I was saving up for some sebagos and working behind the bar in Camden!
I think JG is wearing Buffalo Creek Trader loafers, a Michelson tie and a Sero shirt???????
Lovely stuff.
Raving!
Say what you like but I had some great nights out. Perception, Amnesia, Revolution, Nocturnal, I did em all. Dancing til dawn, thats where it was at for me.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avj9V-fU4mY&feature=related
And feeling pickled til wednesday, which wasn't so good.
Working in advertising... wearing vintage suits, with a quiff and clubmaster framed glasses...
I was 7 years old. Probably skateboarding and wearing grubby jeans, grubby t shirt and grubby hightops,. I seem to remember being grubby.
That was the last best summer before the rot set in at Liverpool Poly, I was working in a fab shop at Stone Manganese Marine, plenty of dosh for a student and was wearing Ocean Pacific and Mambo when they were definitely inspired by the Beach Boys and Hawaiian shirts. When their winter season clubber came out, they went all black and grundgy, a warning of what was to come for the 90s.
Edit: I was digging The Who's Quadrophenia and The Clash's London Calling, also had Cohen's I'm Your Man on the go, although he seemed impossibly old even then. It was a long sunny autumn as I remember, the bad weather and winter only really set in the middle of November. Christmas I received numerous M&S button-downs, the BB made ones. Aftershave was Lacoste Booster and Joop!.
A long time ago now, impossible to reach, but it was a wonderful summer as I recall with all my old school chums in the sixth form before they were scattered to be seen no more, or on odd occasions at Christmas or vacations in the Travellers Rest pub. Now, the ties of friendship and recognition are long gone.
Last edited by 4F Hepcat (2012-04-06 02:39:19)
Getting a divorce.
In sunny Stoke-Upon-Trent.
Last edited by A Fine Sadness (2021-12-05 13:26:02)
‘89. Last year of school. First year on building sites. First gig (Desmond Dekker). Ratty old Vespa. Passed driving test. Red Mini with white roof. First pair of Levi 501’s. First time I spent the whole night with a lady. Not a bad year now I think about it.
Trying to be a responsible adult with a mortgage etc, but still spending too much money on clothes.
Last edited by Runninggeez (2021-12-05 14:25:40)
'89 was a great year for me. I was in my early twenties and my career had taken off. I was still living at home and had a fully expensed company car so my disposable income was really good. There was a regular luxury coach service that ran from Birmingham to Marble Arch so I was often down in London checking out what was going on. My return coach journey was never without a fist full of carrier bags. London then had so many great stores. Not just clothes shops but record stores and book shops too. The choice of cheap bistro's always amazed me.
I remember that the UK jazz revival that had fuelled an interest amongst younger guys in dressing in a much sharper but slightly retro was coming to an end. My interest in American style waned as the Italian designer look took hold. There was also a mini USA workwear/sportswear thing going on with stores opening up all over selling Russell, Champion, Carhartt and Timberland. I recall a short lived chain called McKenzie that did a roaring trade in this kind of stuff.
The soul and jazz scenes had fragmented into so many different niches there was an almost unlimited amount of specialist night outs. Some pretty scruffy, some smart.
Life was good.
Penitentiary. ‘3 hots and a cot’. Great bunch of guys with a similar sense of style, big meals all together at one table, swapping stories and sharing showers.
Attanding Mod-Rallies and clapping hands to Dave Brubeck´s Unsquare Dance.
Wearing black roll-necks, duffle-coats, black berets.
When in Blighty graduating from CCI to "pirate rallies".
Jdemy, this sounds undeniably better than my 'Burberrys' at homeless shelter' anecdote.
Duffer of St George was also big around that time Alvey, especially the club scene. Bought a few bits from there.
Yes, I bought Duffer in 1990. It wasn't easy to get where I was living and I shelled out £50 on one of their long-sleeved t-shirts/polo shirts/sweat shirts/whatever the wretched thing happened to be. I was too old for it and should have stuck firmly to conservative button-downs with my Levis. We live and learn.
WIL - I would have been stepping into your place on the CCI's in '89. It's possible we've been in the same room in the same god awful seaside town at the same time.
Last edited by Spendthrift (2021-12-06 03:06:20)
Mod rallies AFS. I'll leave it there (wink)
AFS, Mod rallies. When i remember it correctly the mastermind of the CCI was a man called Tony Class? Attached were, i think, the guys from the Unicorn record label. Mr. Mark Johnson (?) et al. Spendtthrift you´re, right, god awful ball rooms in hotels that have seen better days. But nevertheless great fun for a young gun on tour with his mates and on long travels from Austria to England.
The pirate rallies were for those who thought to be trully in-the-know of mod. Smartly dressed the pirates were. Of course the door policy was strictly no greens, no boots and as far as i recall no ´arringtons. The older, snobbier mod(ernist) element. The DJ´s spinned a lot of danceable jazz. I could imagine that this was the type of rallies where the "Untouchables" were born.
1989 was also the year when some kind Sarf Landan Mod(ernist) face guided me to 2 Russell Street.
Well, but that´s another story ... :-)
I believe Mark Johnson had left the mod scene by 1989. I never went to any CCI events but the organiser was Tony Class, who died quite recently. Here's a video that shows the appeal:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLhFFpF4YFk
In 1989 i was taking A levels then off to uni. Finding clothes I liked and felt comfortable and confident in back then was an impossible task really, although I did occasionally find half decent stuff.
In 1990 or 1991 some friends invited me to accompany them to a CCI run but I couldn't face it.
Last edited by Yuca (2021-12-06 04:22:41)
A 'Mod' I was not, although I can sense the appeal once it had been 'stepped up' somewhat. I was well aware of the Summer Of Love (was that 1988?) but had begun listening to rural blues by 1985/6 then moving onto Parker and Coltrane by 1988/89. Limited, yes, but it led to other things (including Edith Piaf). I had a pretty 'limited pallet' in that phase of my life but springing from poverty rather than indifference.
Good music was also hard to come by. I well remember the trouble my first wife had getting me a Son House LP. You could get people like Muddy and B.B.King on cassette. Not so plenty of others. Thank heaven, I say, for the compact disc.
Musically speaking I was quite hip by '89: lots of blues, soul, Blue Note jazz and a little bit of Latin. My ideal was to be a late 1950s modernist. I knew enough to listen to Back at the Chicken Shack etc but had no idea how to find the appropriate clobber.