Last edited by Alex Roest (2008-09-01 08:04:38)
Thanks, I'm afraid they stopped doing this fanzine some time ago... I only got four or five issues from one of my mates, but I'd love to read them all. I will take a look, if they have a blog or something instead...
Anyway, here's some of the Hideaway sounds:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/New-Breed-Soulful-Todays-Dancers/dp/B00005K9MY/ref=pd_sim_m_h__1
http://www.amazon.co.uk/King-New-Breed-Rhythm-Blues/dp/B000067FQ9/ref=pd_sim_m_h__2
http://www.amazon.co.uk/New-Breed-R-Added-Popcorn/dp/B0012EBU8Y/ref=pd_sim_m_h__2
Cheers, HBH
Mr. Henderson is a new contact for me & I really rate him. He's got that Big John Gall connection & his stories of wearing Ivy in Paris in the mid-eighties are just my cup of tea.
If I had the time I'd stalk him.
A Top bloke.
A nice new page just added to the JS site: A tribute to the Italian male.
Worth a look, IMO.
I can't even enter the website...
Anyway:
The Hideaway: TOP club
Mr Henderson: TOP bloke and dj
Thanks for the many very sweet comments about the website. It is amateurish - absolutely. But then we are all amateurs who love this stuff. I'm a fan, not a designer, as if that wasn't obvious. I'm a bit concerned to hear that so many people have not been able to see the site. This may be because of the amount of visuals on the site. They can take a while to load. I would assume that if you have broadband, and the latest Adobe, and all that sort of stuff, then it should work. Sorry if it still doesn't because it is published and out there. I so agree with the comments about John Simons. I first shopped there in July 1986 with my old mod chums Gary Isaacs and Mark Collins (Hubert Swaine). As happened to Russell Street happened to me - that first visit was a monumental experience. I can still feel that sense of discovery and belonging, which has never completely left me. Shopping there, and working there for a short while in the late 90s, I felt at the epicentre of a kind of unspoken, very metropolitan cool : understated, knowing and very very hip. John has been so consistent, and so charismatic for all of this time. He is our Svengali and we have all fallen under his spell. Oh and I loved Jeff's Cutler and Gross vintage circular retro Ivy frames SO much. Me and the boys went and spent a fortune on Anglo-American tortoiseshells the following week even though we all had 20:20 vision. Spent the next few years watching Woody Allen's 'Manhattan' again and again....
And although we missed each other by a few months Mr. Toffeeman also worked at The Ivy Shop too.
Top Bloke!
I can only reiterate what other people say. Johns Shop is by far & away my favorite. He is a massive, massive influence on me & has on occasions taken me under his wing & been as kind, generous and interested in me as one could hope for, likewise Ken & Jeff, I love that shop and the people connected with it. I shall remain forever envious of those who have known it for years, as I only discovered it just over a year ago - is it just me, or are people my age/of my generation who are interested in this sort of thing few and far between?!
No reason for younger chaps not to get into JS.
I was 19 when I first went there. Mates of mine were 20.
In all honesty I was very keyed up when I first walked through that door, but once inside its so relaxed that you soon get into it.
Everyone is very cool & helpful, but if you seek out Jeff (& I usually do) then he is so engaging that you'll soon forget any preconceptions that you might have.
Last thing I bought he told me to take it outside to see it better. John Lally would do that at the Ivy Shop too.
Hard to put into words, but they have this knack of treating everybody the same in my experience. There's no hierarchy. If you're there in the first place then they assume that you're there because, like them, you love all this stuff.
Pete Townshend was just another punter at The Ivy Shop when I was there - Same service from John Lally as anybody else. The manager Ian, the other Saturday boy & I just stood around. No big deal.
For me that was breathtakingly cool: Here I was in a place where Townshend was just a punter because we were Coltrane & Miles Davis fans. Pete was OK, but he wasn't Miles. He was just a regular customer here.
John Lally used to drink with The Who, btw., back when more of them used to use the shop.
Understand now why this little window of mine into another world has stayed with me for so long & meant so much to me?
Here was a world where Rock Gods waited to be served while the shop's manager and lowly little me just leaned against the shirt cabinet and looked on.
Fucking Cool!
Russell - John Lally was helping out at J.Simons when I called in there last week. An absolute delight to see him. He was helping John by getting out his needle and thread and fixing a few vintage items, just doing general clothing repairs around the shop. And he was doing it with such skill and care. These guys are a bit special I think. Untouched by ambition or competitiveness but so hugely into their thing and still enthusiastic about stuff. John is still heavily into his jazz and blues guitar and his clothes. Still vain, though short, bald and pot-bellied. And he has bags of style and suss. It cheered me up seeing him. Him and Ian still exchange Christmas cards which I thought quite sweet. They each enclose a fiver so the other one can have a festive drink!
God, I'd love to see JL again - It's been 21 years!
I once bought him a kebab you know.... Ramble, ramble...
Sweet bloke - He went out to check that I was OK when Ian sent me down the post office & I was gone a long while because of the queues (Bonnie Langford was in the post office too that day). Walking back up Richmond Hill I met my mate Greyhound walking down who sold me some speed in the Gents halfway up the hill...
Twenty-two, green as grass, but I was living The Life I reckoned!
That was my last day at The Ivy shop: The Saturday before Christmas 1987. I'd talked my way in there & done a few Saturdays really just to pick Ian's brains about Austins & JS. Ian gave me £25 instead of the usual £20 because it was Christmas, but said that he was sorry but the shop couldn't support four members of staff, which was sadly true at that point. I just used to stand around talking in there all day and Ian had spent most of that afternoon in the back with a pizza... I told Ian I'd ring him, but then I never did... Life moved on, & I got more & more into J. Press...
Ramble!
Last edited by Daniele (2008-09-04 01:41:49)
He was there yesterday too, when I popped in. A really charming guy, had an all too brief chat with him before having to scarper for a Doctors appointment.
Was just wondering if anybody else had any contributions for the 'Community Page' on the J.Simons website? Thus far I've had some great stuff from three stalwarts of the UK Ivy scene, but apart from these it's all dried up. So please anybody get any stories, reminiscences, pics, recommendations, recollections, irritations, best purchases, worst purchases, Johnny Simons' hairstyles, Ian Strachan's porno collection, Kenny Lovegrove's 27 year penchant for Food For Thought, any dirt, any gossip : throw it my way... Please PM me any bits and pieces. Thanks.
i'd honestly never seen a fanny held open before...
Can you believe how I feel, after living in London for 6 years on and off between 1998 and 2005 and I discovered the J Simons shop (and seriously this is no joke) on my last day in London out for a farewell booze-up before moving back to Glasgow?
Not only that, it was a Sunday and wasn't even open. I was depressed enough to be leaving that fine city (due to circumstances out-with my control) but that was the final nail in the coffin. Haven't been back since.
It does mean that you still have a treat in store...
I was chatting to Fred who posts here the other day after he'd just been to John's & I was saying how everyone should go to JS just for the experience if nothing else. Obviously time is against the shop now with John moving on to his new project next year so sooner rather than later would be the best time to make a visit.
It's odd that just a shop can create such strong feelings, but I suspect that it's due to the people there as much as the merchandise. The place has got a real personality.
Best -
It was genuinely strange how exhilarated I was by the place - lovely people, terrific stock. I am very sad that I probably won't be able to go back before it closes......
Gents,
this is my first post, so hello to all!
I moved to Holborn/London recently and set foot into J Simons for the first time 10 minutes ago - and bought a pair of sebago loafers right away. I can only confirm everything positive that has been written about this store and its people and recommend it wholeheartedly.
As I only learned about J Simons through this board, I wondered whether there are other stores in London of a similar kind that one should know about.
Welcome!
Sadly these days John's is it.
More news on John's new project for next year as it comes through. Hands have been shaken & John is as enthusiastic as ever. Motivated, inspired & moving forward.
Best -
Jim