• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Bike India

Best Bikes in India | No.1 Two Wheeler Magazine

Pulsar NS400Z – CHALA APNI

  • Home
  • News
    • Upcoming Launches
    • Latest News
    • New Bike Launches
  • Reviews
    • First Ride
    • Road Test
    • Comparison
  • Features
  • Our Bikes
  • Videos
  • Subscribe
  • NG Auto
    • AUTO COMPONENTS INDIA
    • CAR INDIA
    • COMMERCIAL VEHICLE
  • Brands
  • AUTHORS

Classic Bike Cult Feature: The Rockers v the Mods

April 6, 2016 by Aninda Sardar Leave a Comment

Classic Bike Cult Feature The Rockers v the Mods (4)

Café racers and scooters led to the creation of two incredible sub-cultures based on two-wheelers back in the 1950s and ’60s. With interest in those two sub-cultures growing the world over, we delve into what made Rockers and who were the Mods

Story: Aninda Sardar
Photography: Rommel Albuquerque and Sanjay Raikar

November 2013 was a milestone in India’s motorcycling history. It marked the introduction of one of the most enduring motorcycle cultures of all time to our shores with Royal Enfield launching the Continental GT café racer and Triumph entering the Indian market with the iconic Bonneville and the Thruxton café racer. Suddenly, everyone in the biking world was talking about Rockers and café racers. Just a year prior to that, in 2012, another icon of the two-wheeler world, Vespa, had also entered India bringing with it two-wheeled heritage of a different kind. Over the coming years each of these manufacturers will hope to popularise their products by attempting to spark off café racing culture in the case of the bike makers and scooter culture in the case of the latter.

As the scene gears up for exciting times ahead, we take a look at the Rockers motorcycle sub-culture that led to the creation of café racers and the Mods who made scooter riding fashionable back in the ’60s.

The Rockers

Classic Bike Cult Feature The Rockers v the Mods (8)

Back in the 1950s and ’60s if you were a working-class youth growing up in Britain and in love with motorcycles, chances were your typical day would end with the ringing of the factory bell and a dash home for dinner. The overriding purpose of this post work haste, though, would happen once the clock struck eight. You’d find yourself donning a pair of blue jeans, a pair of strong boots and a black leather jacket. You would then head to the garage, strap on your pudding basin helmet and goggles before firing up your souped up British motorcycle and then head out to the Ace Café in northwest London (or any other transport café that suited your fancy) to meet your chums. And that pretty much sums up the average evening in the life of one of motorcycling’s everlasting icons – the Rocker.

A general rise in prosperity among the working-class youth in the post-WW II Britain combined with the peaking of the British motorcycle industry, the influence of popular American rock ‘n’ roll music and construction of windy arterial roads led to the birth of the Rockers. The fact that this was also the time when transport cafés were coming up around the country further helped the Rocker cause.

 

More on page 2>

Aninda Sardar – who has written 312 posts on Bike India.


Email • Twitter

Related posts:

Adrift Astride a Guerrilla: Royal Enfield Guerrilla 450 Drift Clinic

TVS YMRP 9.0 - A Taste of Racing

Interview – Saimah Ajaz Baig – ‘You have to chase your dream; you cannot just sit back’  

Pages: Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Page 6

Filed Under: Classic Bikes, Features Tagged With: bike, Britain, cafe, continental, Culture, Enfield, gt, II, Jukebox, Mods, motorcycle, racer, Rockers, Royal, scooters, Sub-culture, thruxton, triumph, Vespa, WW

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

AlphaOmega Captcha Classica  –  Enter Security Code
 ⟲    ➴
 


* Copy This Password *

* Type Or Paste Password Here *

Primary Sidebar

Follow Us

LATEST ISSUE

Pulsar NS400Z – CHALA APNI

19TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

Bike India - India's no. 1 two-wheeler magazine

Triumph Street Triple 765 R and RS Review | The Best Street Triple Yet

Ducati Diavel V4 Review | Devil of the Mountain

Royal Enfield Hunter 350 first ride | Aspi Bhathena

SPECIAL Featured Story

Yamaha FZ-S Fi Hybrid

Yamaha FZ-S Fi Hybrid Launched

The Yamaha FZ-S Fi Hybrid has been launched at Rs 1.45 lakh (ex-showroom). Yamaha claim that this is India’s first sub-150-cc hybrid motorcycle. 

More about this.

Recent Posts

  • KTM 390 Adventure X Review – X Marks The Spot
  • 2025 Kawasaki Ninja 300 Launched at Rs 3.43 Lakh
  • Suzuki e-Access Review – Promising Package
  • Oben O100 Platform Coming Soon

Car India

Car India Magazine - Get your Digital Subscription

Footer

Latest News

2025 Kawasaki Ninja 300 Launched at Rs 3.43 Lakh

Oben O100 Platform Coming Soon

Ather Energy Partner With Infineon Technologies

Honda CB750 Hornet Launched in India

Pulsar NS400Z – CHALA APNI

Pulsar NS400Z – CHALA APNI

Bike India: India’s no. 1 two-wheeler magazine

BIKE India covers the two-wheeler industry in its entirety, both from the local and the international perspective. Also delivers the most definitive verdict on machinery and performance by explaining the hows, whys, and whats on every new bike in a lucid and user-friendly manner. BIKE India is the India’s most authoritative two-wheeler publication, a magazine for people with a passion for bikes and everything to do with their history and heritage.
SiteMap

Copyright © 2025 · BIKE INDIA INDIA’S NO. 1 TWO WHEELER MAGAZINE, BY FAR! ·