Motorcycle culture was founded on counterculture. Societal rebels, outlaws and drifters were some of the first to accept two-wheeled transportation as their way of life, and the association has stuck through the years. In the ’60s and ’70s young guns in England’s city scenes would take stock bikes, hot rod them and then race from cafe to cafe — thus, the cafe racer was born. Flash-forward 50 years, and the cafe racer–style motorcycle has made a come back in popularity and is once again a symbol of the rebellious motorcyclist. It’s a trend the big manufacturers have caught on to and embraced. Of their takes on the genre, these five made the best impression from the saddle.
A Custom Cafe Racer, from the Ducati Factory

Now that mass-market manufacturers are riding the appealing and lucrative wave of counterculture, we indeed might just be at the peak of the cafe racer.
Yamaha’s Answer to the Cafe Question

Introduced last year, the XSR 900 is Yamaha’s answer to the hipster/modern/classic niche dominating much of the moto scene.