1970s: Illuminatus, Big in Japan, and Zoo In 1975, Drummond began working at the
Everyman Theatre in
Liverpool as a carpenter and scene painter. a 12-hour performance which opened on 23 November 1976, and which was staged by
Ken Campbell's "Science Fiction Theatre of Liverpool". The production transferred to the
National Theatre, and then the
Roundhouse, in London. Drummond later wrote that none of his career would have happened as it did if not for what he learnt from Campbell, starting with the advice "Bill, don't bother doing anything unless it is heroic!" After absconding from the
Illuminatus! production in London, Drummond returned to Liverpool and co-founded the band
Big in Japan. After the band's demise, Drummond and another member, his best friend and were involved with the production on Echo & the Bunnymen's
debut album, released on the
Korova label.
1980s: A&R & solo artist Drummond later took a job in the mainstream music business as an
A&R consultant for the label
WEA working with, amongst others,
Strawberry Switchblade and
Brilliant. In July 1986, on his 33 and a third birthday, Drummond repented his corporate involvement and resigned his job by way of a "ringingly quixotic press release": "I will be 33.5 (sic) years old in September, a time for a revolution in my life. There is a mountain to climb the hard way, and I want to see the world from the top..." (In an interview in December 1990, Drummond recalled spending half a million pounds at WEA on the band
Brilliant – for whom he envisioned massive worldwide success – only for them to completely flop. "At that point I thought 'What am I doing this for?' and I got out.") Drummond was "obviously very sharp," said WEA chairman Rob Dickens, "and he knew the business. But he was too radical to be happy inside a corporate structure. He was better off working as an outsider." Later in the year, Drummond issued a solo album,
The Man, a country/folk music recording, backed by Australian rock group
The Triffids. The album was released on Creation Records and included the
sardonic "
Julian Cope Is Dead", where he outlined his fantasy of shooting the
Teardrop Explodes frontman in the head, to ensure the band's early demise and subsequent legendary status. The song has commonly been seen as a reply to the Cope song "Bill Drummond Said". Drummond wrote and performed "The Manager", filmed by
Bill Butt in which he lamented the state of the music industry and offered his services at £100 a time to help fix it; one of his complaints was about
remixes: "songs have to be written, not layered". The spoken-word recording also appeared as a B-side, and on some compilations as "The Manager's Speech". and 5 from
Sounds Magazine who called the album a "touching if idiosyncratic biographical statement". Drummond intended to focus on writing books once
The Man had been issued but, as he recalled in 1990, "That only lasted three months, until I had an[other] idea for a record and got dragged back into it all". Drummond and Cauty (who Drummond had signed to
Food/
WEA as a member of Brilliant) released their first single,
The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu's "
All You Need Is Love", in March 1987. This was followed by an album –
1987 (What the Fuck Is Going On?) – in June of the same year, and a high-profile copyright dispute with
ABBA and the
Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society. A second album –
Who Killed The JAMs?, also the last album under the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (The JAMs) name, was released in February 1988. Later in 1988, Drummond and Cauty released a 'novelty' pop single, "
Doctorin' the Tardis" as The Timelords. The song reached number one in the
UK Singles Chart on 12 June, and charted highly in Australia and New Zealand. On the back of this success, the duo self-published a book,
The Manual (How to Have a Number One the Easy Way). In late 1988, the duo released their first singles under the moniker
the KLF, "
Burn the Bastards" and "
Burn the Beat" (both taken from the JAMs' last album). (From late 1987, Drummond and Cauty's independent record label had been named "
KLF Communications".) As the KLF, Drummond and Cauty would amass fame and fortune. "
What Time Is Love?" – a signature song which they would revisit and revitalise several times in the coming years – saw its first release in July 1988, and its success spawned an album,
The "What Time Is Love?" Story, in September 1989.
Chill Out, an
ambient house album which had its roots in Cauty's chill-out sessions with
The Orb's
Alex Paterson, was released in February 1990. Described by
The Times as "the KLF's comedown classic",
Chill Out was named the fifth best dance album of all time in a 1996
Mixmag feature. on "
Justified & Ancient", released in 1991 and became an international success The KLF's commercial success peaked in 1991, with
The White Room album and the accompanying "Stadium House" singles, remixes of 1988's "What Time Is Love?", 1989's "
3 a.m. Eternal", 1990's "
Last Train to Trancentral"; and "
Justified and Ancient", a new song based on a sample from
1987 (What the Fuck Is Going On?) In 1992, The KLF were awarded the "Best British group"
BRIT Award. With grindcore group
Extreme Noise Terror, the KLF performed a live "violently antagonistic performance" of "
3 a.m. Eternal" at the BRIT Awards ceremony in front of "a stunned music-business audience". Later in the evening Drummond and Cauty dumped a dead sheep at the entrance to one of the post-ceremony parties.
NME listed this appearance at number 4 in their "top 100 rock moments", and, in 2003,
The Observer named it the fifth greatest "publicity stunt" in the history of popular music. On 14 May 1992, the KLF announced their immediate retirement from the music industry and the
deletion of their entire back catalogue, an act which associate
Scott Piering described as "[throwing] away a fortune". When he left WEA, Drummond issued an enigmatic press release, this time talking of a "wild and wounded, glum and glorious, shit but shining path" he and Cauty had been following "...these past five years. The last two of which has led us up onto the commercial high ground—we are at a point where the path is about to take a sharp turn from these sunny uplands down into a netherworld of we know not what." There have been numerous suggestions that in 1992 Drummond was at the edge of a nervous breakdown.
Vox Magazine wrote, for example, that 1992 was "the year of Bill's 'breakdown', when the KLF, perched on the peak of greater-than-ever success, quit the music business, ... [and] machine gunned the tuxedo'd twats in the front row of that year's BRIT Awards ceremony." Drummond himself said that he was on the edge of the "abyss".
1993–1997: K Foundation and other activities Despite the KLF's retirement from the music business, Drummond's involvement with Jimmy Cauty was far from over. In 1993, the pair regrouped as the
K Foundation, ostensibly a foundation for the arts. They established the
K Foundation art award for the "
worst artist of the year". The award, worth £40,000, was presented to
Rachel Whiteread on 23 November 1993 outside London's
Tate Gallery. Ms Whiteread had just accepted the £20,000 1993
Turner Prize award for best British
Contemporary artist inside the gallery. The K Foundation award attracted huge interest from the British
broadsheet newspapers. Infamy followed when, on 23 August 1994, the K Foundation burnt what remained of the KLF's earnings, one million
pounds, at a
boathouse on the
Scottish island of
Jura. A film of the event –
Watch the K Foundation Burn a Million Quid – was taken on tour, with Drummond and Cauty discussing the incineration with members of the public after each screening. In 2004 Drummond admitted to the BBC that he now regretted burning the money. "It's a hard one to explain to your kids and it doesn't get any easier. I wish I could explain why I did it so people would understand." On 4 September 1995 the duo recorded "
The Magnificent" for
The Help Album. In 1997, Drummond and Cauty briefly re-emerged as 2K and K2 Plant Hire Ltd. with various plans to "
Fuck the Millennium". K2 Plant Hire's published aim was to "build a massive pyramid containing one brick for every person born in the UK during the 20th century" Members of the public were urged to donate bricks, with 1.5 bricks per Briton being needed to complete the project. Drummond also contributed a short story titled "Let's Grind, or How K2 Plant Hire Ltd Went to Work" to the book "Disco 2000".
1997–present: Post-The KLF In 1996–1997 Bill Drummond did a music project in
Finland, with
Mark Manning and a selection of Finnish artists. Drummond's involvement in the music industry has been minimal since his final collaboration with Jimmy Cauty as 2K in 1997. In 1998, the
Scottish Football Association invited Drummond to write and record a theme song for the
Scotland national football team's 1998
FIFA World Cup campaign. Drummond decided against doing it (Del Amitri got the job) but he wondered if he had twisted fate by declining, because the other major football songs of that year were made by associates of his: Keith Allen ("Vindaloo") and Ian Broudie ("Three Lions"), two men he had met on the same day when working on
Illuminatus! in 1976, and former protege Ian McCulloch. In 2000, Drummond released
45, a book consisting of a "series of loosely related
vignettes forming the rambling diary of one year".
45 also explored Drummond's KLF legacy, and was well received by the press. Drummond featured on
Seeming's 2020 album ''The
Birdwatcher's Guide to Atrocity'', performing the spoken-word portion of "Learn to Vanish". It was his first appearance on record in 20 years. Drummond reunited with Jimmy Cauty in 2017. They returned as The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, with a novel –
2023: A Trilogy – and a 3-day event, "
Welcome to the Dark Ages". Cauty confirmed that the duo's work is an ongoing project. == Other ventures ==