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Showing posts with label Dance music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dance music. Show all posts

Friday 1 January 2021

The KLF: Dance Music Hitmakers Make Songs Available After 29-years

The KLF: Dance music hitmakers make songs available to stream after 29-year hiatus

Dance music duo The KLF have made a selection of their most popular songs available to stream, which had been unavailable for nearly three decades.

Tracks including dance anthems “3AM Eternal” and “What Time is Love” are being made available on a new eight-song compilation entitled Solid State Logik.

In 1992, the band deleted their entire back catalogue, and their music had been officially unavailable ever since, including on streaming sites services such as Spotify or Apple Music.

In the years since The KLF’s withdrawal from music, they have focused on other artistic pursuits, including art and writing projects, while fans have shared bootleg clips of their music and performances on YouTube. 

The band, comprised of Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond, announced their departure from the music industry 29 years ago, during an appearance at the 1992 Brit Awards.

Performing “3AM Eternal” after having tied for best group with Simply Red, The KLF shot machine-gun blanks at the audience.

Brit Awards 12th of February 1992 with the infamous machine guns

Wednesday 2 December 2020

Electronic From Kraftwork to the Chemical Brothers at London's Design Museum

 Electronic from Kraftwork to the Chemical Brothers Until 14 February 2021

London’s Design Museum’s “Electronic” exhibition will now run until 14 February 2021, allowing many more to be able to attend this exhibition dedicated to the birth of electronic music. Full title “Electronic: From Kraftwerk to Chemical Brothers”, the socially-distanced exhibition follows the pathway from the birth of electronic sounds being used in jazz and rock, through experiments from Japanese composers and acts like Silver Apples, through to the work of Kraftwerk, the birth of rave, Aphex Twin and finishing with modern day Chemical Brothers. There are light installations, a plethora of equipment and a soundtrack supplied by Laurent Garnier.

Tickets need to be pre-booked and social distancing carefully observed, but this, as many visitors have stated, is the closest you’ll get to that being in a club feeling for a while

UNTIL 14 FEBRUARY 2021 Open from Wednesday 2 December 2020

Following the announcement that London will be on COVID Tier 2, the museum and its exhibitions will reopen on Wednesday 2 December.

Limited tickets for late sessions on New Years Eve just released. BOOK NOW.

IMPORTANT! PLEASE TAKE YOUR OWN WIRED HEADPHONES TO ENJOY THE MULTIMEDIA EXHIBITS. HERE'S WHY.

Warning: This exhibition contains strobe lighting and flashing lights, which might not be suitable for people with epilepsy.

Age guidance 12+