| A1 | Candystore | 3:08 | ||
| A2 | Candyman | 3:27 | ||
| A3 | Disaster Fund Collection | 5:42 | ||
| A4 | King Boy's Dream | 1:03 | ||
| B1 | The Porpoise Song | 5:47 | ||
| B2 | Prestwich Prophet's Grin | 5:03 | ||
| B3 | Burn The Bastards | 6:03 |
Made In Wales
Late December 87
Some copies issued in stickered sleeve with insert - a 11½"x23" pictorial discography called "The 1987 Completeist List" with cat. number KLF 001.
Track durations not printed on the release.
| Title, Format | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who Killed The JAMs ? (2xCDr) | Positive Void Communications | JAMS CD 2 | UK | 2009 | ||
| Who Killed The JAMs ? (CDr) | Positive Void Communications | JAMS CD 2 | UK | 2009 |
Tracks like Disaster Fund Collection ("We really tried, we crawled through the mire...") and Burn The Bastards ("Build a fire, stoke it good, throw them on, and let the bastards burn!") express their anger at the situation. This last track has the coming of 1988 as its theme - and contains an express wish for 1987 to end as quickly as possible, as well as the line "1987 - what the fuck have we done?" - a reference to their destroyed album. On the other hand, the rather dark Porpoise Song seems a defiant response to what had happened ("The twists and turns and choice of fate have left us where we are / Well I'm a king, I've made my choice, now let's get to the bar!")
That's not to say it's bad. In fact, it's very good. There's some really nice, subtle electro breaks mixed with Scottish seafaring poetry (The Porpoise Song), bhangra beats and cynical pop commentary (Prestwich Prophet's Grin), and humourous hip-hop pastiche (King Boy's Dream).
In the circumstances, this is an amazing album, and good by any standards, especially for the barren musical wasteland of the late 80s. This album still sounds fresh and was quite different to anything else that was being made at the time.