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All Our Forts Are With You

CD
£8.99

THE DEBUT ALBUM FROM BILLY CHYLDISH'S NEW BAND CTMF
In 1976/ 77 the ‘shortly to be’ Billy Chyldish, as well as being head of research in the counties first fortress study group
The Medway Military Research Group, was working as an apprentice stonemason in Chatham dockyard. After seeing a
feature on punk on the London Weekend show Billy thought he wouldn’t half mind being the singer in a punk rock group
himself. Childish duly left work and suggested to a few old secondary school mates that they should form one pronto.
“What about a name?” they asked, “simple”, answered Wild Billy, “we’ll be called CTMF.” Button Nose Steve, who was to
shortly give Billy Chyldish his punk moniker – and even owned a Woolworth’s guitar, and Dave Marsh, a form mate who
said he might buy a drum kit one day – both nodded slightly. 36 years later, and CTMF have finally come into being. no
ones sure where Dave Marsh now is, but button nose Steve is busy feeding pigs and ducks on his small holding in New
Romney and Billy Chyldish, with other mates, has recorded an LPs worth of material – and half a dozen 45’s for different
destinations around the globe – utilising lyrics first jotted down for the original CTMF line up in 1977. Billy describes
CTMF group as “the epitome of modern”.and their sound as “the sound of yesterday, tomorrow”
All of their records are released under the moniker CTMF. Some say this stands for Copyright TerMination Front, others
claim it is simply short form for Clarity Through Fuzz .There have been numerous rumours that Jimmy Cauty plays bass
and that it is none other than Bill Drummond that can be heard on Xylophone. Billy, however, muses that though he is indeed
friends with Jimmy Cauty – and has in the past been in correspondence with Bill Drummond – he has never knowingly
heard of the KLF as he “gave up on music after punk turned crap at the end of 77”.
People in the know can vouch that all this is in fact truth