The Time Frequency

The Time Frequency (TTF) are a techno group from Scotland.

Founded by Jon Campbell and Steven Nelson in 1988 they are one of Scotland's first techno groups. TTF have also included fellow keyboard players Paul Inglis and Kyle Ramsey and later Colin McNeil. Mary Kiani was the lead singer of TTF, later replaced by Jo Wilson, then Debbie Millar, and more recently Layla Amini. The Time Frequency play gigs at Scotland's top venues like Barrowlands and Rezerection. They had chart success with a number of hit singles, amongst which the biggest were "The Ultimate High", "New Emotion" and "Real Love" (the last named of which, after a remix, reached number 7 in the UK Singles Chart.

Because Jive Records would not pay session singer Mary Kiani enough money to be a full-time member of the act, she had to leave the group and was replaced with Debbie Millar, a 25-year-old singer from Bournemouth.

A best of album was released on 7 May 2007, titled TTF – The Ultimate Collection. They released the follow-up to their 1994 album, Dominator, in 2008 titled Dominator 2.

Famous quotes containing the words the time, time and/or frequency:

    Be careful then how you live, not as unwise people but as wise, making the most of the time, because the days are evil.
    Bible: New Testament, Ephesians 5:15-16.

    And since the average lifetime—the relative longevity—is far greater for memories of poetic sensations than for those of heartbreaks, since the very long time that the grief I felt then because of Gilbert, it has been outlived by the pleasure I feel, whenever I wish to read, as in a sort of sundial, the minutes between twelve fifteen and one o’clock, in the month of May, upon remembering myself chatting ... with Madame Swann under the reflection of a cradle of wisteria.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)

    The frequency of personal questions grows in direct proportion to your increasing girth. . . . No one would ask a man such a personally invasive question as “Is your wife having natural childbirth or is she planning to be knocked out?” But someone might ask that of you. No matter how much you wish for privacy, your pregnancy is a public event to which everyone feels invited.
    Jean Marzollo (20th century)