The new Massive Attack is good. I didn't like Mezzanine and while the latest is a long way from the hip hop sounds of the early days it is a late night, whispered, delicate sound collage. Worth getting.  Apparently it is only 3D on this recording, no daddy G.
 
On the war subject it has been claimed that Irag has invaded all five of its neighbours, however the US since the WWII has invaded Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Panama, Grenada, Iraq, Afghanistan,  Bosnia and leant military advisors to military coups in Nicaragua, Chile and Burma.  America is the only country to have used a nuclear weapon in anger and used chemical weapons in large numbers (agent orange in Vietnam).  I think those facts speak for themselves. 
 
James
-----Original Message-----
From: Don Gagen [mailto:DGagen@EnsembleStudios.com]
Sent: 26 February 2003 21:23
To: 'klf@mailman.xmission.com'
Subject: RE: [KLF] Re: America No More (OT)

I was just listening to Mezzanine and thinking about the name change too.  I'm not sure if it happened in the US as I've only seen a few examples of their releases with the name change online.  Is the new album worth getting?  I like everything else they've done. It would be cool to hear Jimmy remix of one their new tracks.

"There is no greater joy than soaring high on the wings of your dreams, except maybe the joy of watching a dreamer who has nowhere to land but in the ocean of reality."

DONALD D GAGEN

MAILTO:DGAGEN@ENSEMBLESTUDIOS.COM

ENSEMBLE STUDIOS

http://www.ensemblestudios.com


-----Original Message-----
From: John Milne [mailto:Highlandland@btopenworld.com]
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 3:11 PM
To: klf@mailman.xmission.com
Subject: [KLF] Re: America No More (OT)

During the last Gulf War (assuming we're about to embark upon Gulf War 2)
radio stations in the UK were banned from playing certain records and others
were altered ("3 AM Eternal" had the gunfire removed, and Massive Attack's
name was shortened to "Massive", etc.).  Now, just this afternoon, a DJ on
Radio Scotland announced that he was going to play "Rock the Casbah" by the
Clash, but "wasn't allowed to".  He played "I Fought the Law" instead.

Have I missed something, or have the Powers That Be (either the BBC or the
government, or both) brought out the same ruling, twelve years later,
banning the same tunes again?  If so, there's been no reporting of it on the
news.  Sorry if this seems trivial, but considering we're not actually at
war yet (and please God never will be), it seems amazing to me that DJs are
being banned from playing certain records in mere ANTICIPATION of conflict!

John

Not Scots, just Scott-ish

PS - Why do I feel like I've just written to the "Daily Mail"?


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