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Commentaire de morice

sur Comment se cacher derrière un saucisson...


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morice morice 17 juin 2010 11:26

morice,
savez-vous ce qu’est le mouvement skinhead ?


non, d’ailleurs j’ai fait plus de 8 ans de radio au moment de leur apparition... 
vous mélangez les dates et les genres, comme d’hab !!

A movement started in Britain in the 60s when the mod scene met the hippy scene. The mod scene split, and the « hard mods », the ones who hated hippies, got harder. With a little influence from Jamacian rudeboys, the skinhead was born out of the hard mod. Most of the music was held over from the mod days, but there were ska and reggae imported from the rude boys. In the 70s, many punk-rockers became Skinhead, Skrewdriver among them, and brought Oi ! and RAC into the scene. Skinheads represent the working class, and fight with honor. There are 4 main types of Skinheads : Traditional Skinheads (Rejects all politics and labels) Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice (SHARP) Anti-racist Skinheads White Power/National Socialist(Neo-Nazi) Racist Skinheads Red Anarchistic Skinheads (RASH) Communist Skinheads There’s also GASH (Gay Aryan Skinheads), but they’re just a joke. The general « uniform » of the Skinheads are flight jackets, Fred Perry’s/polo shirts/dress shirts, Levi 501s/tight jeans, steelcap combat boots (Doc Martens, Gripfasts, and others), and either shaved head or close-cut hair. Sideburns are common. Generally, skinheads reject hard drugs, although drinking and smoking are common. Skinheads love to go out drinking with the boys, get rowdy, and kick a few skulls in. Skinheads work for a honest, working-class living with their own sweat and blood. Oi, Oi, Oi !

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=39372982713

At the same time, there was an influx of Jamaican immigration to London. They brought with them Jamaican rude boy culture, reggae and ska. Many of them went to work in London’s docks and lived in the working class communities of London’s East End. As a result of living so close to one another, the ‘native’ hard Mods mingled with the Jamaican rude boys, swapping mannerisms, slang words and dancing together in West Indian dancehalls to all the latest ska, reggae and soul records.

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Out of this, the Skinheads were born, a multi-racial, working class youth subculture with a clearly defined hostility to the police, government and bosses as well as being an expression of the discontent that many young people felt at the time. This culture would only flourish for a short while, peaking in 1969 and fizzling out in the early 1970s amidst internal violence and media hysteria.


le ska c’est autre chose... et judge dread aussi...


allez Yohan, parlez nous soupe à l’oignon (ou ici u cochon !) mais de grâce ne parlez donc pas musique. Vous lui faites mal...

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