Showing posts with label A Taste Of Honey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Taste Of Honey. Show all posts

Monday, 12 February 2018

Songbook - A Taste Of Honey - PLUS SPOTIFY PLAYLIST!


(This first appeared in issue #68 of Shindig! magazine.)

How kitchen sink realism met Broadway theatre, sparked a Grammy-winning evergreen and inspired The Fabs. Duncan Fletcher investigates.

Ken Kesey's counter-cultural bus trips in the sixties were inspired in part by the Beat Generation writers of the previous decade. Jack Kerouac's On The Road being perhaps the biggest influence. Over on the British Isles, our own magical mystery tours and revolutions of the head had their seeds in an altogether different literary style.

The Angry Young Men and kitchen sink realists that had come to prominence in the late fifties had ushered in a new age of anti-establishment literature and film that gave a voice and confidence to post-war youth, especially out in the provinces. Regional accents became accepted, fashionable even. The northern working class were now represented in books, plays and films. Shelagh Delaney's 1958 play, A Taste Of Honey, may have been at the gentler end of this movement but with its themes of class, race and sexuality it was still subversive enough to help usher in new freedoms, and new ways of being and seeing...

(Click over the jump to continue reading and for the specially compiled Spotify playlist.)