Groovy old men

skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
edited November 2008 in Strut Central
Something for your lunchtime reading, from the Independent in July.b, 21b, 21/font1
Quote:/font1h, 21b, 21Groovy old men: The rise of the silver swingersb, 21b, 21Forget the shed and slippers ??? today's men of a certain age are more at home at a Guillemots gig or in aBond Street boutique. John Walsh keeps pace with the generation that time can't touchb, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21You can see him sitting in one of the massage chairs in Toni & Guy, the trendy and expensive hairdressers, waiting to have his silver locks layered and his straggly eyebrows trimmed. He should, by rights, patronise a barber more appropriate to his age ??? say, Trumper of Curzon Street ??? but the girls in Toni & Guy make an agreeable fuss around him, and the vibrating chair does wonders for the chronic ache in his spine.b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21You can see him at the Latitude Festival with his teenage family and his 36-year-old second wife, in her yellow Hunter gumboots and Comme des Gar??ons jacket. They wouldn't dream of missing Latitude; so much more civilised than Glastonbury, and you can see Bill Bailey and Hanif Kureishi rather than listen to guitar bands all day. He has, after all, been listening to guitars since he was 12 (he watched The Rolling Stones and The Beatles on the first-ever Top of the Pops in 1964) and has played several versions of the instrument since he was 16. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21You can see him dropping off his seven-year-old son at day-school in Highgate. The young school-run mothers look at his mass of crow's-feet, his close-cropped white hair, his zip-fronted Reiss jacket with epaulettes, Banana Republic stone chinos and Oliver Sweeney brogues and think: this guy is Orlando's grandfather, isn't he? b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21You can see him at the Holmes Place gymnasium wearing a T-shirt and Fat Face surfer shorts, pounding along on the running machine with his eyes shut, iPod wires trailing from his ears. His face is taut with concentration. He could be a well-preserved 40. Only the fact that his T-shirt bears the legend "Emerson, Lake & Palmer 1974" gives away the fact that he is, in fact, 60. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21He objects to being on a mailing list that sends him impertinent correspondence about retirement benefits. He has no plans to retire, ever, thank you very much. Although if he did, it would leave him more time for playing Guitar Hero 3 on his PlayStation and thrashing his son by being note-perfect on "Smack My Bitch Up". He really really hates it when some well-meaning youth offers him a seat on the 9.03pm to Victoria. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21He is, in short, one of the Groovy Old Men, an urban phenomenon that's been making its presence apparent since the turn of the millennium and now stretches across all breeds and types of hombre. Age-wise, the younger GOM are in their mid-to-late fifties (think Gabriel Byrne or Trevor Eve), they flourish in their early sixties (think Bryan Ferry and Sir Paul Smith), they become terribly distinguished in their mid-seventies (think Terence Conran and Peter Blake), and can still be found cutting a dash in their eighties (think Sir David Attenborough.) Beyond that, things get a little problematic, because of the awkward manifestations of decrepitude, and they start to disappear from view, their life's work complete. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21They are cool, soign??, well groomed, well dressed. They knew about The Last Shadow Puppets before their children had heard of them, and pulled strings to get tickets to The Dark Knight at the IMAX. They worry about their health, and the environment, but not to a boring degree. They ride a Norton motorbike. They're very hard to pin down, age-wise. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21The most visible Groovy Old Men may be rock and film stars, writers and public intellectuals, but they're by no means all media chatterers. They can be Paul, the chap who rewires your kitchen. Paul wears tight black jeans (at 59, he's very proud of his 34-inch waist) and has installed a thunderous 50-inch home cinema in his new, post-divorce, Southwark flat, confident that a blast of the knife-fight scene from V for Vendetta will impress lady callers enough for them to ignore the evidence of age in his strangely ochrous teeth. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21Whoever he is, the Groovy Old Man is hellishly busy. At his age, he's less in mortgage hell than his younger associates. He has more disposable income, and he disposes of it with abandon. His favourite clothes are black drape jackets by Versace, and coloured shirts by Etro. He can be found hovering in the basement at Liberty, especially at sale-time. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21Driven by impetuous desires, he might ring Apsley, the cut-price dandy's favourite tailor in Pall Mall, to ask them to make him a suit like the midnight-blue chalk-stripe worn by Rafa Nadal's father during the Wimbledon final. He is the classic "??50 man" who thinks nothing of spending that sum on CDs and DVDs in a Saturday trip to HMV. (He aches for a box set of Mad Men Series 1.) b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21A man in thrall to visual and aural culture, an early adopter of fancy technology, he still finds the odd evening to read a well-reviewed new novel (he's currently struggling a little with Joseph O'Neill's Netherland.) But magazines bulk larger in his life. Though he doesn't spend half the year by a pool, he takes Cond?? Nast Traveller to read about scuba-diving in the Maldives and camel-trekking in Zanzibar. He cannot resist the sexy gadgetry on display in T3 magazine. And he is a devoted fan of The Word. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21But the ageing groover has had one thing on his side in the last decade: the kids don't mock him any more for liking rock music, or wearing Carhartt jeans or even playing a Fender Stratocaster. He has been blessed by the erosion of the generation gap: he is allowed to play Interpol or Beirut on the car hi-fi, just as his teenage children can rediscover Led Zeppelin. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21Hepworth finds technology to be the great age-leveller. "One of the reasons older men have proved so influential in music in the last 10 years is that, whereas the word used to be on the street, it's now travelling digitally, and a middle-aged man with full access to communication technology can know as much, if not more, than his kids. The early adopters of the iPod were blokes of 40 and over. It trickled down to the younger generation a lot later. Wherever there's a cool toy, there's a middle-aged man trying to devise a reason why he needs it." b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21In the meantime, here come the Groovy Old Men, in their ??120 Paul Smith shirts, their huge, converted warehouse apartments in Bermondsey, their iPods full of The Fratellis and Bloc Party alongside Springsteen and Dylan, their Gillette clippers for disposing of nasal and aural hair, their MySpace entries, their discreet trips to the chemist for Viagra, Cialis and "vitamin supplements," their insouciance before the raised eyebrows of women and the alarm of their offspring. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21The Groovy Old Men started out as the children of post-war rock'n'roll, growing up in the Forties, Fifties and Sixties. They're probably the most fortunate generation in history. Lucky to have missed the war, most of them also missed rationing, national service and austerity. But they witnessed the initial stirrings of rock music ??? Elvis, Bill Haley, Cliff, Buddy ??? the benefits of the Pill, the apotheosis of the teenager, the rise of satire, the counterculture, the expansion of screen-based culture into the global village, the first wave of computers... No wonder Groovy Young Men turned out the way they did. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21Their early role models are still pushing their luck. Mick Jagger, the Chanticleer of rock for 45 years, is an astonishing 65 this Saturday. It's a quarter-century since he memorably said: "I don't know of any rule that says you can't be 40 and stay up all night." Leonard Cohen, the gravelly bard of love and enlightenment,
is the most lionised figure of the musical year, making young women tremble at his 73-year-old baritone. Neil Young, 63, knocked the crowd dead at the Hop Farm festival (my 16-year-old son said it was the best gig he'd ever attended) and has directed a documentary of his old pals/adversaries Crosby, Stills and Nash touring with him, playing songs from his Living with War album. Neil Diamond, Brian Wilson and Lou Reed came over to reassure British fans that they were capable of standing up unaided, and of singing like angels without seeming in any imminent danger of joining the Heavenly throng. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21This summer has brought a rash of GOM misbehaviour. Ronnie Wood, 61, legged it to Ireland with a 19-year-old Russian cocktail waitress, until hauled home by his wife and son. John Cleese, 68, celebrated his ruinously expensive third divorce by stepping out with a blonde American dame of 34 (called Smiley), and Salman Rushdie, a world-class novelist seemingly afflicted with chronic satyriasis, got his 60-year-old arm around the waist of a beautiful twentysomething black writer called Aita. b, 21b, 21b, 21 b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21One sign that the Groovy Old Men are winning the ageism war will be when men over 40 are seen in advertisements for objects of desire. Elsewhere in Europe, they're ahead of us: in Italy, Baldessarini perfume per uomo is marketed using the image of a suave Lothario ??? silver hair slicked back, silver chin-beard, cruel blue eyes ??? who will clearly never see 60 again but has a private jet, a lissom girlfriend and, evidently, a hell of a scent. b, 21b, 21b, 21b, 21h, 21
b, 21b, 21 Who's a groovy old man? b, 21Charlie Watts gets the nod, but not Sir Mick, Bill, or Keef, and certainly not Ronnie Wood. Bowie, yes.[/b]

  Comments


  • magpaulmagpaul 1,314 Posts
    b, 2160 and getting your haircut at Toni & Guy. damn. b, 21b, 21If you've witnessed the ages of rock first-hand, there really is no excuse to have the Fratellis on your iPod.

  • The story kinda contradicts itself. b, 21b, 21Yeah, it's trying to stress that he's 60 and could pass for 40, yet there's that bit about his son's teachers thinking he's a grandfather??

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    All the real heads on this board will, to some extent, become groovy old men.b, 21Hell, some already are.b, 21b, 21/font1
    Quote:/font1h, 21b, 21I just discovered laserwolf is old as hellb, 21Published July 1, 2007 Uncategorized b, 21b, 21Soulstrut is crawling with bridge club ballers like this poor fellow and that weezing ruin of a man rockaedlic. These guys may have been the shit back in the day; cruising in their thunderbirds with the foxiest mamas this side of mississippi, their pompadour boufants standing like granite in the face of breeze and gale alike. The sad fact remains that the hands of time have washed themselves of these moth eaten men of yesterday. Its my time now, dolo???s time. b, 21b, 21The rest of the cowards arent much younger, the board is crammed with more over 30???s than a peter engel production.b, 21b, 21h, 21
    b, 21b, 21Even Dolo will have a shot at groovy-old-mandom.

  • ...that dolo board is actually borderline amusing

  • is it a coincidence that this thread and the furley* vs. roper thread appeared around the same time? is ferley the prototypical "groovy old man"?b, 21b, 21*i misspelled dude's name.

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    Don't know who Ferley is, but Roper is definitely not a groovy old man.b, 21b, 21BTW the OG UK George Roper is also a much revered characterb, 21b, 21 img src="http://joabri-ltd.com/images/p1.jpg"1 b, 21b, 21/font1
    Quote:/font1h, 21b, 21Adaptationsb, 21George and Mildred was adapted in the United States as The Ropers, a spin-off of Three's Company, the US version of Man About the House.b, 21b, 21b, 21h, 21
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