- The Affair – Contains official news, history, pictures and music. Also includes interviews from Ian Page.
- The Arrogants – Contains news, links, photos and music.
- Autumn – Based in London, UK. Contains information, news, photos, music and gig information.
- The Chords – Official site contains news, info and photos.
- The Flake – Mod band from Germany including sounds, lyrics and pictures.
- Fleet Street – Power pop trio from the UK.
- Jim Rhoads ACTION – Mod band based in PA.
- Long Tall Shorty – Contains official news, gig information and reviews.
- Made – Italian Mod group combining Power Pop and British R ‘n’B. Features reviews, photos, schedule and releases.
- The Name – British Mod band new site with sound clips and full history from 1979-81. Toured with Purple Hearts and The Chords.
- Paul Weller and The Jam – This is Martin Beck’s homepage about some of his favourite bands: Paul Weller and The Jam, The Chesterfield, and the Part Time Punx.
- Penny for the Guy – An ongoing modernist music project, containing information of future releases demos within this modsite.
- Secret Affair – Traces the lifespan of Secret Affair and Ian Page. Contains information on other Mod bands of the 1979 revival and a short look at Mods Today.
- Small World – Contains official news, music, interviews, photos and a Paul Weller Rickenbacker section.
- The Thingies – 60’s music style and photos of the top midwest 60’s band.
- The Threads – Contains official news, photos and music.
Mod (or, to use its full name, Modernism or sometimes Modism) was a lifestyle based around fashion and music that developed in London, England in the late 1950s and reached its peak in the early to mid 1960s. People who followed this lifestyle were known as Mods, and were mainly to be found in Southern England.
Mods were obsessed with clothes and music, including Black American R&B and Soul, Jamaican Ska, and Bluebeat and a select few British groups such as The Beatles, the Small Faces, the Kinks, The Spencer Davis Group and The Who.
Mods would gather at all-night clubs to show off their clothes and dance. They would typically choose motorscooters as their mode of transportation, either the Lambretta or the Vespa. These were sometimes adorned with many lights and mirrors and were intended to gain attention.
Cover of The Who’s 1965 song My GenerationAn alternative youth movement known as ‘Rockers’ often clashed with the Mods, leading to street battles between the two factions in seaside resorts such as Brighton and Margate. These events led to much anguished discussion about ‘modern youth’ in Britain during the early 1960s. The conflicts inspired Anthony Burgess’s novel A Clockwork Orange in which the anti-hero is arguably a futuristic Mod. The film Blowup (1966), directed by Antonioni, both celebrates and mocks the scene. The film Quadrophenia (1979), based on the album of the same name by The Who (1973), celebrated the movement. Partly because of the success of this film, the Mod Revival occurred during the late 1970s.
One logo of the mod movement is a stylized target, based on Britain’s Royal Air Force symbol.
The band The Jam were highly influenced musically and stylistically by mod culture as are more recent musicians Ocean Colour Scene who often collaborate with Paul Weller, and The Ordinary Boys.
Mods made up (and continue to make up) a large proportion of the Northern soul movement, a subculture based on obscure American soul records from the 60’s and 70’s.
«Mod is clean living under difficult circumstances» – Peter Meaden
top of the page


