Tag: Newton Dunbar

  • Hackney style stars in ‘people’s history’ of British fashion

    Style icon: Hoana Poland
    Style icon: Hoana Poland. Photograph: Nina Manandhar

    Local author Nina Manandhar has featured East London heavily in a new book on British popular style, What We Wore.

    The book is a collection of photos submitted by people from all over the UK, covering street style from 1950
    to 2010.

    Published by Prestel, the book includes portraits of Four Aces founder Newton Dunbar, Dalston entrepreneur Sharmadean Reid and founder of Strut boutique Hoana Poland.

    Manandhar has previously featured portraits of shoppers on Ridley Road as part of her London photography book, Money On My Oyster. She herself has lived in Hackney for over seven years.

    What We Wore includes a series featuring Winston Milton, born and bred in Hackney, who is a friend of the author.

    She said: “Hackney has changed so much in the time since these photos were taken. There is a thriving community of creatives here, but it’s really important to me as an artist that the new communities mix with the ones that have been here for years and Winston is a really good example of someone who bridges that divide.”

    Manandhar pointed out that the book also traces the lineage of club culture, which has been integral to Hackney’s history – featuring for example Natalie Coleman’s outfit for Labyrinth, established on the site of the old Four Aces club.

    The author explained: “It’s great to see how different social spaces have been inhabited by different groups in Hackney’s history.

    “Stories about style are an entry point to wider social history for me and the readers.”

    What We Wore: A People’s History of British Style is published by Prestel Publishing. RRP: £22.50. ISBN:9783791348988 

     

  • Newton Dunbar: ‘The New Four Aces is wherever I play’

    DJ Newton Ace. Photograph: Dino Delavega
    DJ Newton Ace. Photograph: Dino Delavega

    Those old enough to remember legendary Dalston nightspot The Four Aces may need no introduction to Newton Dunbar, its charismatic owner.

    Jamaican-born Dunbar opened the club in 1967, naming it after a brand of Jamaican cigarettes, and remained in situ for over 30 years.

    Early on Dunbar booked Ben E. King, Jimmy Cliff and Desmond Dekker to play at The Four Aces, establishing it as the place to hear pioneering soul, reggae and ska. Even when the club transformed into Labyrinth in 1988, with reggae making way for acid house, jungle and happy hardcore, Dunbar still had an office upstairs.

    It’s no surprise then that 45 years since the club opened, music is still Newton Dunbar’s main occupation. Only now, no longer the boss watching from the back of the room, he has reinvented himself as a DJ.

    Going by the name DJ Newton Ace, Dunbar plays old school reggae on Haggerston radio and has a weekly residency at Charlie Wright’s.

    “When The Four Aces was taken away I was left in a void with nothing to do,” he says. “But I saw it coming and I prepared mentally. When it finally went, I decided to have a good rest and I looked around. Travel-wise I went back to Jamaica a few times and then I got back and it was reality time.”

    The “void” was the result of the club being forced into a compulsory purchase order by Hackney Council in 1998. It was then boarded up and left to decay until being demolished to make way for luxury flats in 2007.

    Dunbar took the original sign for The Four Aces, which was taken down “very ceremoniously”, and uses it as a prop for his DJ sets. In this way, he says, The Four Aces lives on as a concept.

    “I decided to use the sign as a concept, and when people ask me what that means I say the New Four Aces is wherever I play. I take the concept of the original and I manifest it in what’s happening now.”

    Dunbar came to London in 1956 with the idea of studying law. When that didn’t work out he got a job on the railway, then worked as an engineer before starting out as a club proprietor. As such, it’s no surprise that Dunbar says becoming a DJ was more the work of “providence” than any grand plan.

    “A friend of mine asked me to DJ in the Eastern Curve Garden in 2007,” he recalls. “Over 300 people turned up. They liked the music and I could pick up the vibes so I was allowed to play on carte blanche. When we got to the final hour they all walked to the side where I was playing and applauded. I was blown away.”

    Now in his 70s, Dunbar says his new occupation “keeps me from looking for the carpet slippers and for my brain to wither.” Clearly, though, there is more to it than just keeping active.

    “Sometimes you realise that music is a very spiritual thing,” he says. “If you are fortunate enough to be able to dispense something that relates to spiritual aspects then that’s a very good fortune, and I’m lucky to be doing what I’m doing.”

    Listen to Newton ‘Ace’ Dunbar on Haggerston Radio every Tuesday from 4–6pm
    www.haggerstonradio.com