High Fashion and High Times at the Wildest Rock 'n' Roll Boutique
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Paul Gorman
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Discover the 'illuminating and colourful' (Telegraph) story of the boutique that dressed British rock 'n' roll
This is the tumultuous tale of Granny Takes A Trip, lavishly illustrated with never-before-seen photographs of the shop, its key players and - of course - the clothes.
'A celebration of the London boutique that bridged psychedelic fashion and glam' UNCUT
Granny Takes A Trip was more than just a shop and a fashion brand; it was the original rock and roll clothes boutique, the template for all that followed.
What started as an odd retail venture/art installation in a depressed part of London known as World's End became an international byword for glam decadence in Manhattan and Hollywood, combining flamboyant style and all manner of countercultural activity to attract everyone from Pattie Boyd, Marianne Faithfull and Anita Pallenberg to Elton John, Jimi Hendrix, Miles Davis, Mick Jagger, Rod Stewart, the Beatles, and Lou Reed.
Unfolding over a decade-and-a-half, this tumultuous story invokes a cast of often unique, sometimes entitled, unusually talented and troubled individuals on a collective mission to shake up austere, repressed, class-ridden Britain and white bread America. Some achieved this at great personal cost as darkness, addiction and tragedy stalked those behind the extraordinary shop facades.
Much mythologised but never told, this cautionary tale has now found its definitive chronicler in celebrated cultural historian Paul Gorman who has had access to first-hand accounts from all the principal figures, as well as notes for a memoir and a much-treasured scrapbook by Freddie Hornik, the tailoring entrepreneur who survived the death marches of central Europe after WW2 to acquire Granny Takes A Trip in the late 60s and transform into an unparalleled pop cultural force.
A celebration of the London boutique that bridged psychedelic fashion and glam . . . A colourful, illustrated account
Helen Barrett
FINANCIAL TIMES
Will we ever see another boutique like Granny Takes A Trip? . . . [Gorman's] book includes previously unseen photographs of designs, clients and ever-changing interiors
Mick Brown
TELEGRAPH
An illuminating and colourful study not only of the shop itself, but the milieu and times from which it sprang
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