vocalist on a limited edition white label version of the JAM's "It's Grim Up North" circulated in 1990.[16]

Notes and references

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  3. Black Steel discography at Discogs.com. Retrieved 31 May 2006 (link)
  4. Nick Coler discography at Discogs.com. Retrieved 26 April 2006 (link)
  5. a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Ricardo Da Force discography at Discogs.com. Retrieved 31 May 2006 (link)
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  14. Drummond, B. & Cauty, J. (1989) The Manual (How To Have a Number One The Easy Way), KLF Publications (KLF 009B), UK. Template:ISBN. (Link to full text Template:Webarchive)
  15. Mark Stent, in Tingen, P. "The Work of a Top Flight Mixer", Sound on Sound magazine, January 1999 (link). Retrieved March 2006.
  16. a b c Template:KLFDiscography
  17. Drummond, B., "They Called Me Up In Tennessee", 45, Little & Brown, Template:ISBN / Abacus, Template:ISBN, 2000.
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  19. Drummond, B. and Cauty, J., advertisement, Time Out, 21 August 1997 (linkTemplate:Category handler[<span title="Script error: No such module "string".">usurped]Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".).
  20. Collin, M., "Obituary: Miomir Grujic", The Guardian (Manchester), 25 August 2003, p17.
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