Hmm ... I suppose.  But at the risk of being a bit "pop culture anal", eighties retro to me means things like Marylin Manson covering "Tainted Love", "Donnie Darko" or - yes - "Relax" or "I Shot JR" t-shirts worn in fun pubs.

Again, this might be just the UK, but the KLF are more "early nineties" than eighties.  Recently there's been lots of bands and musicians from that era (Happy Mondays, Inspiral Carpets, Ned's Atomic Dustbin, House of Love, Butler and Anderson, the La's - even Cauty working with Paterson again, I suppose) getting back together, mostly to entertain fans who were still in primary school when the eighties were at their full FGTH blast. 

The high-fashion nineties revival is yet to come - and KLF t-shirts just look very, very old rather than retrochic (imho).  At the moment, 1991 is still not trendy ...

John




> Message Received: Oct 27 2005, 12:41 PM
> From: TheMgnt@aol.com
> To: klf@mailman.xmission.com
> Cc:
> Subject: Re: [KLF] Custom Clothing
>
>
> from the problem of the band not being remembered by many people under 25, there's the
> designs they had back in late 80s and early 90s.  Fine for that time, but now as dated as
 
I wouldn't say they're dated.  80s retro t's are kind of popular now (I just picked up a vintage style Devo shirt a few weeks back).  And, at least here in the States, you're not going to find many that have heard of the KLF (until reminded of 3am's aha-aha hook).  I used to get a lot of compliments on my KLF T speaker logo'd shirt back in day from people who just thought it was a cool design.
 
-paul
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