The History of the JAMS a.k.a. The Timelords

The History of the JAMS a.k.a. The Timelords

Track Listings

1. All You Need Is Love
2. Don't Take Five (Take What You Want)
3. Whitney Joins the Jams
4. Porpoise Song
5. Downtown
6. Candy Man
7. Burn the Beat
8. Doctorin' the Tardis
9. Gary in the Tardis

The History of the JAMS a.k.a. The Timelords,The JAMs , The Timelords,Tvt,Acid House,Ambient House,Club/Dance,House,Newbeat,Pop,Popular Music,Rave,Rock
The History of the JAMS a.k.a. The Timelords
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Take what you want!
  • The Timelords really Doctor the TARDIS and samples
  • KLF? I don't hear no KLF in here....
  • Awesome Cd!
  • What the **** is going on?
The History of the JAMS a.k.a. The Timelords
The JAMs , and The Timelords
Manufacturer: Tvt
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Doctorin' the Tardis
  2. Chill Out
  3. White Room / Justified & Ancient
  4. The White Room
  5. Betty Davis

ASIN: B000000GQZ
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. All You Need Is Love
  2. Don't Take Five (Take What You Want)
  3. Whitney Joins The Jams
  4. Porpoise Song
  5. Downtown
  6. Candyman
  7. Burn The Beat
  8. Doctorin' The Tardis
  9. Gary In The Tardis

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Take what you want!.......2005-05-23

The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (The Jams) formed in 1987. The tracks on this CD are taken from their various early singles and LPs. The group also recorded as The Timelords, KLF and 2K. The Jams were a sample crazed production team that took sampling to the extreme. They made a lot of really interesting music sampling anything they felt like sampling. Consequently, they got sued a lot. Anyway, this is a really fun CD that features some of their work that they got permission to release, including their first real hit "Doctorin' the Tardis". If you like that song, you'll probably like the rest of the CD. It even incudes a Christmas song, "Downtown", and a New Years song, "Burn the Beat".

5 out of 5 stars The Timelords really Doctor the TARDIS and samples.......2003-12-22

Taking sampling to its logical conclusions was revolutionary in the 80's. Tone-Loc himself sampled McCartney's "Band On The Run", and Van Halen's "Jamie's Crying". 2 Live Crew used Van Halen's "Ain't Talkin' About Love" on As Nasty As They Wanna Be, and who knows how much Zeppelin was used on the Beastie Boys.

Then there are the Jams (Justified Ancients of Mu Mu), one of the aliases used by the Kopyright Liberation Front (read KLF), a duo of Scottish rap-pillage artists with strong brogues who made it to #1 in the UK with "Doctorin' The TARDIS", a song familiar to Dr. Who fans. Their basic sound consists of loud rapping, scratching, loud guitar chords, and ripe drum machine synths

A loud irreverent vocalization of the first notes from the La Marseillaise comes, followed by a brief "love, love, love" from the Beatles' "All You Need Is Love." And then... "KICK OUT THE JAMS, M---------ERS!" And later on, do I hear Samantha Fox's "touch me, touch me" from her best known single? Yes, I do. A collage of fierce AC-DC guitar chords, human beat box-type sounds, scratching, samples follow the rest of the raucous opening track, "All You Need Is Love."

"Don't Take Five (Take What You Want)" is advice given to the rappers by a man with antler ears and is basically a story about how the rappers make it rich. TV commercials or programems are sampled, but the main musical sample is "Take Five" by Dave Brubeck, done briefly.

"Mission Impossible, we were told. She'll never join the Jams." The "she" in question is Whitney Houston, and the loud brass climactic chords from the Theme from Shaft, along with Hayes' "can you dig it" and "right on" being heard. Then, the telltale percussion from "I Wanna Dance With Somebody" is heard, and then that opening whoop from Whitney, to which the Jams cheer. "Oh! Whitney Houston joined the Jams!" to which Isaac Hayes says "right on, right on!" More Whitney and Hayes are heard later on. This is crazy! I was surprised Houston didn't sue them the same way ABBA did.

"Porpoise Song" is not the song by the Monkees from Head, but a drum machine/rap and scratch that samples airy synths from Pet Shop Boys and takes the rhythm from Michael Jackson's "Billie Jean." I really miss that scratching from the 80's. Look at rap now!

"Candyman" is a song centered around Jimi Hendrix's "Foxy Lady." Later on, a brief sample from Richard Wagner's "Die Valkure," the track featured in Apocalypse Now, is played, over weird special effects.

"Burn The Beat" is a party jamming in full swing. "can't stand the party" a la Sly and the Family's "Dance To The Music" can be heard. After a sampling of Michael Jackson's "Bad", the song jars to a halt to the traditional New Year's Eve countdown on BBC1, leading to Big Ben's chimes ushering in the New Year.

And then... "Doctor who, hey doctor who, doctor who, hey, the TARDIS..." sung a la the chorus of Gary Glitter's "Rock And Roll Pt. 2" and then the wheezing and grinding sound of the TARDIS, a Dalek's "exterminate!" A wailing siren predominates in parts of the song. The Who theme used is the new one used in 1980, and thudding drums. The line "we obey no one, we are the supreme beings" are taken from Episode 6 of Genesis Of The Daleks. This was used in the inbetween segments of The Making of Silver Nemesis.

"Gary In The TARDIS" is like the previous number, except with Gary Glitter vocals, where chants for Gary, and Gary asking, "Did you miss me? Do you love me? Do you want to touch me?" References to being the leader of the gang is mixed in with mention of the TARDIS. The Dalek still says his lines from Genesis.

The liner notes also contain a timeline of the Jams, including their ruthless sampling of many artists until ABBA sued them for using "Dancing Queen" sans permission. Result, they had to destroy all copies of their first album and reissue it with all the samples taken off, leaving wide gaps between raps(!!)

This was one of the few CDs I bought in 1990, and I listened to it over and over as a result. One of my favourite CDs.

2 out of 5 stars KLF? I don't hear no KLF in here...........2003-07-16

In a (big) word: DISAPPOINTED.

I have WHITE ROOM & CHILL OUT, and love 'm. Went looking for more of the same & found this disk here on Amazon. Aside from a couple of entertaining tracks/ideas, there's nothing here to satisfy my urge for more KLF.

Which leads me to another big word: FRUSTRATED.

5 out of 5 stars Awesome Cd!.......2001-12-14

I originally bought this album for the "Doctorin'The Tardis", track, and ended up falling for every other song on here as well. This is one of my favorite albums and I definitely recommend it to anyone.

5 out of 5 stars What the **** is going on?.......1999-05-01

I have been a JAMMS fan for a long time. When I bought this cd, I was hooked. The first song "All you need is love" is the best song on this cd. Along with "Burn the beat" and Doctorin' the Tardis." The is a great compilation of the JAMMS. Inside the case, it gives a list of all the JAMMS releases. If you are a fan of The KLF. Then get this cd. This is where The KLF came to be. I will never sell this cd to anyone. The KLF will always live on.

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