
SO YOU WANNA BE A GLAM ROCKER?
GLAM FASHION IN THE 70s
One
of the best things about Glam fashion was that it was always
available, and never overpriced. It had the effect of making its
superstars somehow seem more human, more approachable.
One of the most universally desired sex symbols of Glam was
Sally James, star of probably the greatest Glam kids television
show ever, Tiswas. She is our guide to the dress habits of the
great, good and cor-blimey of Glam.
"There was a great irony about Tiswas . . . it's always had
this Glam image, mainly because all the Glam artists came onto the
show. But the funny thing was that, because most of them knew full
well that they would get soaked in water, they often tended to
dress down a bit. "
"We'd get The Sweet on, for instance, and they would have
reverted to denim, probably because they didn't want us to ruin
their clothes. I didn't blame them. We ruined a lot of clothes on Tiswas. Glammed up pop stars don't look so charismatic when they
are dripping in water or covered in slime.
"But I think most of them came on because it was refreshing for
them. It was loose. They could hang about, have a laugh. I know
that all the Glam bands were very competitive in the way they
dressed. So Tiswas was a good antidote to all that. "
"They had to be up for it. Also, it was a good way for the
public to see a little beyond the image, because there was no way
they could seem distant and charismatic - Image wise, they were
naked."
"For my part, the Glam thing was casual anyway. I'd wear
tight denim jeans, a little waistcoat and, of course, the
thigh-length black leather boots. They were almost like waders
really. They don't seem a bit stylish now but I really loved them
at the time. They became a bit of a problem . . . I'd get a lot of
quite pervy letters flooding in. "
"I don't think I was allowed
to see the worst of them either. I think I was shielded from that,
but some of them were pretty bad. The boots were undeniably a Glam
item. I had one pair that I particularly liked. They came up to
mid thigh and had diamante all down the sides and really high
spiked heels. I thought they were the bees knees but I couldn't
walk in them nowadays. I would wear them at night. "
"Like a lot of people, dressing in Glam clothes meant
party clothes. They weren't fashionable. Fashionable clothes were
things like Oxford Bag trousers and Budgie coats. but Glam meant
fun clothes. things that you could wear for parties but would
never wear walking down the street. "
"I had a lot of those. I would go down to a shop called
Ace on the Kings Road, where they would sell all this incredible
stuff. Sequins everywhere. Lurex cardigans. I loved satin and
velvet. I remember one outfit, dark blue satin trousers and a
silver satin jacket. I thought that was really cool. My wardrobe
was full of dark velvet flares too. "
"One of the things about the Glam era was that the girls
always wanted to dress like men. It wasn't particularly feminine,
which is kind of ironic when you think about it. Throughout the
entire era I never owned a single skirt. Women went for a man-like
look."
"Women liked to wear black while the men experimented with
colour... so it was cross-dressing in a really light fun kind of
way. One favourite was outsize men's suits, like pinstriped
gangster suits with massive ties. All those silk jackets with the
huge Tulip collars, light green or metallic blue."
"In reality, Tiswas was anti-glam. I'd dress down
- and just
look at presenters Bob Carol-Gees and Chris Tarrant - the
scruffiest men on television. Chris wore that same patched leather
jacket throughout the entire run of Tiswas. There was one
particular interview where, for some reason, he had to look smart.
So he sent his shoes down to make-up to be cleaned. Someone picked
them up and instantly threw them in the bin. Chris went mad, and
he was shouting "they are my best shoes. What have you done
with them?" But the girls down there just thought they were
so disgusting that no-one would want to wear them.
It was seen as quite anarchic . . . to be so scruffy on television
in those days but it made people relax. It gave the thing a casual
air."
"Platform shoes or boots never figured for me",
continues Sally James. "I never wore them, my friends never
wore them. We considered them ugly and naff. They were fashionable
in a kind of street market way. You'd get them in all those little
stalls in London, on Oxford Street or in Kensington, but I just
remember everyone thinking they were stupid, or a bit juvenile.
"
"Of course if you were Gary Glitter you'd be expected to
wear them. I remember talking to him in the dressing room and he
seemed quite small and then, 10 minutes later, he came staggering
out on the set, it seemed as if he was about a foot taller.
Ridiculous for Tiswas because people were always getting pushed
over, but Gary was Gary, all decked out in that silver stuff.
Nobody ever wore that on the street."
"People tended to pick up on
bits of things from pop stars and use them in a rather more
reserved way. Like Alvin Stardust would come on and would be
wearing masses of rings. And then we'd be wearing lots of rings
too, or lots of heavy fun jewellery around the neck. Things like
that - cheap stuff. Anything would do. Things to catch the
eye."
"I've just realised . . . I almost had platforms . .
. or
shoes that were almost platforms. They weren't real platforms,
they were white wedges with a sandal top. A lot of them have been
in fashion since, but never quite the same. I love to look at
wedding albums from the era. Now they are really embarrassing,
especially for the lads with long feathery hair, huge lapels and
gigantic ties. Very funny now"
"There was the tartan too. That didn't just belong to Bay
City Rollers fans" adds James. "Tartan scarves were worn
by a lot of older people, probably because of Rod
Stewart. People
in denim and tartan everywhere. I keep coming back to denim, not
because that was my particular world, but because throughout the
Glam period, denim was simply everywhere. people often forget
that. You could Glam denim up a bit. "
"One big thing was sewing patches on, or embroidery. there
was a lot of that. I had one pair of jeans with a few daft badges
on, parrots and things, and I wore them for years and years, loved
them. People would put studs in denim too. Not just Rocker type
studs, all kinds of studs. Heart shaped studs, strawberry shaped
studs, everything. There were those bizarre patchwork denim jeans
made up from all kinds of old Levi's and cheaper denim . . . and they
would sell for immense amounts in London. they looked incredibly
scruffy too, like old tramps trousers, and people would wear them
with the white clogs with thick wooden soles that fell off if you
walked too fast. "
"And little tiny patchwork denim waistcoats, Wrangler
denim shirts. The whole ensemble. if it was winter you could even
wear denim Budgie coats over the top of all this. Budgie coats
with thick fluffy white collars. I didn't have one of those, they
were more of a mans thing I suppose, but I liked them."
"Status Quo were the Gods of denim. They always seemed to
be on Tiswas. I'm sure that Rick Parfitt would just turn up and
walk on, he was always there. I think that look was part of Glam
too . . . that whole thing about keeping your fags in the pocket of
your Levi jeans - Fags in one side, lighter in the other. Or in
the pockets of cheese-cloth shirts. I had a few of those, they
were cheap and very sexy."
"I remember sitting around the dressing room with Status
Quo, drinking bloody Liebfraumilch, which was always flowing.
Everyone felt it was really sophisticated at the time. It was just
red, white or rosé in those days wasn't it? Mateus Rosé.
Disgusting stuff but you didn't know any different in those days.
And Liebfraumilch kind of suited Status Quo's image, I think.
Unpretentious . . . the wine of the people!"
"Mike (Sally's husband) and I became very friendly with
Marc Bolan in the later years. He was the epitome of Glam.
Absolutely. No one else came close. He looked so beautiful, all
the time. I did quite a bit of modelling with him and it was
always great fun. That possibly summed the era up, in a way,
because here was Marc, all dolled up like a peacock - literally
with everything, and I'd be stood in plain denim. Like role
reversal in a way. He used to wear tons, and I mean tons, of
make-up. Took him hours to get it all on."
"It was an art form for him. But he was a really, really
nice man. Of course he was gregarious, he played that star role to
the full and no doubt he really loved himself, but underneath all
that he was actually a really nice, caring, intelligent guy. We'd
have many dinner parties with him and he's always be theorising on
great heavy subjects, pontificating on this and that. Yes, he
always had a lot to say, and maybe it was part of his showing off.
But that was the whole point of Marc, wasn't it? That was the
point of Glam. To show off."
"Marc was it. perfect, always absolutely perfect.
Actually, those tulip satin jackets were very Marc, weren't they?
Only thing is, he wore a pink feather boa as well."
"It's difficult to compartmentalise that era. It wasn't
just a question of going from wearing denims to wearing really
silly clothes - it wasn't like that at all. It segued in slowly
from the sixties psychedelic era and went right through the punk
thing and beyond really. Because the early 80s was another Glam
boom. Also, nobody wore Glam stuff all the time. You would dress
to suit the occasion."
"Black leather was very sexy and whenever I wore it I got
mistaken for Suzi Quatro, because we looked very similar. Again,
she is remembered as a Glam queen and all she ever wore was
leather trousers and a leather jacket . . . and again, tight denims.
I remember she was voted 'Rear of the Year' and, in that same daft
contest, I came fourth. So she had a better bum than me."
"Noddy Holder was always completely down to Earth. His
version of Glam was the exact opposite of Bolan's. He never
believed in this star thing. He wasn't precious. Far from it. He
didn't believe his own press or anything like that. He was just
Noddy, and for him Glam meant wearing a daft hat and a silly suit.
It didn't matter because Slade were just a really good rock band."
"Everyone knew that and the Glam thing was just an added extra. It
was just something that groups did at the time. But for Marc it
was the opposite. His Glam was more like glamour. It wasn't a joke
to Marc. That was how he really was. But Slade were funny, like
cartoons. I have a picture of Noddy on Tiswas and he's wearing a
"Freedom For Tooting" T-Shirt. That was his idea of
Glam. Oh, and platforms. Slade wore platforms more than anyone.
They were the platform kings."
"Sparks were fun too. People warned us about them. Said
that they took themselves too seriously, but they didn't. I think
that some people didn't treat it as an act. And it was an act,
with Ron Mael and the eyes. It was great, the kids in the studio
would be transfixed by those eyes. I think that today, they'd just
regard him as a complete pratt."
"One of the television Glam fashions at the time would be
the satin tour jackets. Record companies don't do this kind of
thing anymore, but we were flooded with promotional items. We'd
get dozens of tour jackets to hand out and to own the tour jacket
of your favourite band was de rigueur for a while. They'd be very
garish sometimes, bright green, scarlet. You just wouldn't wear
one nowadays. "
"It would be seen as the ultimate in naffness. I mean, you
still get tour jackets but they tend to have the band's name or
album title written in very small writing on the breast pocket or
somewhere. It's very reserved now, very tasteful, whereas back
then there would be huge letters on the back saying SWEET TOUR or
something. And if you had one you felt like you were in the
business, like you were a bit special. There was that kind of
naiveté that has gone".
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