In the light of the events of recent years, it’s difficult not to look back on 1973 as something of a watershed moment.
Britons, more than ever before, were looking to the Continent for inspiration and, although you were still more likely to holiday in Margate than Marbella, the change was clear to see in everything from pop music to restaurant menus.
Just like our evolving gastronomic tastes, we gained a growing appreciation of exotic performance saloons – and who could blame us for having our heads turned when at home we were being served up a lukewarm platter of Austin Allegro and Morris Marina?
One of the first foreign firms to capitalise was Alpina, a small company based out of an old typewriter factory in Buchloe, Germany.
What began with tuning kits for the BMW Neue Klasse saloon eventually encompassed the lion’s share of Munich’s model line-up, covering everything from entry-level models right up to the firm’s top executive offerings – each of which elicited a fascination among the British public that was rarely matched outside Germany.