RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:
This morning, we begin a series on this year's inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Profiles of six musicians or bands from three different cities: London, New York and Los Angeles. It's a diverse bunch, including two acts born in 1960s London, the Small Faces and Donovan.
Although much has been made of the way British bands invaded America during those years, David C. Barnett, of member station WCPN, reminds us that the original invasion was the other way around.
DAVID C. BARNETT, BYLINE: The seeds of a cultural revolution were shipped to Great Britain from America...
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BARNETT: ...in the form of records by country, R&B, and blues performers like Slim Harpo.
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BARNETT: Ian McLagan says he and his friends bought everything they could.
IAN MCLAGAN: We would listen to Muddy Waters and Howling Wolf or R&B, you know, Otis Redding, Stax.
BARNETT: Another kind of music grabbed the ear of Donovan Leitch, whose family had migrated to London from Scotland and settled in the city's northern suburbs. He was mad for jazz.
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DONOVAN LEITCH: It was the drums that I picked-up first and Gene Krupa at Carnegie Hall. I thought I'd be Art Blakey.
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BARNETT: But for these hip, young fans of blues and modern jazz, the music was just part of a larger cultural movement that had its own style, which included tailor-made suits, fancy leather boots and motor scooters. They liked to think of themselves as modernists or mods.
British writer John Pidgeon says that the most mod of the mods, the real trend-setters, were known as faces.
JOHN PIDGEON: They were the kind of people you'd look at and go, oh, I wish I looked as cool as that person.
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BARNETT: The High Numbers, later known as the Who, gave the coolest of the cool their own theme song, borrowing the tune from Slim Harpo.
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BARNETT: Among these trendsetters was a group of musicians who called themselves the Small Faces, due to their diminutive stature. They were boosted into the national spotlight by a popular Friday night TV program, "Ready Steady Go."
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BARNETT: The show took the music and fashion of the London mod scene into living rooms across the country. It was where Ian McLagan first saw the Small Faces, thanks to his dad.
MCLAGAN: I was getting ready to go out on a date and he shouted up the stairs: Ian, come and look at this band. They're great. Three months later, I was in the band.
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BARNETT: Joining Kenny Jones, Ronnie Lane and Steve Marriott.
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BARNETT: Another "Ready Steady Go" favorite was a teenaged minstrel, with a very different musical and fashion sense. He sported a fisherman's cap, acoustic guitar and harmonica rack.
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BARNETT: A number of critics said that Donovan Leitch's look and sound were a little too reminiscent of his American contemporary, Bob Dylan. But Donovan argues that they were just two singers with common influences from American records.
LEITCH: I absorbed the vinyl from Woody Guthrie to Pete Seeger and Jack Elliott, and then into the Beat poets of Allen Ginsberg. At campus, we were absorbing that stuff. We looked to America.
BARNETT: Donovan says he picked up a new look from California and writer John Pidgeon says it started spreading across mid-60s London.
PIDGEON: It was really quite interesting when some of the straightest people who you'd come across, all of the sudden, started appearing in caftans and beads and smoking dope and, in many cases, doing hallucinogenic drugs, as well.
BARNETT: Donovan was an early adopter of what he calls the holy plants.
LEITCH: Plants have always been used by shamans to enter what is called the inner realm.
BARNETT: And the music that he made within that inner realm shot up the charts. John Pidgeon says that, initially, he had dismissed Donovan as a Dylan clone.
PIDGEON: Which is why it was such a shock when he turned up a couple of years later with "Sunshine Superman" and "Mellow Yellow." And you'd think, where did they come from, because they were just fantastic records.
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BARNETT: A number of bands followed this psychedelic trail, including the Small Faces, who charted with a whimsical tune written by Ronnie Lane and Steve Marriott about a place called Itchycoo Park.
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BARNETT: The Small Faces were also experimenting with mind-altering substances and with recording techniques that created a trippy sound.
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BARNETT: But all of that heavy production presented problems for a touring band.
MCLAGAN: "Itchycoo Park," even when it came out, we couldn't replicate that live.
BARNETT: And that didn't sit well with Steve Marriott, who soon left to start Humble Pie, leaving the Small Faces without a lead singer. They soon recruited a couple guys from the Jeff Beck Group, Ron Wood and Rod Stewart.
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BARNETT: The two new members of the group weren't as short as the others, and from then on, the band was simply known as The Faces.
It was 1969 and the end of the Swinging '60s. Bands like Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin from the industrial Midlands of England would soon take over the charts with a louder, heavier sound for darker times. London forgot about trippy hippies and well-coifed kids on scooters.
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BARNETT: For NPR News, I'm David C. Barnett.
MONTAGNE: And this is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Renee Montagne.
DAVID GREENE, HOST:
And I'm David Greene.
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