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Wednesday, February 27

Glam Palace


Shopping with my mum in the 1970s usually involved dull shops like C&A, Richard Shops and British Home Stores looking at beige polyester slacks and brown nylon tank tops, but once in a while we'd go to the wonderland that was the Biba department store on Kensington High Street. Housed in the Art Deco splendour of the old Derry & Toms building, it looked like a Roxy Music album cover come to life, all mirrors, chrome, leopard skin, ostrich feathers and black walls, and with it's dark lighting and loud rock music blaring from massive floor speakers it felt more like a nightclub than a store.

Biba started out in the 60s as a poky little boutique off the High Street selling miniskirts and skinny tops to the beautiful young things of Swinging London and by 1973 had expanded into the seven opulent floors of "Big Biba" which was like some mad Kubla Khan fantasy palace amid the dingy grayness of early 70s England. Their "look" evolved into an extravagant mix of Art Deco elegance with Hollywood glitz and bohemian decadence that defined the trashy cabaret and retro-futuristic look of Glam and the peacock style of 70s rock fashion. Not just spangly shirts, tight pants, feather boas and platform shoes, their dark and exotic cosmetics range was perfect for that elegantly wasted look, Lou Reed and Freddie Mercury both wore Biba's black nail polish and a young suburban girl who would later call herself Siouxsie Sioux took the train into London to buy her red eye shadow there.

Download: Make Up - Lou Reed (mp3)


The shops founder Babara Hulanicki said she designed her clothes for "Fresh little foals with long legs, bright faces and round dolly eyes. Postwar babies who had been deprived of nourishing protein in childhood and grew up into beautiful skinny people" so it wasn't exactly aimed at single mums with two children like mine but it was a great place to take the kids for the day, only a short bus ride away and it was free. You could literally spend all day there and I think we often did, the store actually encouraged hanging out. For a kid my age Biba was like a theme park, every one of it's seven floors an exercise in high concept and pure fun, like the men's department where you could play darts and bowl and featured a "Mistress Room" that sold lingerie and had a huge leopard-skin bed. For obvious reasons my absolute favourite place was the kid's department which looked like it had been designed by Lewis Carroll, with a roundabout in the shape of a record player, a castle and a dog kennel that was big enough to walk into. I remember the kennel had a giant stuffed Snoopy sitting outside that my sister and I desperately wanted mum to buy for us but I think it was beyond her budget. It wouldn't have fitted into our council flat anyway.

But while the clothes were meant for skinny, 20-something, "Nova"-reading, girls about town, at Big Biba they stuck their famous black and gold logo on everything from fashion to furniture, make-up, toys, even soap powder and tins of baked beans so everyone could take home a bit of Biba cool — even eat it on toast. It was probably the world's first lifestyle emporium (before the concept of "lifestyle" had been invented), you could wear, eat, wash, play, and literally live in Biba.

Download: Something For The Girl With Everything - Sparks (mp3)


On the top floor was the gorgeous Rainbow Room restaurant and concert venue which dated back to the 1930s style of the original building. in many ways this the place where 1970s rock and style collided, the clubhouse where Freddie Mercury had afternoon tea and David and Angie Bowie hung out with Mick and Bianca in the evenings. The New York Dolls played two infamous concerts there (their only London shows I think) and it must be the only place ever to host both the Dolls and Liberace. The Wombles played there too but that's a whole other story.

Download: Trash - New York Dolls (mp3)


Naturally, Bryan Ferry made a video there, "Let's Stick Together" was filmed on the Rainbow Room stage and features a cameo by Jerry Hall looking very Biba-esque in a gold dress and vampy Hollywood siren make-up.



Suzi Quatro might not have been as chic as our Bryan but the video for "Devil Gate Drive" was shot there too (on the Ground Floor) it shows what a well-know cultural icon the brand had become that the Biba logo is shown so prominently here. Though this must be one of the few cases where a store looks more glamourous than the pop group.



Sadly Big Biba was only open for two years and closed in 1975, the store was making money but not enough to escape the sinking gloom of the times. During those two years the miners went on strike, the country was put on a three-day work week and power cuts meant that people were living in darkness and some stores were lit by candles in the afternoon. It's been said that the store lived up to the rock and roll credo of "live fast, die young, and leave a beautiful corpse" and looking back there's something all a bit Weimar Republic about Big Biba with it's extravagant decadence in the middle of a country falling apart, according to "Ziggy Stardust" we only had five years left before the end of the world anyway so why not build a monument to dressing up and looking as fabulous as possible.

The Derry & Toms building is now occupied by a Marks & Spencer which about as far from Biba as you can get. I bet they don't sell black nail polish.

No way I could get through this post without some actual Roxy Music, if the store had a house band it would have been them. You don't hear their second single "Pyjamarama" much so here it is in all it's glittery glory.

Download: Pyjamarama - Roxy Music
Buy: "Welcome To Big Biba" (book)

15 Comments:

At 4:24 PM, Blogger Simon said...

Great post! And Pyjamarama - probably one of my favourite Roxy tracks; it's just such a...dreamy and melancholy tune; with one of my favourite Ferry vocals.

 
At 8:02 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree - great post, Lee. I never visited Biba (Derby a bit further than Fulham to Ken High St!) but I do remember coming to London in 77 and seeing Kings Road and also Covent Garden before it was gentrified. It was all punk clothes shops behind metal shutters in the old market arches.

I've always liked Pyjamarama over Virginia Plain, when I bought it I had all the lyrics handwritten on the back of one of those cardboard sleeves you bought in Boots.

Phil

 
At 10:27 AM, Blogger WZJN said...

Damn man, what a great post! The pictures you post, along with your commentary, really gave me a palpable taste of what you must have experienced there. Makes me wish I could have been there just to see the place!

Roxy Music ... I've come to understand that you folks really lifted them to a special plateau. Over here, albeit from my very small point of view, they never achieved that status, but were nonetheless a great band. Again, I wish I knew them in that time and place to know more of their impact as opposed to knowing only a few singles here and there. Same goes for Sparks.

Did you guys really know Suzi Quatro over there? I played that Devil Gate Drive album raw for my friends over here.

Again - fantastic and vivid post!

 
At 10:32 AM, Blogger londonlee said...

Oh yes, Suzi was a big star in England, bigger than in the US. All her hit singles were made in England.

 
At 2:47 PM, Blogger dickvandyke said...

Simply effervescent tales of a time when the glass runneth over with fizz and sparkle.

And, if you knew Suzy like I (would have liked to) know Suzy! Leather cat suits were all the rage in austere middle England around '73.

 
At 4:47 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Biba Fan!!!
As luck would have it I went to "Big Biba" twice, I was still at shop and only had pocket money to spend always bought badges or posters from there.
So sad it closed if it were open today they would make a mint.
Always remember at the train station it was listed as a tourist attraction!

 
At 9:21 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

jerry nolan the drummer from the new york dolls used to play with suzi quatro at one (very early) stage

legend has it that dolls bassist arthur kane got caught switching price tags on something he wanted to buy when they were playing at bibas

 
At 2:19 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Went to Biba with my mum, I think, and Kings Road, lots, in the 70's

London as a kid in the 70's
Fucking ace


xxxxxxxxxx

 
At 2:21 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

And danced to Roxy Music with my mum in the living room

 
At 2:34 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"and power cuts meant that people were living in darkness and some stores were lit by candles in the afternoon"

Geez, I remember that
I loved it!
One of my fave memories!!

 
At 11:46 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

David Bowies Blue Jean video was filmed by Julien Temple in the Rainbow Restaurant in 1984/5,and it looks pretty much as it did in the 70s.

 
At 5:40 PM, Blogger Linda said...

Thanks for these pics. In the 70s I attended nearby Holland Park School. My friends and I used to love to wander around Biba on the high street. I loved how dark and luxurious everywhere was. I loved their black and gold label on baked bean cans, the rainbow room (we used to go up there when it was deserted and creep ourselves out--it felt like the atmosphere of "The Shining" and this was before the movie). Best of all was the roof garden. I remember when they went out of business, they were practically giving stuff away and my mum got me a bunch of things.

 
At 4:48 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Does anyone know what the rainow room is like nowadays? Is it still intact or was it eventually broken up.

The music videos filmed at Biba are interesting viewing. I remember the Blue Jean video from the time.

Too young to remember Biba from the time. Have recently read several Biba related books (fascinating story). Was a frequent visitor to High St Ken in the last decade and saw the Derry and Toms building on most visits. I've been in the M&S part of the building, it's most un-Biba like.

 
At 6:49 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Have just found a pic of what the Rainbow Room looked like in 2005:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/simon_p_white/536049022/

Slightly shocked (but not surprised) a the difference between the Biba days and the 2005 pic. In 2005 it looked like glorified office space.

 
At 9:29 AM, Blogger londonlee said...

At least the structure is still there but could it be any more pale and bland?

 

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