KNOW THY'N ENEMY - The Mods...

locOleoN

Is that the best you got? OK.. now my TURN...
ehhhh.. Just kidding...so DONT go around kicking over Vespas on the street... ;D
Just a point of interest..

THE MODS:



A Mod was a product of working class British youth of the mid-sixties.
They portrayed an image of being stuck up, emulating the middle classes, snobbish and phoney.
The Mod boys dressed in suits, neat narrow trousers, and pointed shoes. The girls displayed a boyish image and darkened their eyes and wore their hair short to fit a unisex type of culture.

The Mods were essentially from London and the South East and were complete followers of the latest fashion. They consumed purple hearts (a mixture of amphetamine and barbiturates.) Each had to have a Lambretta GT 200 or a Vespa GS 160. These were their scooters that they rode as part of their stigma that connected them to being a Mod.




Like most phenomena, the Mod movement happened at exactly the right moment. By the time the media noticed them in 1962
a social, demographic and economic crossroads had been reached: National Service had been abolished, the economy had begun to boom, and hire purchase arrangements gave people vastly increased spending power. A better time to be a teenager will almost certainly never occur.

The Mod scene went bananas. From being a scattering of ultra hip subterranean club dwellers, Mod had quickly evolved to take on a definitive culture and structure of its own. At the top, there were the Aces, still on the cutting edge, still setting the pace, still listening to the hippest tunes. The individuals may have changed, but the attitude had not. It was perfectly possible, while grooving to obscure ska tracks in some Shepherd's Bush basement club, to bump into David Bailey, Twiggy and Mary Quant in the same evening.



The next strata were the instantly recognisable and much maligned ‘Tickets’ or ‘Numbers’. They were first noticed in
East London, when gangs of arrogant, strutting kids began to descend upon dancehalls and nightclubs, causing inevitable
confrontation. Their look generally followed where the Aces lead although with a more working class flavour. The shapeless army surplus Parka coat became iconic as well as practical.

It protected the wearers’ expensive weekend suits from the vagaries of the London climate, and was also kept the cold out
while weaving among the traffic on the regulation scooter. These scooters predominantly Italian Vespa and Lambretta models
were spectacular. Bedecked with peacock fans of wing mirrors, and decorated with numerous headlights, crash bars, whip aerials, white wall tyres and high backed seats, they were possibly the coolest thing ever to hit the tarmac.

For everyday wear, turned up Levi’s became de rigueur, often shrunk to size by being worn in the bath. Desert boots and Fred
Perry tennis shirts were enormously popular. For these kids, Mod really was a way of life. Every night, something would be
happening somewhere, the entire scene fuelled by amphetamine very much the Mod drug of choice. Although available, pot simply did not fit in with Mod ideology. Pot slowed you down. Speed kept you leaping for days. There was no competition.

This strata of the scene began to produce it’s own bands notably the Small Faces, the Yardbirds and an Acton outfit called the High Numbers, shortly to achieve fame as the Who.



For a brief while, the Who defined Mod. A string of classic singles: ‘I Can’t Explain’, ‘Anyhow Anywhere Anyway’, ‘The Kids Are Alright’ and the frankly bonkers ‘My Generation’ propelled the Mod sound into every jukebox and radio in Britain. ‘The Who are clearly a new form of crime’ wrote the Daily Telegraph,'anti social and armed against the bourgoise'. Combining the angry, spitting stance of the backstreet Mod with the Pop Art stylings of their manager leading Ace Kit Lambert, the Who are still the first thing that comes to mind whenever ‘Mod’ is mentioned. This is perhaps rather inaccurate - many Mod purists never accepted the Who.

MODS vs. ROCKERS

‘You have to be a Mod or a Rocker to mean anything’ (interview with Mod girl in the Daily Mirror, 1964)

Not everybody was a Mod. Rockers were loosely speaking, the last of the Teds, with leather and heavy motorcycles who poured scorn on the new movement. For them, Mods were weedy, effeminate snobs. Mods saw Rockers as out of touch, oafish and grubby. Mods were usually city dwellers (it was, by this time, a national phenomenon, although rooted in London), whereas Rockers tended to be more rural.

Mods held down well paid office jobs , whereas Rockers were manual workers. Musically, there was no common ground, with the Rockers clinging to Elvis, Gene Vincent et al. Rockers rebelled from without, whereas Mods rebelled from within. A Rocker looked like trouble to the uninitiated, most Mods looked like presentable if rather arrogant young chaps.

Scuffles occurred wherever territories overlapped or rival factions happened upon each other. Enterprising Mods sewed fish hooks into the backs of their lapels to shred the fingers of manhandling assailants. Weapons were often in evidence , coshes and flick knives being particularly favoured. To stray into the wrong part of town was to risk falling into very hot water indeed.



Things came to a head on the May Day Bank Holiday of 1964. Traditionally, Londoners head for the seaside resorts on Bank Holidays. 1964 was no exception. Thousands and thousands of Mods descended upon Margate, Broadstairs and Brighton with no particular lust for civil disturbance. However, an inordinately large number of Rockers had had the same holiday plans. Within a short space of time, marauding gangs of Mods and Rockers were trampling sandcastles and overturning deckchairs all along the South Coast. The worst violence was at Brighton, where the judge presiding over the cases of arrested antagonists famously labelled them ‘Sawdust Caesers’ and levied heavy fines.

The Brighton riots were later immortalised as the centrepiece of the cult film ‘Quadrophenia’. Skinheads and Hippies. The Mods were the products of a culture of constant change, and it was therefore inevitable that the scene would devour itself. By the time Bobby Moore waved the World Cup aloft in the Summer of 1966, the Mod scene was in sharp decline.

Most Mods simply drifted away, lured by the burgeoning Hippy counter culture and the first ‘Happenings’ that were taking place around this time. Hippy culture presented a passive outlook on life that was the total opposite of the Mod standpoint. The frenetic uptight-out-of-sight energy that had underpinned the Mod ethos had vanished. There was a final stratum to the old Mod culture that rejected the new order absolutely. At the lowest end of the scale both in philosophy and appearance, the ‘Hard’ Mods were rougher all round than the rest of their comrades. Scruffier, and with cropped hair, they became
the first Skinheads, keeping the original Mod music alive and retaining basic elements of the Mod look , Fred Perry sportswear and Levis - but mixing them with exaggerated working class trappings such as braces and the ubiquitous Dr Marten boot.

The Skinheads would write a colourful and controversial history of their own in the coming decades but that’s another story.

See!!.. Im not just a pretty face!!.. LOL!!! (I can cut and paste to!!..LOL http://www.freewebs.com/sohotobrighton/modhistorygallery.htm)
 
Re: KNOW THY ENEMY - The Mods...

hey, that sea front picture was taken just down the road from me, its right by the pier entrance which would be behind the buses. ;D
 
Re: KNOW THY ENEMY - The Mods...

I sold this to get my bike.

backround.jpg
 
Re: KNOW THY ENEMY - The Mods...

Interesting reads Noel. I liked the 59 history article too. Please keep them coming.
 
Re: KNOW THY ENEMY - The Mods...

oldog said:
Interesting reads Noel. I liked the 59 history article too. Please keep them coming.

Well Im glad you likey!!
 
Re: KNOW THY ENEMY - The Mods...

oldog said:
Interesting reads Noel. I liked the 59 history article too. Please keep them coming.

Yeah, have to agree this article and the 59 club one are great. Love reading about how it was back then.

Just looking at some of those scooters in the pics above, some of them have about a half dozen lights on the front.
 
Re: KNOW THY ENEMY - The Mods...

HerrDeacon said:
Yeah, have to agree this article and the 59 club one are great. Love reading about how it was back then.

Just looking at some of those scooters in the pics above, some of them have about a half dozen lights on the front.

Half dozen hey?

316491.JPG

285964.JPG


:D
 
Well, suffice it to say i dont think that thing would have any blind spots....If you change lanes into someone on that you are just an IDIOT! LOL Good god, i wonder how much that would effect handling?? Looks like an old wooden ship (Diversity??LOL) on wheels...
 
It just occured to me, I bet only two of those are used for riding...the rest are all VANITY MIRRORS...MY BAD!! LOL
 
HAHA! Or with a good tailwind, you'd get GREAT gas mileage...you could stretch some sails over the front of those.
 
When I was in university, I actually studied the Mods & Rockers in a number of courses including sociology and music history. Just to add to Noel's article, here are some things that I remember:

The term Mod is a short for Modern. South London at the time was hard working class area. The people didn't have a lot of money, as as you can imagine, and living conditions weren't the best. The Mods wanted to differentiate themselves from their own living conditions by dressing the best as they could in the highest modern fashions of the day. In a lot of ways, it was the 60's English version of current day kids from modern ghettos dressing in Dolce & Gabana, Calvin Clein, etc. In the end they wanted to give themselves hope for a better day, while giving themselves dignity.

Meanwhile ...

Music in England in the 60's was heavily influenced by America. The Beatles had just successfully invaded the US, and like all new music, bands were looking for new influences in order to make new music. What became strongly influential was turn of the century American Blues which finally made its way to the UK. Recordings of early twentieth century artists such as Ledbelly and Robert Johnson were suddenly in high demand. The influence of American Blues gave birth to a number of bands including The Who and The Rolling Stones. If you can imagine the level of rebellion that was symbolic by listening to music made by American black men in a very homogeneous England, then you can start to see its' attraction to the youth of the 60's. The same wave hit the US in the 50s but really didn't impact the UK until about a decade later.

Also heavily influential was American Culture on the UK. Movies such as "The Wild One"(1953) and "Rebel Without a Cause"(1955) became the blueprint for the UK Rockers. Thus, while the Mods were deliberately trying to be modern and new, the Rockers were looking backwards at American history. In the end, the Mods vs Rockers was just as much about conflicting cultures as much as it was about learning from the past or forgetting about the past and moving forward with a new modern sense.
 
I like cafe bikes but can't stomach Elvis or Eddie Cochran, or any rockabilly for that matter, I'd much rather listen to the Who or Yardbirds if I HAD to listen to something old......does this mean I have to add like 30 more mirrors to my bike??
 
Aw Man.. ya may as well slap 30 lights & 40 Mirrors on your vespa then!!.. LOL!! ;D


Nate said:
I like cafe bikes but can't stomach Elvis or Eddie Cochran, or any rockabilly for that matter, I'd much rather listen to the Who or Yardbirds if I HAD to listen to something old......does this mean I have to add like 30 more mirrors to my bike??
 
Thank you all! :D

I love history, and these articles are great! ;D ;D

It makes one wonder how future generations will look upon our time! It seems fairly dull by comparison. :p
 
I was talking to a scooter guy at work about the superfluous mirrors. He said that at one time, there was no law requiring a mirror on scooters. When they passed the law, mods were getting heavy fines like crazy. To stick it to the cops (and avoid unnecessary tickets) they exaggerated the mirror requirement.
 
Modern Mods:
<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/w_kIUSr7-is&hl=en"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></object>

scooters-check
latest fashion-check
 
Back
Top Bottom