Sunday, 31 May 2015

More On Sharpies & Bogans


I've seen footage of Sharpies so many times in my life, it never occurred to me it might actually be of interest to anyone outside of Melbourne or the state of Victoria. The national broadcaster the ABC has trodden these images out ad nauseam throughout my life so now it's uniqueness is totally lost on me. The music part of it remains of interest but the sharpies kinda attached themselves to those bands. I'm sure those bands wanted an audience and I guess beggars can't be choosers but the bands probably didn't want the ugly controversy & media campaigns that came with it. The Coloured Balls, Australia's finest rock band of the time broke up because of the trouble surrounding the band, not any kind of musical differences or anything. This of course left a huge opening in the pre-punk era for someone to come in and fill that spot. AC/DC were that band and hey they didn't just fill that spot, they filled every nook and cranny throughout the world with their minimal driving guitar rock.



*Simon Reynolds points out similarities to sharpie dancing and the shoulder dance performed here by Mud here

At Coloured Balls shows towards the end of their existence there was just too much violence between Sharpie gangs and a new element that had entered the fray Skinhead Boot Boys. Previous to that the Sharpies had been a cool subculture to play to according to Loyde. The media got themselves an angle and the band were accused of inciting the violence, even participating in it themselves. A writ was even issued to one newspaper for their preposterous lies. I think we can all guess which gutter press paper that was er...there was only one.  So Lobby got fed up, as the shows became a pleasureless experience for the band, and walked away.

I guess the natural progression from the Sharpie was the Bogan. This was more of a loose generic term for a subculture like indie or something like that and it wasn't a gang thing. The hairdo turned to your more traditional mullet ie. shortish on the top and sides (longer than a Sharpie) with much much more business at the back. AC/DC, Cold Chisel, The Tatts and The Angels were the bands that were followed by this lot.

I guess ex-Sharpies who had the gang mentality deeply ingrained in their souls would have later joined some of those skinhead gangs or biker gangs once they were old enough. Gang culture usually leads to some kind of life of crime. A fine example of this would be that Australia's most loved and successful criminal Mark 'Chopper' Read who claimed to have been a Sharpie and is perhaps glimpsed in the above short film. Other international subcultures would have attracted some of the other ex-Sharpies like punk, anarcho-punk, hardcore etc. Then I suppose the rest of the ex-Sharpies would have just grown up, got jobs and started families. But on occasion after a bit of booze on a Saturday Night some sharpie dancing would have ensued, like that scene in the film Mallboy (2001), which I can't seem to find on youtube. The ephemerality of it all (Sharpie culture) is a bit of a mystery though. As far as I know there haven't been any younger generations taking up the lifestyle as a revival. That could be ripe for the picking now! There have been comedy sketches on Sharpies on television's D-Generation, Fast Forward and the like.

Sharpie culture was very white, as white as you could get so it definitely fits parallels with Gabber, Skinheads etc. Although I have read that other ethnicities apart from those from the British Isles were also included in some Sharpie gangs. It was predominantly white though. This could be a reason why it hasn't been revived as Australia became way more multicultural from the 80s onward. Take a very popular underground band from the 80s like The Hard Ons. They were a punk/thrash/pop band that had no members with their roots in Anglo-Saxon culture. The original three piece had backgrounds from Sri Lanka, Yugoslavia and Korea, I think. This was the face of 80s youth culture.




5 comments:

  1. 'Bogan' seems to be roughly equivalent to the word 'chav' in the UK. I suspect every country, every region in each country too maybe, has a word that serves the same function - condescending, exclusionary, socially superior, minging fear and disapproval and aesthetic disgust. And as well as being geographically parochial, the terms are temporally parochial. The term fades away.

    I wonder what the etymology of bogan is.... 'Boge" words in the UK connote things like "bogie" (snot, mucus) and I guess link to boogeyman. A connection to the word 'bog' as in swamp? Bog also means toilet in UK. Generally speaking, not a pleasant syllable, the 'bog'

    Incidentally I only came across the word because I was chatting to my first girlfriend about my visit to Australia a few years ago - she had spent the first nine years of her life in Australia - and she said 'oh, bogan was a word people used then'

    So how about a cultural breakdown of the term Ocker next then?

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  2. Strange how Sharpies are considered a Melbourne youth cult when they were also to be found in large numbers in Sydney from mid sixties to mid seventies.

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  3. I am aware of the Sydney Sharpies you speak Anonymous. I was referring specifically to that footage above which is from Melbourne. Melbourne is also where bogan originated so that was why this has been a Melbourne-centric discourse. Melbourne really celebrate their cultural history and it seems Sydney isn't anywhere near as self obsessed a city as Melbourne is. I mean have you heard Nick Cave and The Birthday Party came from Melbourne?....ha..ha..... I lived in Melbourne for 25 years and only left 18 months ago so I am definitely coming from that background. Before I left there were some documentaries and even an exhibition on Sharpies in the suburb in which I lived. Sharpies in Melbourne were far more prevalent than any other city in Australia though. It seems every train station across Melbourne had their own gang. Perth had a little scene as well. Does anyone have any info on those sharpies.

    Anonymous why don't you tell us about Sydney Sharpies? Is that culture seen as significant by Sydneysiders? Or is it forgotten? Something to be ashamed of? I have a very vague recollection of a book about Sydney Sharps, can't recall its name though.

    Geelong is a city only an hour's drive west of Melbourne and they even had their own term for bogan called the scozza. Other city's and towns had their own specific parochial terms as well. One thing I really know nothing about is bodgies and widgies! What the fuck were they? My dad might know more about them as I think they were one of the first Australian youth cults post WW2. Maybe I'll get him to contribute a post to me blog?

    Oh and hey Anonymous next time you comment you might want to give up a name or remain unpublished.

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  4. My dad's text msg response to what the fuck is a Bodgie?

    "A Bodgie used to hang out in Milk Bars in the 50s playing the jukebox and pinball machines. Hair a bit long brushed back. Considered to be a no hoper."

    So his 70s creep was just a updated version of the Bodgie from 20 years earlier.

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  5. I failed to to mention that a Widgie was the female term to accompany Bodgie. The folks seem to think bogan was, etymologically speaking, coming from the these roots but 20+ years later. So somewhere along the line it transformed to suit the current times/fashions/music etc. My dad was an English, Geography and Social Studies teacher so I'm happy to go with him on this one. I guess a Bodgie/Widgie was similar to a UK rocker. Did they then change into Teddy Boys? Were they a separate thing or one and the same? What's the lineage there Simon?

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