Posted on 09/03/2015 6:33:24 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Smutty Smith and Katrín Rósa Stefánsdóttirs flat is covered with photos. In addition to a wall cluttered with Elvis memorabilia and concert shots of Smutty with a plethora of legendary musicians, their family photos are particularly eye-catching.
In black and white, Katrín, Smutty, and their two sons gaze morosely at the camera. We always try to do family pictures in the old-school style, where no one smiles, Katrín laughs, in stark contrast to her deadpan likeness in the photo. I was so happy that day because my sons were getting quite bored, so they looked perfect!
Their family photos arent the only nod to the past, though. Their home is covered in 1950s Americana items, with Sailor Jerry pin-ups on the walls. It feels like a time capsule, much like Katrín and Smutty themselves. The two have become known around Reykjavík as the Rockabilly couple thanks to their vintage get-ups.
Katrín answered the door wearing a bright floral dress, her flaming red hair in perfect victory rolls. With expertly applied red lipstick, she could easily be an extra on I Love Lucy. Smutty donned a tight punk t-shirt with even tighter black pants. He completed the look with a Marlon Brando canvas cap delicately placed on his greased-up, dyed-black hair.
They look like theyre straight out of a Technicolor movie, but they arent dressed up for any special occasion. They assure me that these are actually casual looks for both of them. In fact, the two dress like this every day. Both Smutty and Katrín are obsessed with the rockabilly aesthetic, they explain, and try to emulate it in every aspect of their lives.
It all starts with music, Katrín tells me about their aesthetic. Gene Vincent, Charlie Feathers, Vince Tailorour children Charlie and Vincent are actually named after them.
Smutty continues: Rockabilly is a mixture of black delta Mississippi Memphis blues and country western. Its clear hes been asked this question millions of times before. All Elvis did was to take an old black song and speed it up, he says, with a laugh. Oh, and he was a white guy.
Although it started as a musical genre, the term has now become an umbrella label for anything relating to the 1940s and 50s American aesthetica mantra title for a global subculture of individuals that idolise the post-war years.
Cant help falling in love
I went in my goth wear to this rockabilly night and the next day I just threw all my clothes away and started anew. Naturally, Katrín and Smutty havent always been rockabilly. I was a little goth girl, Katrín reminisces, but I thought [the rockabilly-ers] were so glamorous, she smiles, a little embarrassed. I went in my goth wear to this rockabilly night and the next day I just threw all my clothes away and started anew. That was eleven years ago.
Smutty was a Teddy Boy in 1970s England. Teddy Boys were postwar kids that took on the Edwardian looka cross between Jack the Ripper and funeral directors mixed in with a Mississippi gambler, he explains. Chantilly lace, drainpipe trousers, velvet collars, and long jackets are characteristic of the style, as are greasedup quiffs. Teddy Boys were the rebels of the working class; they drove hot rods, got tattoos, and listened to rock and roll.
Moving from Essex to New York City at age 17, the rocker was already covered in tattoos, which was quite rare at the time. People really freaked out, he says with a cheeky grin. I looked like a girl and I had tattoos.
A DJ and bassist now, he raises his eyebrows when asked how hes changed since those early years. I havent evolved at all! he says with a shrug. Ive stayed and looked pretty much the same. Luckily, his job allows for the sort of over-thetop outfits that hes fond of.
Katrín works at a kindergarten. Kindergarten is not the place to dress up, she says, laughing. Although she has to wear more conservative clothing to work jeans, black trousersKatrín likes to add little rockabilly touches with stripy sailor shirts and bandanas. Her vibrant hair gets enough of a reaction from the children. The kids actually call me Ariel, she says, grinning.
Both describe their style aesthetic easily. Forties and fifties retro-Americana, Katrín answers, while Smutty shrugs. Still a Teddy Boy inside.
The Reykjavík Grapevine_Smutty and Kate_close up
Smutty has been designing all of his own clothes for the last thirty years and likes adding little garish touches. His favourite piece is a chalk-stripe Teddy Boy suit with burgundy velvet on the collar and cuffs, lined with a bright Japanese koi tattoo print. Very Johnny Depp, he says, rolling his eyes.
Katrín takes a black and white fitted A-line dress with a sweetheart neckline out of her closet, showing me her favourite piece. Its stunninglike something Madeleine or Judy would wear in Vertigo. In contrast to this finery, she then pulls out a worn pair of high-waisted thick blue jeans. They are absolutely unlike anything you could find in stores nowadays. With strong azure-blue denim, the pants are more reminiscent of Rosie the Riveter than Kim Novak. Its clear Katrín doesnt discriminate in her love of the fifties.
The couple are adamant that they do not fit into the typical Icelandic fashion mould. Icelandic women like fashion, Katrín says. They love the eighties, but they also like very plain clothes. Minimalism.
Smutty is less polite. Its shit, he says of Icelandic fashion. The woman here are the worst dressed Ive ever seen. Its this Cyndi Lauper and Boy George look with the capes and the scarves and the baggy trousers, he shudders. Men go to weddings dressed in 66 North, he says, his expression betraying how appalling he finds this. They go to the movies dressed in fucking skiwear. Skiwear is for skiing, not for going to the movies.
Mystery train
At the same time, the allure of and access to rockabilly is growing. Theres the vintage-style store Kjólar & Konfekt on Laugavegur, which sells rockabilly brands like Bernie Dexter and Stop Staring, and Smutty says the downtown barbershops have also just started selling two different types of American hair grease.
In the last few years, what has been traditionally been niche is starting to bubble up to the mainstream. Now Im getting calls from young girls, Smutty says, somewhat incredulously. Theyre like, Were doing a rockabilly theme can you DJ? Can you tell us what clothes to wear?
Katrín and Smutty have also found an unusual outlet for their formally underground hobby. Weve been hired as a couple to dress all the girls and guys for a weddingto do all their hair rockabilly, and play music. Its become quite trendy.
The University of Iceland has also sprouted up clubs that swing dance and jive. Smutty holds rockabilly nights every monththe next one is July 31 at Lebowskiand theyve been growing in popularity.
Even so, the couple still gets stopped or stared at when walking the street. It doesnt bother them, though. Theyve been within the alternative scene for so long that Katrín says she barely notices when people gawk.
They know that they are unusual. People say, Youve still got grease in your hairyoure fifty. Youre still getting tattooswhen are you gonna grow up? Smutty grins. When Keith Richards stops playing music.
I bet they enjoy listening to Brian Setzer.
He looks like a really wild guy.
To paraphrase Hank Hill...I love people with tattoos, it let’s you know who’s not right without even having to talk to them.
He looks like he just had a hookworm treatment!
Rockabilly is really big in Europe, especially Netherlands, Germany, France, Spain and Italy. Check out the forum called “Rock City Boogie” forum. They go nuts about it and have a big annual 4 day festival called Blue Heaven.
Wheels Fargo and Nightingale from Italy: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEklMnSw13Q
All that said, I’m not really into the cult following of Betty Page, they seem to be real big into nostalgia like that and there is some woman up in the North West who really really looks like Betty Page,
Bernie Dexter: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernie_Dexter
I was stationed in Keflavik, Iceland back in the early 70s. Iceland is a desolate place. Icelanders no longer have the NATO base and the military personnel stationed there to keep them entertained. I guess immersing yourself in rockabilly probably makes life there more bearable.
Looks like pictures from early 1900s when people were told not to smile
They love as mentioned in the article Gene Vincent, I don’t think Gene ever took off like he did in England and the rest of Europe and Vincent and his guitarist, Cliff Gallup played great music.
Tintype photos had the sitter in position for a couple of minutes with a brace at the back of the neck. The exposure might be for only a couple of seconds but the wet plate process and camera adjustments would take a couple of minutes.
The sitter cannot hold a smile that long.
Cool...and Groovy! nearly Far Out!
ROFLOL
Before I saw your post...
My first thought was that they looked like the result of a train wreck involving Lux Interior (RIP), Poison Ivy, and the Stray Cats.
he looks like keith richards’ poltergeist
Si THAT’S why my great grandparents wedding photo looked so serious!!!
I’m gonna show you how
To get on board
You put one foot up
You put another foot up
You put *another* foot up
And you’re on board
The drug train...
these people appear to be riding on the ROOF of the Drug Train
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