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Ready, Steady, Go!: Swinging London and the Invention of Cool [Paperback]

Shawn Levy
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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Book Description

7 July 2003

Shawn Levy, author of ‘Rat Pack Confidential’ brings alive London in the swinging Sixties with a gripping, groovy story of those who created the scene that changed the world.

For a few years in the 1960s, London was the coolest city on earth: a spontaneous, dizzying stew of pop music, fashion, film, scandal, drugs & sex, crime, the avant garde underground and the tabloid obsession with fame. The rest of the world watched in awe.

Snaking through it are such eminent swinging Londoners as The Dreamer (actor Terence Stamp), The Chameleon (Rolling Stone Mick Jagger), The Loner (Beatles manager Brian Epstein), The Snapper (photographer David Bailey) and The Blue Blood (art dealer Robert Fraser), as well as such figures as comedian Peter Cook; hairdresser Vidal Sassoon; singer Marianne Faithfull; fashion designer Mary Quant; supermodels Jean Shrimpton and Twiggy; gangsters Ron and Reggie Kray; actor Michael Caine; actresses Catherine Deneuve, Lynn Redgrave and Julie Christie; pop groups The Beatles, The Who and The Kinks; filmmakers Roman Polanski, Richard Lester and Michelangelo Antonioni; as well as the various participants in the Profumo scandal, the Great Train Robbery, the rise of LSD, the radical underground, the heyday of the gambling club and the fashion boutique and various and sundry scandals, scenes and sensations.

Due to a combination of massive talent and sheer luck, they dominated the world scene. But the party was to end – after seven short years it seemed that everyone was now a Swinging Londoner and the same vibe was found in Paris, New York and San Francisco.

‘Ready, Steady, Go’ recreates the whole show and contrasts a series of emblematic lives with the great events that shaped the time. Through these stories, Shawn Levy, author of ‘Rat Pack Confidential’, shows how the city reinvented cool and then seemed to lose its swing altogether.


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Ready, Steady, Go!: Swinging London and the Invention of Cool + London in the Sixties + Boutique London: A History: King's Road to Carnaby Street
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Product details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate; New Ed edition (7 July 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1841152269
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841152264
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 19.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 225,939 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

'An atmosphere sense of period and some tremendous detail.' -- Sunday Times

'Levy's Tom Wolfe-like immersions in the detail of this period is impressive.' -- Guardian

From the Back Cover

'David Bailey', The Snapper
'Terence Stamp', The Dreamer
'Brian Epstein', The Loner
'Mary Quant', The Draper
'Vidal Sassoon', The Crimper
'Mick Jagger', The Chameleon
'Robert Fraser', The Blue Blood

For a few years in the 1960's, London was the coolest city on earth: a spontaneous, dizzying stew of pop music, fashion, film, scandal, drugs & sex, crime, the avant-garde underground and the tabloid obsession with fame. The rest of the world watched in awe.

Snaking through the scene were the characters that made the city: gangsters, comedian, actors, journalists, pop bands, film makers, art dealers and models. For a few, brief years thanks to a combination of talent, luck, timing and geography, they dominated the world scene like nothing before. London was buzzing.

'Ready, Steady, Go!' recreates the whole show and contrasts a series of emblematic lives with the great events that shaped the time. Shawn Levy, author of 'Rat Pack Confidential', shows how the city re-invented cool and then seemed to lose its swing altogether.

Praise for 'Rat Pack Confidential':

"Scotch-on-the-rocks cool"
'Loaded'

"A compulsive account of five men with America in their pockets – and the money, power and sense to bleed every last moment of fun out of it. An immense book."
'FHM'

"A delight. A wonderful slice of popular cultural history."
'The Times'

"Lapel-grabbing entertainment"
'Independent'

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Ready! 4 Feb 2007
By E. A Solinas HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Every now and then, culture bounds forward completely -- and takes art, movies, theatre, music, and society along with it. Swinging London was one such time, and "Ready, Steady, Go!: The Smashing Rise and Giddy Fall of Swinging London" takes a balanced, informative look at this colourful, taboo-shattering time.

As the opening chapter tells readers, 1950s London was the uncoolest city in the world -- the US was booming with rock'n'roll and teen rebellion, while Italy and France were sophistications zones. All that changed in a few years, with the introduction of new kinds of everything: shocking new fashions, sexual habits, hairstyles, music, and a subculture of excited sophistication and (allegedly) classless communication.

Among the new royalty: models, photographer David Bailey, stylist Vidal Sassoon, designer Mary Quant actors such as Terence Stamp and Michael Caine, the Rolling Stones and the Beatles, their managers, and a wide sprinkling of others -- Marianne Faithfull, Twiggy, and a bunch of "in" bluebloods. But like any era, it didn't last -- its own popularity drowned it, as drugs, death and the psychedelic fashions took over.

Charting an entire cultural era is pretty difficult, without making it boring or turgid. But Shawn Levy succeeds with "Ready Steady Go!", outlining how this colorful -- and still influential -- period began, how it flourished, and how it lost its relevance as time went on.

Levy writes in a crisp, easygoing style that makes it remarkably easy reading, especially since he's tracing a dozen different stories at once, while charting how the "Swinging London" scene metamorphosed over time.
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16 of 19 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars What is cool? 10 Aug 2004
By ZDDQ140770 VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
The most irritating thing about this book is the author's writing style- the zippy, clever-clever smug brezziness favoured by newspaper columnists and the attention-deficient. This is a shame as it detracts from what is otherwise a great story and an accurate description of the decade in London, and the changes in values and taste driven by a tiny group of people. Dock another star for the lack of photos- what photos have been included have an almost zen-like irrelevance to the text. In an era so driven by image, the illustrations could have been chosen better.

His taste is spot on, recognizing that certain faces from the 60s so famous now were almost irrelevant at the time (the blackballing of Twiggy by the most famous society photographers as she wouldnt sleep with them, for example, and rightly, no mention of the irritating Lulu at all). He correctly identifies the main movers and shakers and deftly dissects their worth or lack of worth. Most importantly, he gives a wonderful account of the zeitgeist's downfall into drug-addled navel gazing.

Levy actually understands what "cool" is- preening, vulgar, nrcissistic and beautiful. Don't read this as history or even as a cultural study; its more a series of potted intertwined biographies, a few people who ran British culture for a short period and breifly made us the coolest thing in the world.

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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars The fleeting centre of the world 19 Feb 2004
By retinal
Format:Hardcover
'Swinging' 60's London may only now exist in Austin Powers films, but once it was the place for those few in-the-know, to the town where everyone wanted to be and finally, and just as quickly, a parody of itself.
Few books that touch the subject give the reader the full picture and intriguing cast of characters whose impact on all aspects of popular culture we still feel today. This book sets out to change that, and if it wasn't for Barry Miles' excellent "In the Sixties" book, then this would be the one to read. In fact, the author relies on Miles for a lot of his anecdotes, quotes and key-players. Both the aforementioned Miles book and his book on Paul McCartney, "Many Years from Now", have obviously been read studiously by Levy.
However, what makes this book worth reading is the truly full scope of the London scene, from start to finish, that a memoir and biography couldn't fully achieve.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Ready Steady Go 9 Jan 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This was a Christmas present for my Grandson. I had it given to me as a present and it brought back memories of wonderful times of my youth so I wanted him to have a copy. He was delighted.
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Good fodder for a school essay 12 Jan 2009
Format:Paperback
Journalist-speak by someone paid to churn out factoids established by other hacks, borrowed from other hacks etc. If you're good at speed reading, give it 2 hours and highlight with your pen anything you haven't seen before ad infinitum.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Mods opinion 6 Aug 2005
By Alfie
Format:Paperback
This book is very well written & informative, a must for anyone intersted in 60's London,
it tells the tale from the perspective of the then hip young things who were making it big in town,
Terry Stamp Mary Quant ect
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