sandpiper sunset

sandpiper sunset

September 25, 2010. Tags: , , , , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

Sunkist

Sunkist

September 5, 2010. Tags: , , , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

Club Imágenes

Calle Calzada #602, esquina a C (333606)

Open noon-3am daily. Admission free.

A perfect post-theatre, -movie or -cabaret venue. Live traditional and bolero music is played from 11pm onwards and light snacks and drinks are offered in the bar area. More substantial meals are also available in the restaurant.

August 16, 2010. Tags: . Uncategorized. Comments off.

Ronnie Scott’s

47 Frith Street, W1 (020 7439 0747)

Leicester Square or Tottenham Court Road tube. Open 8.30pm-3am Mon-Sat; 7.30-10.30pm Sun; gigs 9.30pm daily. Admission ?4-?20. Credit AmEx, DC, MC, V.

Mr Scott might have
died a few years ago, but this Soho staple, started by Scott and Pete
King some 40 years ago, is still going as strong as ever. The lights
are low and the drinks are pricey, but the jazz is of the highest
quality (acts play here for at least a week at a time). Be warned: the
many expense-accounters who are drawn to the place for its fame do have
a tendency to talk the whole way through.

August 8, 2010. Tags: , , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

Fasching in the Bermuda Triangle

The German-speaking world’s take on carnival is called Fasching, and Cologne is its Rio. While Vienna can hardly claim to be a Fasching hotspot, a wander round the streets of the Bermuda Triangle zone of the Innere Stadt should prove much more exciting than on the average Tuesday with fancy dress contests, live bands and alcohol in abundance. Fasching also coincides with the main events of Vienna’s Ball Season, such as the glitzy Opera Ball on February 22.

July 30, 2010. Tags: , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

J Mascis & The Fog

After years of relative silence – which has done little to relieve him of his slacker-defining reputation – Dinosaur Jr’s main-man and guitar-god J Mascis is back as a solo act and doing what he does best; writing the perfect angst-ridden pop songs and then drenching them in distortion. Old fans know who they are and will be there. Potential fans must know this – without J there wouldn’t have been a Nirvana…

July 29, 2010. Uncategorized. Comments off.

Jongleurs Camden Lock

Dingwalls, Middle Yard, Camden Lock, Camden High Street, NW1 (020 7564 2500)

Camden Town or Chalk Farm tube. Performances 8.45pm Fri; 7.15pm, 11.15pm, Sat. Admission Fri ?14, ?11 students, OAPs, disabled, ES40s; Sat ?12, ?9 students, OAPs, disabled, ES40s. Credit MC, V.

Website: http://www.jongleurs.com

A comfortable,
purpose-built comedy venue based on the American model, with excellent
bills, a late bar and food. Be sure to book in advance to guarantee a
seat, and remember, those at the front should be prepared to join in.
There’s an occasional open slot, and a disco until 2am follows the show
on Friday nights.

July 27, 2010. Tags: , , , , , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

Great Emperors of Europe: Napoleon and Alexander I

Gathering exhibits from both Russian and French museums the Historical Museum shows side by side the similarities between the two emperors whose countries decided the fate of Europe at the beginning of the 19th-century. Displays include Alexander’s coronation costume and throne – an almost exact copy of Napoleon’s – and a number of awards given to the French emperor which go on display for the first time since 1946.

July 22, 2010. Tags: , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

La Fantasmagorie

La Fantasmagorie

July 17, 2010. Tags: , , , , , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

Kensington Palace

W8 (020 7937 9561)

Bayswater, High Street Kensington or Queensway tube. Open 10am-4pm daily. Admission ?9.50; ?7.10 5s-15s; ?7.70 OAPs, students, ES40s; ?29.10 family. Credit AmEx, JCB, MC, ?TC, V.

Website: http://www.hrp.org.uk

Living near the river
at Whitehall aggravated William III’s chronic asthma, so, in 1689, he
and Mary, looking for a more healthful home, bought the modest Jacobean
mansion then known as Nottingham House. Wren and Hawksmoor (and, later,
William Kent) were drafted in to redesign the building. Kensington
Palace remained the favoured royal residence until the reign of George
III, who preferred Buckingham House. The future Queen Victoria was born
in the palace in 1819, and it has latterly been known as the last home
of Princess Di (although she was only one of a number of royal
residents). Plans were put forward a couple of years ago to convert the
palace into a permanent memorial to the Princess and a home for the
magnificent (but currently scattered) Royal Collection of art. The Princess’s dresses
are on show until the end of March 2000, after which the project may go
ahead. Whether or not this happens, the palace is open for tours of the
State Apartments, including the room where Queen Victoria was baptised,
the King’s Gallery with its fine seventeenth- century paintings, and
the royal dress collection.

July 16, 2010. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , . Uncategorized. Comments off.

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