- 3 a.m. Eternal
Infobox Single
Name = 3 a.m. Eternal
Caption = Pure Trance Original (005T) cover
Artist =The KLF
Released = May 1989 ("Pure Trance 2")
January 1991 ("Live at the S.S.L.")
January 1992 ("The KLF vs ENT version")
Format = 12" ("Pure Trance Original")
Cassette, 7", 12" and CD ("Live at the S.S.L.")
7" ("The KLF vs ENT version")
Recorded =Trancentral
Genre =House music
Length = 5:55 ("Pure Trance Original")
5:50 ("Live at the S.S.L.")
2:43 ("The KLF vs ENT version")
Label =KLF Communications (UK)
Producer = Drummond/Cauty
Misc = Extra chronology
Artist = Drummond & Cauty
Type = singles
Last single ="What Time Is Love? (Pure Trance)" (1988)
This single = "3 a.m. Eternal (Pure Trance)" (1989)
Next single = "Kylie Said to Jason " (1989)Extra chronology
Last single ="What Time Is Love? (Live at Trancentral)" (1990)
This single = "3 a.m. Eternal (Live at the S.S.L.)" (1991)
Next single = "Last Train to Trancentral (Live from the Lost Continent)" (1991)Extra chronology
Last single ="Justified and Ancient (Stand by The JAMs)" (1991)
This single = "3 a.m. Eternal (The KLF vs ENT version)" (1992)
Next single = "K Cera Cera " (1993)Extra album cover
Upper caption = Alternate covers
Lower caption = "Live at the S.S.L." coverExtra album cover
Upper caption =
Lower caption = The KLF vs ENT's "Top of the Pops version" cover"3 a.m. Eternal" is a song by
The KLF , numerous versions of which were released as singles between1989 and1992 . In January 1991, anacid house pop version of the song became an international top ten hit single, hitting #1 in theUK Singles Chart and #5 on the USBillboard Hot 100 , and leading to The KLF becoming the internationally biggest-selling singles band of 1991. When, the following year, The KLF accepted an invitation to perform at theBRIT Awards ceremony, they caused controversy with a succession ofanti-establishment gestures that included a duet performance of "3 a.m. Eternal" withcrust punk bandExtreme Noise Terror , during which The KLF co-founderBill Drummond firedmachine-gun blanks over the audience ofmusic industry . A studio-produced version of this song was issued a limited edition mail order 7" single, the final release byThe KLF and theirindependent record label ,KLF Communications .Origins
The original
1989 12" single release constituted the second of The KLF's "Pure Trance" series. There were two issues, numbered 005T (pink writing on a black sleeve, featuring two KLF mixes) and 005R (black writing on a pink sleeve, featuring four more mixes, including remixes byThe Orb andThe Moody Boys ).tadium House version
A version heavily reworked for a mainstream audience, "3 a.m. Eternal (Live at the S.S.L.)", was issued in January 1991 hit # 1 in the
UK singles chart and # 5 in the USBillboard Hot 100 . This version featured a rap by Ricardo Lyte. The "S.S.L." in the subtitle refers to aSolid State Logic mixing desk. Although a lot of crowd noise features on the mix, it is in fact a purely studio-based creation. The seven inch version of this mix appears on the album "The White Room ". Concurrent with the chart-topping version, yet another 12" was released, featuring resolutely underground remixes by The Moody Boys.The KLF vs Extreme Noise Terror
In 1992, The KLF released a limited edition mail order only single containing a new version of "3 a.m." featuring the
grindcore /crust punk bandExtreme Noise Terror . The two bands also performed a live version of the song at that year'sBRIT Awards ceremony. The Brits performance was garnished by a limping, kilted, cigar-chomping Drummond firing blanks from an automatic weapon over the heads of the crowd. After viewing the rehearsals, "NME " writerDanny Kelly said: "Compared to what's preceded it, this is a turbo-powered metallic wolf breaking into a coop full of particularly sick doves... And the noise? Well, the noise is hardcore punk thrash through a disco Techno hit played by crusties. All bases covered, brilliantly. Clever, "clever" bastards." [Kelly, D. "Welcome To The Sheep Seats", "New Musical Express ", 29 Feb 1992 ( [http://www.libraryofmu.org/display-resource.php?id=297 link] )] At the end of the performance,Scott Piering announced to a stunned crowd that "The KLF have now left the music business". Within a few months, they did just that - their records were deleted and The KLF retired from the industry.Danny Kelly later described the Brits performance as The KLF's "self-destruction in an orgy of punk rock..., mock outrage ... and real bad taste". [Kelly, D., "Million Dollar Bash", "Q", February 1994 ( [http://www.libraryofmu.org/display-resource.php?id=377 link] ).]
Reviews
The "Pure Trance Original" was described by "
Record Mirror " as a "euro-flavoureddeep house pulser" with atmospheric chanting and a "cathedral-like resonance". [Review of "3 a.m. Eternal (Pure Trance Original)", "Record Mirror ", 16 September 1989. ] In a January 1991 feature onThe KLF , "NME " writer Roger Morton described the "Pure Trance Original" as a "classic club track" and the "Live at the S.S.L." version as "murderously powerful". [Morton, R. "One Coronation Under A Groove", "New Musical Express ", 12 January 1991 ( [http://www.libraryofmu.org/display-resource.php?id=191] )] . As "Record Mirror" 's "Single of the Week", the "Live at the S.S.L." version was regarded as "a magnificent pulsating beast combining bleeps and body heat". [Review of "3 a.m. Eternal (Live at the S.S.L.)", "Record Mirror ", 12 January 1991. ] Appraising the track retrospectively in 2000, "The Guardian " referred to the "Live at the S.S.L." version as an "epic pop masterpiece". [Poole, S., Review ofBill Drummond 's book "45", "The Guardian ", 26 February 2000 ( [http://www.libraryofmu.org/display-resource.php?id=487 link] ).]Formats and track listings
"3 a.m. Eternal (Pure Trance Original)" was aired as a UK 12" single in May 1989. "3 a.m. Eternal (Live from the S.S.L.)" was given an international release as a single on
7 January 1991 . A single ofremix es byThe Moody Boys was given a limited release a week later. In January 1992, a one-sided 7" single of The KLF's collaboration with Extreme Noise Terror was released viamail order only, from a limited pressing of 1000 copies. [Review of "3 a.m. Eternal (The KLF vs Extreme Noise Terror)", "New Musical Express ", 11 Jan 1992.] [Longmire, Ernie et al (2005). [http://www.klf.de/discography/ KLF discography] Compiled by Ernie Longmire, this has been the authoritative KLF discography on the internet for some 10 years or more and has been the subject of long-term scrutiny and peer review by KLF fans and collectors. It is now maintained by the fan site klf.de.]Key
External links
* [http://seekvids.com/3_a.m._Eternal_%28Live_at_the_S.S.L.%29_-_KLF 3 a.m. Eternal Music Video]
Notes and references
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