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  1. #26
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    Some eye candy...


  2. #27
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    Last edited by Chittychangchang; 26-03-2014 at 05:21 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chittychangchang View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Kurgen View Post
    So, you old bastards, what was better, Lambretta or Vespa?
    There's a few younger second and third generation mods on here although granted maybe not old but most probally b'stards.

    Lambretta is far cooler than the Vespa!
    The Vespa is reliable and the lambretta prone to breaking down and knackering up one's knees pushing it home(not for the old guys).
    Must of missed all of that then? Didn't see many scooter's on the road after the early seventies and the mods gave way to the suede-heads with their Crombies who faded into the skinheads with their braces with half-mast jeans and Doc Martens. The rocker's and biker's have managed to keep going though but I don't see much evidence of the mods still in existence.

  4. #29
    Thailand Expat VocalNeal's Avatar
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    Problem is with the sixties is that if you can remember it you weren't there

  5. #30
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    Hmmm, trying hard to make sense of that one?????? Sorry but you've lost me.

  6. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by jamiejambos View Post
    Hmmm, trying hard to make sense of that one?????? Sorry but you've lost me.
    I think the saying is attributable to Robin Williams.

  7. #32
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    It s still got me Fvcked whoever its attributable to.

  8. #33
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    It implies that if you claim to have been there and you can recall it, then you werent really there because everyone was off their heads on drugs

  9. #34
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    Really, So I lived through the sixties without being there because every bugger was off their heads on drugs.....So where were they and were was I?

  10. #35
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    You were probably at sea at the time and missed it

  11. #36
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    No I wasn't.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kurgen
    So, you old bastards, what was better, Lambretta or Vespa?
    Mine was a lovely Orange Lambretta, not sure of the cc. as I only wazzed it around the estate and mostly with the sideys taken off so they could all see how cool I was.
    That was in 2 dogs mate.

  13. #38
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    Thailand Expat VocalNeal's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jamiejambos View Post
    Really, So I lived through the sixties without being there because every bugger was off their heads on drugs.....So where were they and were was I?
    Not sure in which order but I think you nead to look up wit, sarcasm and irony but it is often hard to tell them apart.

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    ^ Arthur Francis scooters on the way to Scarboro.
    There scoots where the creme de la creme!
    Mate of mine bought a new GP200 on th E plate back in the late 80's.
    Is that you in the pic mate?

  17. #42
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    Quote Originally Posted by VocalNeal View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by jamiejambos View Post
    Really, So I lived through the sixties without being there because every bugger was off their heads on drugs.....So where were they and were was I?
    Not sure in which order but I think you nead to look up wit, sarcasm and irony but it is often hard to tell them apart.
    Don't need to look anything up mate as I can definitely define a knobend when I read one.......Now there's a bit of wit, sarcasm and irony in what ever order you'd
    like to put it smartarse.

  18. #43
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    Quote Originally Posted by VocalNeal View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by jamiejambos View Post
    Really, So I lived through the sixties without being there because every bugger was off their heads on drugs.....So where were they and were was I?
    Not sure in which order but I think you nead to look up wit, sarcasm and irony but it is often hard to tell them apart.
    Jamie - sometimes it is better to shut your mouth and be thought a fool, rather than open your mouth and remove all doubt!

    Btw everyone knows the skinheads preceded the suedeheads.

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    ^
    Its a great pity you can't keep your big mouth shut then isn't it?

  20. #45
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    Turn up the volume, sit back and relax for 15 mins of Modtastic musical anthems....enjoy......




    CCC

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    Interview with Ivor

    An Interview with Twisted Wheel Mod Club Proprietor Ivor Abadi

    March 9th, 2010

    Ivor Abadi, founder of The Twisted Wheel, talks about the Manchester club’s role in the birth of the British northern soul music-and-dance movement during the 1960s. Memorabilia from the club and information about its history can be found at thetwistedwheel.com.

    Northern soul is basically American soul music that became the popular soul music of Northern England. The Twisted Wheel opened in 1963 in Manchester, and what might be termed “soul music” probably started to come around about the same time. It wasn’t actually called northern soul in the early ’60s, but that’s really the start of it.

    Betty Everett's first hit was "You're No Good" in 1964. This 45 is from 1970.
    Betty Everett's first hit was "You're No Good" in 1964. This 45 is from 1970.

    The inspiration for the club was that young people needed a place to meet, listen to music, and dance. There were coffee bars in England at that time where people would meet, and they had music but no dancing. So we called our place a coffee dance club because there was no alcohol. We predominantly attracted a young crowd, say 16 to 22, though some were as old as 30.

    We were five brothers. My older brother Jack came back to England in ’62 after being in the States and the Philippines. We found a place in the center of Manchester and decided on wheels as the theme. That involved collecting all kinds of wheels—from cartwheels to bicycle wheels. We even had a ship’s wheel from Paris. That formed the club’s décor. It was just brick walls painted black, white, and red in a basement, with lots of little, cavernous rooms. It really had a character all its own.

    We had two distinct sessions at the club: the ordinary session—four nights a week on Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, when it would be open from 7:30 p.m. until midnight—and then the all-night session on Saturday, which drew people from a much wider area. They’d come from 100 miles away. This is the scene that ultimately developed into what we now call northern soul.

    I think we were at the right place at the right time when we opened because the Beatles had just started to hit. This was the baby-boom generation—people born in 1946, ‘47. There were a lot of young people, and they wanted something different.

    Musically, we started with jazz and blues, which slowly became rhythm and blues, which became soul music, and then, eventually, northern soul. We didn’t want to be as commercial as everybody else. So we were playing different music even in the early days. It wasn’t pop-based.

    Collectors Weekly: Who coined the term northern soul?

    Abadi: Dave Godin, the editor of “Blues and Soul” magazine in London, visited The Twisted Wheel and heard the soul music we were playing at an all-night session. He wrote an article in which I think he said, “This is northern soul.” In other words, it wasn’t what they were playing in the south of England.

    In London they had a lot of jazz clubs, and even in the late ’60s they weren’t listening to the faster dance music that inspired the unconventional dancing at The Twisted Wheel. There were no other clubs at the time where people were dancing like this.

    Collectors Weekly: Was the club popular right away?

    Abadi: Absolutely. I knew we wanted to have nonstop music. I didn’t want interruptions from the DJs, who always wanted to talk. I wanted musical continuity. You have two turntables, and when one record is finishing, you blend it into the next one. We always wanted that. It was like magic, and we’re not quite sure how that happened, but it was a big hit from the very beginning.

    The club’s first location was in the center of Manchester, where we stayed from January 1963 until September 1965. When the lease was up we moved across town and did business out of our second location from September ‘65 until about January ‘71.

    Collectors Weekly: What were the other defining elements of northern soul besides music and dancing?

    Abadi: I think the clothes. They were very smart and different. The girls used to wear duffle coats, which were very popular. And there was a period when they wore long gloves, which were very trendy and fashionable. The style of the people who came to the club was a bit exaggerated and unconventional.

    They would also make their own badges uniting themselves to each other. We sell badges now as memorabilia, but we didn’t have them then. They would come in with bags and have a change of clothes and shoes because it was an all-night session. The people who came to the club created its atmosphere. I think our very friendly atmosphere and the dancing were the most important things to our customers.

    Collectors Weekly: What sorts of collectible memorabilia from The Twisted Wheel are popular?

    Abadi: The original membership cards are the most coveted. They’re available and not expensive. I still have a huge collection of different membership cards from the ’60s—they go for about 5 pounds each. Original leaflets and posters are also very collectible. We did have pens with the club name on the side, just cheap pens. Nowadays we’ve also got new memorabilia—T-shirts, key fobs, badges, a few other bits and pieces—but all the original wheels that decorated the club are certainly collector’s items.

    Collectors Weekly: Can you describe a typical all-nighter?

    "Twine Time" by Alvin Cash & the Crawlers was an immediate hit on the northern soul circuit.
    "Twine Time" by Alvin Cash & the Crawlers was an immediate hit on the northern soul circuit

    Abadi: There would always be a queue outside because we’d have to empty the club from the early session. We’d let them in usually about midnight. They’d pay their money, take off their coats, and there’d be a coffee bar on the ground floor area. They’d meet up there, hoping to run into friends from all over the place, and they’d have a coffee. Then they’d take their bags to the clubroom, and maybe at that stage they might start exchanging records, which was a popular thing to do at the club.

    We had three different rooms in those days, including two big rooms downstairs where records were playing. A live band would play in one area, but we’d have records playing in another. If the group was very popular, then we’d feed the sound all the way around the club.

    The atmosphere was really charged, with lots of people dancing. We never had any flashing lights in the club. The lighting was situated behind the wheels, so some of the light came through bicycle spokes. It was all hidden lighting.

    We were very strict about who we let into the club. We only wanted nice people. We never had any trouble, and the young people appreciated that. They came from all walks of life, and they all got on, which was strange. Usually people were cliquish and stuck to their own sort. But here they enjoyed something in common.

    Collectors Weekly: And there was no alcohol, right?

    Abadi: None at all. That was becoming very unusual as we got to the late ’60s. Other clubs that served could only stay open until 2:00 a.m. But we were able to stay open all night because we didn’t have alcohol.

    When we first started doing all-night sessions, we used to close at about 3:00 or 4:00 in the morning. But because a lot of people came on public transport, they had nowhere to go until their public transport started again. So the local police came to us and asked us if we’d stay open a little later so that people weren’t wandering the streets. The police weren’t pleased that people were coming from other towns and cities.

    We got blamed for everything that happened because we attracted all the people. And of course there was a little pep-pill scene in the ’60s—amphetamines—and obviously some of them took pills, but not everybody. We got blamed for something that was happening all over the place, including schools and universities. Suddenly the pep-pill scene was portrayed as something we’d created, but that’s another story.

    Collectors Weekly: Who were some of the best-known northern soul DJs, and what did they play?

    Abadi: Brian Rae was one, and he’s still playing northern soul music today. Roger Eagle worked with us, but he’s passed away. If anything, he was a little too way out. He was more interested in the purity of the music and was happy for everybody just to sit and listen. But that’s not what the crowd wanted, or what we wanted, for that matter. Brian Phillips was another great DJ. I don’t know where they all are today. Hopefully most of them are still alive.

    Records on the Tamla Motown label were among the most played 45s at The Twisted Wheel.
    Records on the Tamla Motown label were among the most played 45s at The Twisted Wheel.

    The records they played came predominately from the States, in particular Chicago, New Orleans, and Detroit. They were imported by ship or plane. Of course these importers got to know us, and they sent records directly to the club, so we’d get all the new releases.

    We also got a lot of records from the U.S. Air Force bases in England. There was one not too far away. The DJs used to communicate with airmen, and we would get the music they were playing, some of which became northern soul. Manchester also had Jamaican music shops. So we had this mix of Jamaican-style music, soul, and blues to produce a new overall sound.

    Northern soul music is typically fast and very danceable. The dancing itself is also fast. The young people, especially the boys, would do acrobatic-type dancing, so they’d need a lot of space to do it. Sometimes one or two of the boys would take over the whole dance floor to the detriment of other people dancing. They wouldn’t quite be doing somersaults, but you’d see them spin around on the floor.

    I think the popularity of the records depended more on the sound and the tune. As long as the beat was there and it was danceable, it didn’t really matter who the artist was. You could tell straight away if a song was a hit: You’d put on a record and watch the dance floor fill up, or vice versa.

    Generally an artist would only have one popular northern soul record. There weren’t too many artists with two or three. A few examples off the top of my head—these are all American artists—are Bobby Sheen, who made a record called “Dr. Love.” The Invitations had “What’s Wrong With Me Baby.” Other popular tunes were “There’s Nothing Else to Say Baby” by The Incredibles and “A Lil Lovin’ Sometimes” by Alexander Patten. They were mainly Motown-based artists on the Tamla Motown label.

    Collectors Weekly: Were the records 45s or LPs?

    Abadi: Mostly 45s, the singles. But we had LPs for very popular artists, and we also played 10-inch records. We actually had our whole record collection stolen when we first opened at the second venue in 1965. We marked our records by punching a hole in the center label of the 45. When they were stolen, we knew they’d end up in other clubs. But even when we went down to the other clubs and found our records with the little hole punched in the middle, the police said, “It’s circumstantial. It doesn’t prove anything.”

    Fortunately, we didn’t have to start from scratch because that’s when the DJs started to bring in their own records. Obviously we built our own collection alongside theirs.

    Collectors Weekly: How big was The Twisted Wheel’s record collection?

    Abadi: We had maybe 5,000 records prior to them being stolen. We probably bought 50 records a week, but if the records were widely available in the shops, then it wasn’t what we were looking for because our clientele was looking for something different. The artists we played were on labels like Groovesville out of Detroit. There were also New York labels like Scepter and Wand, all the major American labels (Capitol, ABC, Columbia), and obviously the Motown record labels.

    The Twisted Wheel would punch a small hole in its 45s, as seen in this single by The Sharpees.
    The Twisted Wheel would punch a small hole in its 45s, as seen in this single by The Sharpees.

    Although it was U.S. soul music, the records were usually not that well known in the States. I think when we were importing records our suppliers didn’t realize the discs they were sending us were such hot properties in England. From our point of view, it was simply cheaper to import the records from the States than to buy them from retailers in the U.K.

    We also played a lot of music that wouldn’t be considered northern soul, such as records by Ritchie Barrett, who did “Some Other Guy.” We played Chuck Berry, Bobby Bland, and Bo Diddley. His records were very popular, even though they were pure R&B, because the music was fairly fast. We played Booker T and the MGs, James Brown, Alvin Cash, the Castaways, the Toasters, Fats Domino, the Impressions, and Poison Ivy. “Shake” by Sam Cooke was a popular number.

    There were a lot of popular English acts as well, including Cyril Davies’ R&B All Stars, the Spencer Davis Group, the Dominoes, the Kinks, and Betty Everett. There are so many: Doris Troy, Sugar Pie DeSanto, Sonny Boy Williamson, Gene Chandler, Chubby Checker. Arthur Conley’s popular song was “Sweet Soul Music,” Don Covay’s was “See-Saw.”

    We brought over a lot of acts from the States for two- or three-week tours. Every Friday and Saturday night we’d have a group on. We had to have English groups because there weren’t always American groups around. Even though we opened in January of ‘63, didn’t host any American groups until probably September or October when we started the all-night sessions.

    Frequently, we’d book the bands we’d brought over into other clubs. We had Fontella Bass, Bob and Earl (their hit was “Harlem Shuffle”), Alvin Cash & the Crawlers.

    The marvelous thing about the American groups as opposed to the early English groups is that when they performed live they all sounded exactly like their records. But three groups stood out by a mile: Jr. Walker and the All Stars, the original Drifters, and the Ike and Tina Turner revue, which had The Ikettes, who were absolutely fantastic on stage.

    Collectors Weekly: Over the years, did your club remain popular?

    Abadi: No question about it. We still captured they crowd even when new clubs started running competing all-night sessions. We had the atmosphere. I’m not saying that we weren’t affected from time to time, but by and large the people stayed with us. Toward ‘69 or ‘70 it got a little more difficult because we didn’t have an alcohol license and everyone else was getting them. Things perhaps waned slightly at the end, but we still had a very good following, and we were still bringing American groups over.

    Collectors Weekly: Why did you close the club in 1971?

    The instrumental "Green Onions" by Booker T. & the M.G.s was a huge hit in northern soul clubs.
    The instrumental "Green Onions" by Booker T. & the M.G.s was a huge hit in northern soul clubs.

    Abadi: It’s ironic. The police didn’t want us to have an alcohol license because they didn’t want us to have all-night sessions. They were worried about the potential mix of alcohol and pills, which was nonsense, really, because we probably would’ve ceased the all-night sessions if we’d been granted a license.

    We got turned down every time we applied for a license. So we carried on with the all-night sessions, and they continued to be popular, much to the annoyance of the authorities.

    Finally, in 1971 we got an alcohol license. We closed The Twisted Wheel and opened a new club on the same premises called Placemate 7, which was a completely different club with a different crowd. It was a commercial decision. By this time there were other clubs playing northern soul, although none were as popular as The Twisted Wheel. It was time to do something different. I suppose Wigan Casino became the club that took northern soul into the next dimension.

    Collectors Weekly: Is the northern soul scene still going strong?

    Abadi: It’s very big now. A lot of people have little northern-soul gatherings. Today, northern soul can be found almost anywhere in the U.K. It has stuck as a type of music.

    CCC

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