| 12nd | Top performers on Top of the Pops: 1988 |
| 31st | Top ambient artists |
The following are the current most viewed articles on Wikipedia within Wikipedia's The KLF category. Think of it as a What's Hot list for The KLF. More info »
This is a beta release and so the figures may be a day or two out of date. We'd love to get your thoughts.
| Rank | Topic | Wikipedia views | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The KLF | 1,636 | ![]() |
| 2 | K Foundation Burn a Million Quid | 295 | ![]() |
| 3 | Bill Drummond | 291 | ![]() |
| 4 | Jimmy Cauty | 176 | ![]() |
| 5 | The Manual | 144 | ![]() |
| 6 | K Foundation | 105 | ![]() |
| 7 | Scott Piering | 69 | ![]() |
| 8 | The KLF films | 56 | ![]() |
| 9 | K Foundation art award | 38 | ![]() |
| 10 | Foundry (bar) | 29 | ![]() |
| 11 | Graham Lee (Australian musician) | 22 | ![]() |
| 12 | The Moody Boys | 14 | ![]() |
| 13 | 45 (book) | 14 | ![]() |
| 14 | Alan Goodrick (Gimpo) | 13 | ![]() |
| 15 | The KLF's creative associates | less than 5 views |
The KLF, more recently known as the K Foundation, also known as The Timelords, furthermore known as The JAMs and other aliases, were one of the seminal bands in the British Acid House movement of the late 1980s and early 1990s. Founded by Bill Drummond (alias King Boy D, Time Boy) and Jimmy Cauty (alias Rockman Rock, Lord Rock) in the wake of the disbandment of the sampling outfit The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, the KLF went on to release a series of world-wide hits on their own KLF Communications record label. The KLF left the music industry in May 1992, and deleted their back catalogue.
This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total.
The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).
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