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Teddy Boys: New Suits & New SongsUp until the late Forties teenagers would commonly be written ‘teen-agers’ in the press, with the inverted commas implying that their existence was refutable or just fantasy. By the Fifties though the reality of teenagers was indisputable. Musical matters though really took off with the arrival of Rock’n’Roll. Swing died out with the wartime GI, and from then until the mid-Fifties there were merely vocalists - sardonically labelled crooners - singing whimsical slow ballads that were quite impossible to dance to. The authorities frigidly enforced social restraint in this period. Songs that were obviously harmless found themselves banned by the BBC. The theme to the acclaimed film The Man With The Golden Arm was proscribed - although the film was concerned with heroin addiction, the song itself was a jazz instrumental; ‘I Want You To Be My Baby’ was not allowed to be broadcast because of the line ‘come upstairs and have some loving’; while Johnnie Ray’s 1954 hit, ‘Such A Night’, was excluded from the playlist because of grunts in the chorus! Unsurprisingly, when Rock’n’Roll hit this milieu it provoked a strong reaction. The music itself was a myriad of styles fused together, as described by American DJ Alan Freed:
The dam broke at the beginning of 1955 with Bill Haley & The Comets launching into the singles top spot with ‘Rock Around The Clock’. The single would go on to sell one million copies in the UK alone and in Haley’s wake came Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Holly, Gene Vincent and a certain twenty year old from Memphis, Tennessee called Elvis Presley. In their home country of America, the reaction was severe: in Alabama
the spokesman for the White Citizens Council was quoted as saying,
In Britain the reaction to Bill Haley was also startling. The film Rock Around the Clock was the first introduction of this particular popular style to thousands of teenagers, and they filled up the auditoriums for show after show. At certain places there were reports of rampaging teenagers wrecking the cinemas, and which in turn prompted a newspaper frenzy whose sensationalism was out of proportion to the violence that had occurred. Various local authorities responded by banning the film altogether. Sir Malcolm Sargent, the darling of the Home Counties and Prom conductor said the music was,
If Sargent was bemused by its appeal, then its attraction to the young
can be summed up in John Lennon’s famous quip: With the new reality came the Teddy Boys, or Teds. Their dress style was both exotic and original. Their clothing was based around the long Edwardian jacket and from which came the term ‘Ted’, that being the diminutive of Edward. They wore narrow ties or more commonly just a shoestring under their collars, their trousers were drainpipes and for shoes they wore Brothel-Creepers with cork soles. Their hair was always greased and shaped into various styles such as the Silver-Dollar, the Square-Neck and the most outlandish of them all, the Ducks Arse, which was a quiff so large it resembled a gigantic wave riding upon their heads. For those old enough sideburns were regulation, while a hat, if worn, would be the striped Ratter, or Cheesecutter cap. They were young, street wise, and working-class, and for a couple of years at the centre of infamy and public fear. This is Rock'n'Roll: Jerry Lee Lewis playing Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On in 1957 The Teddy Boys in Romford made their first appearance in 1954. In May of that year Chief Inspector Victor Cook, head of Romford C.I.D., said the following about their presence:
In the next edition of the local paper the Teds responded to this declaration of war:
A Romford Times reporter went out to meet the Teds in their local cafe:
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