From the all-too-sweet sounds of the contemporary
British artists of the mid-1950's through to the
breakthrough of the more biting and vibrant sounds
of Tommy Steele, Marty Wilde, Cliff Richard and all the
Elvis clones that emerged during the late 1950's,
this book chronicles the development of British
rock 'n' roll into a fully blown home industry that paved
the way for the British takeover that was to come in 1962
when the Beatles conquered the world.
However, before that earth-shattering event, British
pop music suffered an anti-climactic decline into the
mediocrity of what is often called 'bubblegum' music.
This is the story of that rise and fall.