majormajor
One Too Many
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My memories of the Mod scene was that it was all over by 1964/65 and had split into modyobs who had started shaving their temples and were into fighting and were evolving into skinheads, and the emerging alternative scene. A certain type of Mod had always been involved in a crossover with the coffee bar beat and folk scene, and Bob Dylan was very popular. I remember having his first LP when no one in the mainstream in the UK seemed to know who he was.
Most people seem to associate Mods with the later revivals but 80% of the people I hung around with around 1963 wore parkas over Fred Perry and later Ben Sherman shirts and rode or aspired to scooters. Tweed three piece suits, co-respondents shoes, and the twenties look did become fashionable in the mid sixties but they didn't have much to do with mods by then. Though some mod girls did wear flapper dresses earlier than that and the influence was already there.
Your description of London Mods is pretty much as I described them. After 64, it was pretty much football gangs, interested in fighting. And yes, even in the North, we were buying Bob Dylan. Used to subscribe to Oz Magazine too, and even fewer folks in the UK knew about that back then.
As for everywhere north of Watford, the scene was different. Nowt to do with football. As I said, if you weren't part of the scene, you would have been in blissful ignorance of our existence, which was pretty much how we wanted it to be.
Here is a pic taken at around 7am on a Sunday morning after an All-nighter at the Twisted Wheel Club, in 1967 (you know - flowers in your hair - the summer of love?). Whether you want to deny their existence at that time is up to you, but I can assure you they were real. I can tell you their names if you like.
Revivalists are just that. So Weller & Wiggins can have there little moments. But they have NOTHING to do with this thread
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