Tuesday 14 October 2014

bearded tits

I can't help about the shape I'm in,
I can't sing, I ain't pretty and my legs are thin.
But don't ask me what I think of you
I might not give you the answer that you want me too.

Oh well, indeed.

About forty one years ago I started growing a beard. It was a bit scrappy and probably didn't look too good. A friend's dad was a bank manager and took the piss out of me relentlessly - evidently I looked like a "Billy goat". I guess nearly half a century ago bank managers knew what was acceptable in respectable life whereas I'm expecting to meet a bank manager with facial tattoos and piercings any day now. I just had a small chin and felt a beard made me look a bit older and less immature.

Beards are very much in vogue nowadays, evidently. Comments about them and how awful they look seem to crop up regularly. I must admit that I still have a beard - as always, it's more of a goatee when I haven't taken it back to a five o'clock shadow - and am used to it. To me it's much like having a glass eye or a monobrow or some other vaguely unusual feature that people get used to you sporting. Like Owen Wilson's nose. But, ultimately, it's a choice.

Recently I have noticed that some of the comments made about younger men sporting facial hair have been quite vitriolic. I have, I must admit, noticed that large beards seem quite popular. The Amish look seems very popular amongst certain types. In the early Summer when I was in London a few times, particularly around Soho, I did have a slight flashback to Jerusalem in the late seventies. There were a lot of large beards - maybe in this current climate I should call it the 'Bob Hite' look. Mr Hite was the large gentleman who sang Going Up the Country with Canned Heat. And then during the Summer New York seemed awash with young men who certainly favoured an Amish look. The ones around Philadelphia were Amish so they don't count here.

When we got back to Blighty in late August beards became a major talking point. In fact, it was the look itself and the young men that wear them that became a major talking point. The newspapers started to run articles about them: the Independent and the Guardian particularly. Evidently - and it was news to me, these chaps are called "Hipsters". I always thought that was a style of trousers but I've been known to be wrong before. There is even a Wikihow on how to become a Hipster, should you so wish. Unfortunately, the opening paragraph sounds like myself and many friends but none of us would want to be "Hipsters" I'm sure.

One thing that I have learnt from these articles is that Williamsburg N.Y. is the "Hipster capital of the World" - would that be the Williamsburg N.Y. that we wandered about in on a very hot day in August? The very Williamsburg that I mentioned in my last post (cf Earwax Records)? Well I must admit to not seeing very many young men with large beards who evidently smell a lot. However, we did go into a clothes shop that had some very nice - and very expensive - clothes in. All made in the USA evidently. Now I think about it the clothes in there were aimed at a particular audience and, other than possibly the softest denim shirt I have ever felt, were not to my taste. Unlike the Bedford Cheese Shop which was definitely to my taste. A lovely place which we returned to  on the way home. The Crottin from California and the Juliana from Indiana cheeses were gorgeous. . .

Where was I? Oh yes, young hipster types with beards. It seems that one of the biggest problems is that the movement is difficult to market so the media has taken against them and decided to pour its opprobrium upon them. I'm sure that must be the reason. Or, as the Boots and Gloves video above  suggests perhaps they are just a natural enemy for all who see themselves as 'normal'. Evidently many of these Hipsters are rather wealthy which is another thing to hold against them, of course.

Well I don't really know but it must be near the end of Hipster-dom now that even Roy Keane has started sporting  a full Yusef- call-me-Cat set of facial fungus. I may not know much about what's hip but I do understand how to quickly kill off a youth movement. And as that older Hipster from another time siad:

Because something's happening here
But you don't know what it is,
Do you, Mr Jones?

Since posting this I watched the short film about the aforementioned Mr Stevens who definitely looks like the stereotypical Hipster in all but age - big beard, hat, sunglasses. However, it's a nice film that features the other former Island Record British Muslim musician of this parish. Well worth a view.

6 comments:

Zouk Delors said...

Haha! I remember that scraggy beard!

You missed the chance to use the word "pogonophobia" - http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01yld7h

Hipsters:

1) When I was about 15, I nagged my mum to buy me a pair of hipsters. They were brown with a loud check and, not feeling that "hip" once I'd got them, pretty much never wore them.

2)From a man whose feelings about Hipsters could be summed up in a single word you've never heard of heard of:

http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2014/09/will-self-awful-cult-talentless-hipster-has-taken-over

3)Audi alterem partem* (Keep your cardigan on, Will!):

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/sep/17/will-self-disdain-hipsters-tired

*Not a German car parts dealer but a legal maxim: "Hear the other side".

Dave Leeke said...

Hi Zouk,

Yes, it certainly was 'scraggy' although I probably thought it rather fetching at the time! The HIGNFY clip is brilliant - thanks for that.

1) I had a similar experience with a check jacket my parents made me wear until Jimmy Ratty took the piss mercilessly telling me how "hip" it looked. Even then ay the tender age of about 10 my fear of looking trendy kicked in. A waste of money which I guess my parents could ill afford somewhere about 1966.

2) I had heard of the Will Self rant but hadn't bothered to read it until now. I presume he wasn't allowed to use that one on Sunday mornings on Radio 4.

3) Castigat ridendo mores, I suppose.

But wise words all the same.

Dave

Brendini said...

It seems, then, that we were Hipsters devant la jour.

Dave Leeke said...

Indeed we were, Brendan, indeed we were.

Unfortunately, I like craft beers and sourdough bread and still tend to wear quite skinny jeans (being a 10 stone weakling).

Ah well, they'll all go away eventually. Que sera sera etc etc.

Hope your knee's okay, old chap.

Martyn Cornell said...

Frankly you can't be a craft beer brewer unless you have a craft beard

http://www.craftbeer.com/news/craftbeer-com-news/best-beards-of-craft-beer-finals

Dave Leeke said...

That last one looks like he's swallowed a badger.

So do women craft beer brewers have to have beers as well? Or is it like "Life of Brian"?