Welcome to the world of the sharp-suited `faces`. The Italianistas. The scooter-riding, all-night-dancing instigators of what became, from its myriad sources, a very British phenomenon. Mod began life as the quintessential working-class movement of a newly affluent nation
- a uniquely British amalgam of American music & European fashions that mixed modern jazz with modernist design in an attempt to escape the drab conformity, snobbery & prudery of life in 1950s Britain. But what started as a popular cult became a mainstream culture, & a style became a revolution. In Mod, Richard Weight tells the story of Britain`s biggest & most influential youth cult. He charts the origins of Mod in the Soho jazz scene of the 1950s, set to the cool sounds of Charlie Parker & Miles Davis. He explores Mod`s heyday in Swinging London in the mid-60s
- to a new soundtrack courtesy of the Small Faces, the Who & the Kinks. He takes us to the Mod-Rocker riots at Margate & Brighton, & into the world of fashion & design dominated by Twiggy, Mary Quant & Terence Conran. But Mod did not end in the 1960s. Richard Weight not only brings us up to the cult`s revival in the late 70s
- played out against its own soundtrack of Quadrophenia & the Jam
- but reveals Mod to be the DNA of British youth culture, leaving its mark on glam & Northern Soul, punk & Two Tone, Britpop & rave. This is the story of Britain`s biggest & brassiest youth movement
- & of its legacy. Music, film, fashion, art, architecture & design
- nothing was untouched by the eclectic, frenetic, irresistible energy of Mod.