Beatniks
"Don't fret cat, its all bells. We got no bread baby,
but that's not our bag anyway. So dig the crazy scene and don't be
such a drag".
The beats checked out of the idyllic life promised by 1950's
suburbia, making their home in the smoky jazz clubs of the urban
utopia. They were the true rebels of conformity and bourgeois
beliefs, rejecting the conventional lifestyle of middle-America
for the hip, beaten down way of life.
They talked different, looked different, and were strange cats
compared to everybody else. Rock & Roll rebellion was one
thing, but this this far-out scene was unlike anything Mum and Dad
had seen before.
Most beats were not military material, neither were they
conformists ready to seek out the corporate world. They were
free-thinkers like founders Allen
Ginsberg, William S. Bourroughs
and Jack Kerouac, all friends and writers.
Beats submerged themselves in life, philosophy, poetry, art,
music, politics and the road. Beat godfather Jack Kerouac wrote
about their wanderings in the quintessential beat bible On the
Road, and jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie contributed bebop
slang as well as his trademark dark shades and beret.
Beats rejected the greaser style of T-shirt and jeans, as well
as the square style of poodle skirts and
saddle shoes. Instead,
the boys wore sweat shirts and baggy chinos with leather huarache
sandals, while the ladies wore black leotards and straight skirts
with sandals or ballet slippers.
Men let their hair grow longer, while women cut theirs short in
the gamine or urchin cut. Berets topped everyone's crown, and
silver jewellery from the Native American culture proved their
sympathy for social causes. The beats' dark fashions echoed the
burdened psychological state they lived in. Black became
synonymous with chic, and angst was the best accessory.
The beat look was a non-conformist trend (how's that for an
oxymoron?), but that didn't stop TV and movies from homing in on
the style. Maynard G. Krebs' beatnik style from The Many Loves of
Dobie Gillis was beat-ish, featuring worn-in sweatshirt, sloppy
chinos, and goatee, while Audrey Hepburn's hepcat hipness in Funny
Face was unforgettable: gamine haircut, black leotard and Capri
leggings with ballerina flats.
Ernest Hemingway had dubbed post-WWI the Lost Generation, while
this new league of literary loners of post-WWII became known as
the Beat Generation.
While they were beat, they certainly were not
lost, and their riff foreshadowed the hippie promise of universal
acceptance and brotherly love to come in the 60s. They jived to
the sound of the bongos, and it was heavy, man. Dig.
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