Jimi Hendrix 1977

770908 Jimi Hendrix

Jimi Hendrix on a pull-out superposter in Bravo of 8 September 1977.

This poster was at the centre of the Great Poster Debate of September 1977 in our house. Although I bought the Bravo magazines, my younger brother and I took weekly turns in deciding which posters would go up in our shared bedroom. My brother’s bargaining strategy was that if he had no say, he’d veto any poster at all going up.

That week in early September 1977, the Superposter choice fell between a garish picture of Bay City Rollers clones Dead End Kids on the colour side (running tomorrow, but you can see the state of them in yesterday’s post), and this really cool monochrome photo of Jimi Hendrix.

I knew nothing of Hendrix, other than that he was dead. Alas, it was my brother’s week to choose the posters — and he opted for the deplorable Dead End Kids. I tried all I could to persuade him that Jimi had to go up, even trying to emotionally blackmail him by claiming that our recently late father — an opera and theatre man who named as his favourite singer Maria Callas — was a big Jimi Hendrix fan. To no avail. The Dead End Kids went up.

I never got to hear any of their records, but I would get to hear a lot of Hendrix’s. As would my brother.

Bravo cover 8 Sept 1977

770908 Bravo Cover

British teeny band The Dead End Kids on the cover of Bravo of 8 September 1977. This was the issue of the Great Poster Debate in our house; more of which later.

Articles in that edition included:
• Did Roman Polanski seduce 16-year-old Nastassja Kinski? (Apparently they are just friends. Phew. Surely Roman Polanski wouldn’t be a statutory rapist!)

• Bill Cosby prescribes happy pills (OK, not really).

• The life and death of Jimi Hendrix.

• Elvis’ life in pictures (remember, he had just died).

 

Honda Lead ad 1982

820902 Honda Lead advert

820902 Honda Lead

Ad for the Honda Lead 80 scooter in Bravo of 2 September 1982. The tagline is: “Well, look at that. The Honda Lead 80.” Somebody got paid for copywriting that!

There are a couple of problems with the ad. Firstly, why would the girl wish to flirt with two boys who are dressed identically? Secondly, driving so closer to what presumably is a public pool? Thirdly, the ad says you should drive with a helmet, but only the back twin has one.

Bravo cover 2 Sept 1982

820902 Bravo Cover

Michelle Pfeiffer and Maxwell “The New Travolta” Caulfield, stars of cinematic landmark motion picture Grease 2, on the cover of Bravo 2 September 1982.

The edition included articles about Donna Summer, Joan Jett’s tourbus, the rock band BAP which were national stats despite singing in the dialect of Cologne, Mike Oldfield and his upcoming Germany tour, the private life of Falco, the hygiene regimen for young women, and a quiz to test whether you’re predisposed towards drug-use (whatever the answer, the advice is not to do drugs).