Scootering

Scootering Words & Sounds

scooteringuk1802_article_084_01_01
scooteringuk1802_article_084_01_02

Rick Buckler and Ian Snowball The Jam: The Start To ’77 (Strangetown)

Last year marked the 40th anniversary of The Jam’s first two albums. Both the critically acclaimed at the time In The City and acknowledged and widely appreciated albeit much later than its initial release This Is The Modern World. The book under review here, The Jam: The Start to ’77 is part one in a series of three books and is a limited edition publication of 1000, as will be the two forthcoming follow-ups. Illustrated by Richard Schaller, this opening parts of the trilogy traces the story of The Jam from shortly before the band formed at Sheerwater County Secondary school. Narrated by The Jam drummer Rick Buckler, it amounts to a stage by stage dissection beginning with Paul Weller and Steve Brookes collaborating as youngsters, making music together at Paul’s Stanley Road home at the time, and lunchtime music room sessions at school. It goes on to cover various incarnations of the early line-ups, including Rick joining in ’73 and Bruce Foxton arriving in ’74. Anecdotes and recollections include first-hand experiences from the very beginning, through going from playing covers in the local youth club and working men’s clubs and pubs, to the advent of punk rock and new wave, with original songs being written and performed. Things then move on to the group breaking on to the London circuit, gigs across the UK, eventually signing with Polydor and The Jam visiting mainland Europe and America for their first shows abroad. Also included are insights into both In The City and This Is The Modern World being released in ’77. Rick’s input is supplemented by a plethora of individual experiences from fans of The Jam, chronologically, bringing personal overviews into the equation. Much has already been published documenting.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Scootering

Scootering8 min read
Old-school Tuning: The Story Of RMK 224F
In the summer of 1988, I was looking for another Lambretta restoration project and the opportunity to purchase an SX200 on the cheap was too good to turn down. Even though it was in a dishevelled state, indeed missing its engine, it was a bargain at
Scootering1 min read
Moving Targets: Rennie Innocenti
This is a bit of a strange book on many counts. Despite weighing in at less than a hundred pages, it manages to pack in an authentic-feeling tale of the rise and fall of a scooter club in the early to mid 80s, a love story, a murder, poetry and a tal
Scootering4 min read
Buzzing Back Into The Showroom
It’s now 18 years since Antony ‘Buzz’ Beaumont (A B – get it?) took the plunge and left his job as an engineer to set up what’s become one of the UK’s most trusted sources of both spare parts and project scooters. Since that time Buzzsolomoto’s grown

Related Books & Audiobooks