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27-10-2014, 11:43
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Last Thursday, Bailey*delivered a talk on beer writing from 1960 to the present to an audience made up of members of the Brewery History Society (http://www.breweryhistory.com/) and the British Guild of Beer Writers (http://www2.beerguild.co.uk/).A version of the slides will be appearing on the BHS/BGBW websites in the next few days, once we’ve had chance to make them presentable, but, in the meantime, here’s a précis.
(Note: Given the time available, when putting the script together, we chose to focus primarily on the UK market, and on writing aimed at a popular audience.)
1. In 1960, there were no beer writers, as such. Of course there were people who wrote about beer, but they were either (a) hacks turning out books and articles on various subjects or (b) industry insiders presenting a cosy, consensual, relentlessly positive message in industry-sponsored publications.*Ultimately, the Brewers’ Society*wanted to raise the profile of beer without necessarily raising its*status*– the last thing they needed on top of all the other challenges was a body of opinionated, demanding consumers.
2.*The first real beer writers were home brewers.*When Reginald Maudling removed the requirement for a license to brew at home in 1963, he triggered a boom, and prompted demand for advice and guidance. Books by people such as Cyril Berry and Dave Line were available on the high street and sold in huge numbers. They were also gloriously irreverent in tone, and entirely off-message, frequently complaining about the price and quality of big brewery beer, and criticising accountant-led brewing. This prefigured…
3. The coming of the*revolutionaries. In the early 1970s, there was something in the air: the Campaign for the Revitalisation of Ale (CAMRA), Christopher Hutt’s*The Death of the English Pub, Frank Baillie’s*Beer Drinker’s Companion*and Richard Boston’s Boston on Beer column in the Guardian*emerged more-or-less independently and more-or-less simultaneously, with 1973 as the key year. The writing (as in CAMRA’s What’s Brewing newsletter)*was passionate, engaging and critical, and the Brewers’ Society hated it.
4.*Michael Jackson.*With his 1977*World Guide to Beer came beer writing as we know it today. So ambitious was his project that he put himself far ahead of the competition and, overnight, became*the global authority on beer. He also, however, ushered in a new era of cosiness, preferring to write about beers he liked while ignoring those he didn’t. Beer writers increasingly found themselves allied with small/micro/craft brewers, and thus reluctant or unable to criticise them.
5. Same again, Guv’nor? For the next decade or so, though, there was nothing new. The CAMRA Good Beer Guide*owned that market;*Jackson re-wrote and re-formatted his masterpiece time and again;*while others imitated it, or took a single part and span it out to book-length. (Can you think of any ground-breaking 1980s beer books? If so, comment below.) Multiple attempts to get glossy magazines off the ground*failed, because of lack of public interest.
6. The struggle for respect. Nonetheless, in 1988, there were enough people writing about beer in the UK to warrant the formation of the British Guild of Beer Writers. This was just one sign of a growing irritation summarised in a*quote from Barrie Pepper: “I found myself being laughed at when I said I wrote about beer for a living.” We also quoted Oz Clarke on the growing tension between the*down-to-earth nature of beer culture and the desire for it to be taken seriously:
…the reason I’m now a wine writer, not a beer writer or a cider writer… [is] because it was the only alcoholic drink which had that apparatus of elitism which spawns a tradition of criticism and discussion.
7.*Lads, ladettes and the classless society.*In Britain in the 1990s, traditional class and gender roles got well and truly jumbled up: public schoolboys pretended to be cockneys, designer beer invaded champagne bars, blokes who’d never cooked before wanted to be Jamie Oliver, and comedy became ‘the new rock’n’roll’. Out of this melange emerged, in the 00s…
8. Pete Brown. The first really new voice*in beer writing*since Michael Jackson. His books were blokeish but thoughtful, and*solved the problem of how to talk about beer intelligently without being pretentious.*He made himself*an actor in the drama, not an impartial observer, and arguably set the template which a generation of beer bloggers followed.
9. BEFORE YOU DIE! In*1999, 100 Things To Do Before You Die by Dave Freeman and Neil Teplica became a publishing and cultural phenomenon. It was followed in 2003 by 1001 Place to See Before You Die, and soon*the market was flooded with variations listing buildings, films, books, and even places to have sex. A flood of beer list books began*with Roger Protz’s*300 Beers to Try*Before You Die!*in 2005. They work because they are*‘beer porn’, light reading, and engage the reader – who can resist ticking them off? Protz’s books even provide a list with checkboxes at the back.
10. Status symbol. The Oxford Companion to Beer, though rather a botched job, signalled*that, especially in the US, beer has become worthy of serious consideration. It also served to raise the profiles of dedicated popular beer historians Ron Pattinson and Martyn Cornell whose highly-regarded but less well-known books informed some of the better entries, and highlighted the*laziness and superficiality of others.
11. Where we’re going, we don’t need… paper. In the future, Evan Rail’s 2012 electronic monograph*Why Beer Matters may come to be seen as a turning point in beer writing. Sold as an Amazon Kindle Single, it shifted 2600 copies in its first week and sailed up the charts. Low production costs, and the ability to cut conservative and justifiably cautious publishers out of the loop, makes the ebook format very attractive to writers on niche subjects, of which beer is surely one.
12.*When will beer writing really have secured itself a place in mainstream*culture? Perhaps when a publisher is overheard saying: “This book about beer has been a smash hit*— such an original format! We should get someone to write a version about wine.”
Of course it’s superficial, and there’s a lot more we could have said, but it’s certainly helped us get a clearer picture in our own minds of the broad trends.
See also: this post by It Comes in Pints which summarises all of the day’s talks and gives a sense of the overall narrative (http://icipints.wordpress.com/2014/10/26/beer-writing-past-present-and-future/).
Talking About Beer Writing (http://boakandbailey.com/2014/10/talking-beer-writing/)


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