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THE JUSTIFIED ANCIENTS OF MU MU - 1987 WHAT THE FUCK'S GOING ON?

- NEW RELEASE

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TITLE:
1987 What The Fuck's Going On?
CATNO:
JAMSLP1987
STYLE:
FORMAT:
Vinyl record
DESCRIPTION:
1987 Leftfield / Electronica LP on Ltd Repress - Feat Chants - Following the single All You Need Is Love, The Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu’s first album 1987 (What The Fuck Is Going On?) continued the style of heavy cut & paste sampling, beatbox rhythms and Kingboy D’s Scottish raps.
With the money from the single we booked five days in a cheap studio and recorded “1987-What the fuck is going on?”. We made it, not giving a shit for soul boy snob values or any other values, we just went in and made the noise we wanted to hear and the stuff that came out of our mouths. We lit a bonfire and put what we could get hold of, on it and then recorded the sound of the flames licking up the pyre. Not a pleasant sound but it’s the noise we had. We pressed it up and stuck it out. A celebration of sorts.Bill Drummond, KLF Info Sheet, Oct 1987
Rather surprisingly 1987 is also the place in which the verses of The KLF’s later single Justified And Ancient made their first appearance as a part of Hey Hey We Are Not The Monkees.

Sample-heavy to the point where the presence of original material becomes questionable, Filled with the KLF's comments on music terrorism and their own unique take on the Run-D.M.C. type of old-school rapping. Tracks like "Don't Take Five Take What You Want," "Hey Hey We Are Not the Monkees" and the rather more obviously criminal "All You Need Is Love" only confirms the eternal existence of this LP within bootleg collections (though several tracks did appear in different versions on The History of the JAMs a.k.a. The Timelords).

PRICE:
£18.49
RELEASED YEAR:
SLEEVE:
Mint (M)
MEDIA:
Mint (M)

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TRACK LISTING:

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CUE
MP3
a1
Hey Hey We Are Not The Monkees
a2
Mind The Gap
a3
Don't Take Five (Take What You Want)
a4
Rockman Rock Parts 2 And 3
a5
Why Did You Throw Away Your Gyro
b1
Me Ru Con
b2
The Queen And I
b3
Top Of The Pops
b4
All You Need Is Love
b5
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Last FM Information on The Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
In 1987, Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty's collaborations began in London, England. They assumed alter egos - King Boy D and Rockman Rock respectively - and they adopted the name The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (The JAMs), after the fictional conspiratorial group "The Justified Ancients of Mummu" from The Illuminatus! Trilogy. In those novels, the JAMs are what the Illuminati (a political organisation which seeks to impose order and control upon society) call a group of Discordians who have infiltrated the Illuminati in order to feed them false information. As The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, Drummond and Cauty chose to interpret the principles of the fictional JAMs in the context of music production in the corporate music world. Shrouded in the mystique provided by their disguised identities and the cultish Illuminatus!, they mirrored the Discordians' gleeful political tactics of causing chaos and confusion by bringing a direct, humorous but nevertheless revolutionary approach to making records, often attracting attention in unconventional ways. The JAMs' primary instrument was the digital sampler with which they would plagiarise the history of popular music, cutting chunks from existing works and pasting them into new contexts, underpinned by rudimentary beatbox rhythms and overlayed with Drummond's raps, of social commentary, esoteric metaphors and mockery. The JAMs' debut single "All You Need Is Love" dealt with the media coverage given to AIDS, sampling heavily from The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" and Samantha Fox's "Touch Me (I Want Your Body)". Although it was declined by distributors fearful of prosecution, and threatened with lawsuits, copies of the one-sided white label 12" were sent to the music press, receiving positive reviews and being made "single of the week" in Sounds. A later piece in the same magazine called The JAMs "the hottest, most exhilarating band this year.... It's hard to understand what it feels like to come across something you believe to be totally new; I have never been so wholeheartedly convinced that a band are so good and exciting." The JAMs re-edited and re-released "All You Need Is Love" in May 1987, removing or doctoring the most antagonistic samples; lyrics from the song appeared as promotional graffiti, defacing selected billboards. The re-release rewarded The JAMs not just with further praise (including NME´s "single of the week") but also with the funds necessary to record their debut album. The album, 1987 (What the Fuck Is Going On?), was released in June 1987. Included was a song called "The Queen and I" which sampled large portions of the ABBA single "Dancing Queen". The recording came to the attention of ABBA's management and, after a legal showdown with ABBA and the Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society, the 1987 album was forcibly withdrawn from sale. Drummond and Cauty travelled to Sweden in hope of meeting ABBA and coming to some agreement, taking an NME journalist and photographer with them, along with most of the remaining copies of the LP. They failed to meet ABBA, so disposed of the copies by burning most of them in a field and throwing the rest overboard on the North Sea ferry trip home. In a December 1987 interview, Cauty maintained that they "felt that what [they]'d done was artistically justified." Two new singles followed 1987, on The JAMs' "KLF Communications" independent record label. Both reflected a shift towards house rhythms. According to NME, The JAMs' choice of samples for the first of these, "Whitney Joins The JAMs" saw them leaving behind their strategy of "collision course" to "move straight onto the art of super selective theft". The song uses samples of the Mission: Impossible theme alongside Whitney Houston's "I Wanna Dance With Somebody". Ironically, Drummond has claimed that The KLF were later offered the job of producing or remixing a new Whitney Houston album as an inducement from her record label boss (Clive Davis of Arista Records) to sign with them. Drummond turned the job down, but nonetheless The KLF signed with Arista as their American distributors. The second single in this sequence—Drummond and Cauty's third and final single of 1987—was "Down Town", a dance record built around a gospel choir and "Downtown" by 1960s star Petula Clark. These early works were later collected on the compilation album Shag Times. A second album, Who Killed The JAMs?, was released in early 1988. Who Killed The JAMs? was a rather less haphazard affair than 1987, earning the duo at least one five-star review (from Sounds Magazine, who called it "a masterpiece of pathos". JAMS aka.. time lords, and the KLF, and 2k. Drummond was once a manager of Echo and the Bunnymen, Cauty has worked with the Orb. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.


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