
Camden: Neither prim nor proper
Camden Town is a London that’s a world away from Harrods
Jane Mundy, National Post
Camden Town, in north London, is a people watcher's paradise, a vibrant outpost
with a gritty working-class core that is paradoxically home to posh restaurants
and of-the-moment celebs such as Amy Winehouse. By 10 a.m. one recent Saturday
morning, every form of life has already hit the scruffy high street. Throngs
of goths, punks, hippies, rockabillies and other fad followers are moving en
masse along Chalk Farm Road to Stables Market.
"Skinheads and goths take their identity seriously," explains long-time
resident Michelle Roland, who with her husband, Fred, has agreed to act as my
guide for a day touring Camden Town. "To the average tourist they may look
tough, but most of them are office workers and shop assistants dressing up for
the weekend."
Still, I'm a Canadian, unused to large eccentric crowds. I clutch my purse tightly
as we slowly snake our way along the route to a covered section of stalls known
as the Camden/Buck Street Market, a hunting ground for Doc Martens knock-offs,
leather jackets, clubwear and black T-shirts - what Michelle (whose day job,
incidentally, is designing costumes for strippers) calls "throw-away clothes."
Just about everything is less than £20 - and these days £1 equals
$1.76, the most favourable exchange rate since 1985. As the crowds thickens,
Fred tells me that Camden Town is now one of London's main attractions. "In
the early 1980s, there were just a few stalls on either side of the street selling
cheap clothes, records and drug paraphernalia," he says. Today there are
500 shops and stalls in Stables Market alone, and Camden attracts more than
100,000 people every weekend.
We inch our way to the Stables Market, where a United Nations of food vendors
resides - no fast-food franchises here. I have a freshly squeezed orange juice
and, a few stalls later, order a barbecued Brazilian steak sandwich, which is
gobsmackingly good, to coin a Britishism.
Next, we venture into the bowels of the Loch Market, passing every cuisine
imaginable, to Kim's Vietnamese, nestled between a manicure bar and a tarot
reader. Kim's pho is a must-eat. Reinforced, we marched onward and upward to
higher-end stalls, including a tailor of men's fine shirts, art supplies and
craft stalls, and the ubiquitous sellers of crystals, incense and drug accoutrements.
To the left of the old horse hospital, we checked out Cyberdog, formerly Gilbey's
Gin House. According to Fred, it was once a stall in the market; today, Cyberdog
is represented by two huge floors of hard-core techno gear. It is like exploring
another dimension. Many ogle the expensive gear but no one seemed to be buying,
or even trying on, the bizarre foamy spacesuits, bearing price tags north of
£400.
Upstairs, the Proud Gallery displayed black-and-white photos of the Sex Pistols.
"We're having a Sid Vicious revival in Camden, like a mini-cult,"
Fred says, "but the goth scene dominates." At night, the gallery stages
burlesque shows. (The town council is trying to shut them down, but the dancers
insist their art has nothing to do with striptease.) At a bar on the same floor
- a former stable - we order mojitos and repair to one of the stalls, each of
which has a different theme, from goth to grunge.
Back on the street, Fred and Michelle point out that we could escape the madding
market crowd with ease. Tranquil Camden Loch is part of the canal system that
runs alongside the market (and all the way to Scotland). It, too, has its share
of colourful characters. "I had my first eyebrow piercing 15 years ago,"
says John Lynch, who tells us he is 78. "But I waited until I left my bank-teller
job to get all these tattoos." Lynch says he makes about £50 a day
charging tourists £1 to pose for a photograph with them (me included).
Barge tours run regularly from Walker's Quay (next to the Secret Society of
Vegans shop), sailing through London Zoo and Regent's Park to Robert Browning's
Island at Little Venice and back.

But we decide to wander down Chalk Farm Road, checking out the impressive array
of boots and leather goods (there's an Aldo factory outlet where bargains abound).
Locals favour Punk Glamour (women's fashions), Episode (retro and vintage) and
LCB Surf Store (surf and skate gear). Resurrection Records is the home of alternative
music; Amsterdam of London is Camden's famous headshop.
Not all that long ago, Brits would go slumming in Camden Town, mainly for the
pubs and cheap music venues. In addition to shopping, it's now a hot spot for
pubbing, clubbing and eating.
Within walking distance, you can indulge in fine dining at Gordon Ramsay's
pricy new restaurant, the York and Albany or, as we do, go for the authentic
Brit experience and chow down on jellied eel, meat pie and mash at Castle's.
Fred's 85-year- old father, Ken, was our dining companion, a regular. The establishment
is standing room only - always a good sign.
The Castle opened in 1934, and Ken has fond memories. "Years ago, they
sprinkled sawdust all over the floor so the jellied-eel eaters could spit the
bones on the floor," he tells us. "In those days, we had turn-ups
in our trousers, and when I got home my wife would always know where I'd been."
On Ken's advice, I order the jellied eel as a starter. A grumpy overworked
server scoops a grey gelatinous mass from a plastic container and plops the
quivering heap on my grey ceramic plate. I take one bite and decided to move
on to the pie and mash, which Ken suggests I order with "liquor,"
which I figure will be a thick gravy. Wrong. The pie and mash is rendered even
more tasteless smothered by a thin green glue made of water, flour and parsley.
Truly revolting.
I should have gone for kebabs instead at the Marathon Kebab House, also popular
for late-night drinking.
We decide to head off to the Hawley Arms, where Ken has a shot of whisky chased
with a pint of bitters and I have a lovely steak-and-kidney pie that renews
my faith in English grub. The Hawley burned down last year, but locals lobbied
the council to get it rebuilt.
Nearby are several clubs and music venues, such as the Enterprise, the Electric
Ballroom and the Monarch. "Camden was asleep until the 1960s, when someone
thought about renting out the Roundhouse for bands. It was a building used to
turn trains around before the reverse gear was invented for trains," says
Fred. "By 1967, the Doors, the Who and David Bowie had all played there."
Until then, he says, the population was mainly Irish, but with inexpensive
housing the English, Scots and Welsh moved in in the '60s. "And that's
why there are so many pubs in Camden Town," says Fred. "The Irish
would fight the English and so on, until they had pubs built specifically for
their kin."
One of the most popular clubs is the Underworld, beneath the World's End Pub,
across from the Camden Town tube station. It's the spot to catch alternative
bands: goth, metal, electronica, rock, punk et al. on Friday and Saturday nights.
Across the street, the Jazz Café brings in world beat and jazz names.
We buy tickets for that night's performance; by 9 p.m. the dance floor is packed.
We make our way upstairs to the bar, order a round of margaritas, perch on high
chairs and watch the band in comfort.
On my way to Heathrow Airport the next day, nursing a hangover, I tell my taxi
driver about the awful eel, meat pie and mash I'd consumed the night before.
"You only eat there with a hangover," he said, laughing, "and
you have to pour loads of vinegar and chili oil on the pie to liven it up. It's
the cure."
I'll try that next time. And I'll also pay more attention to what I buy. My
friend's 18-year-old daughter is thrilled with my clothing purchases - I passed
them all on to her without even trying them on when I got home to comparatively
staid Vancouver. I feared I'd look like that other disgusting dish, mutton dressed
as lamb. Pouring vinegar and chili oil on me wouldn't have helped that.

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