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Nightlife
Madrileos tend to make not one plan for the evening but three or four. While the busiest nights are Friday and Saturday (with Thursday a close runner-up), the locals go out every night and miraculously manage to work or study during the day. Perhaps the secret lies in the tradition of consuming tapas – snacks of olives, anchovies, chorizo (sausages), gambas (deep-fried shrimp) and local specialities like orejas (pig’s ears), callos (tripe), mollejas (sweetbreads), snails in hot sauce and bull’s testicles. After a long night on the town, it is customary to breakfast on thick hot chocolate and sweet fried churros (dough).
Nightlife centres on three major districts – Chueca (Madrid’s gay village, which specialises in trendy restaurants), Calle Huertas (traditional Spanish music, jazz clubs and bars) and Malasaa (mainly bars and clubs frequented by a young crowd). All bars and clubs are licensed but hours are flexible. It can be hard to tell bars and clubs apart, since bars often have a dancefloor and not all clubs charge for entry. Where they do, 5–10 is the standard admission fee, which usually includes consumicin (first drink). The legal drinking age in Madrid is 18 and the price of tipple ranges from 1.50 for a small beer or glass of wine to 4.50 for spirits and cocktails. It is customary to pay on leaving and certainly worth noting that few bars accept credit cards. Tipping is discretionary (1 will suffice).
Many venues close during the month of August. There are several listings magazines. The weekly Gua del Ocio (website: www.guiadelocio.com/english), published in Spanish only and available from kiosks for 1, has information on concerts, theatre, film and other entertainment options. It also provides restaurant listings. The monthly What’s On is published in English and Spanish and is less detailed but good on opening times and contact details. In Madrid is a monthly English-language newspaper, available from tourist offices, Irish bars or Barajas airport. It is hot on the latest club news, DJs, bars and other aspects of night-time entertainment, and it is free.
Bars: Madrid’s bars range from dark, wood-panelled taverns to the fabulous Viva Madrid, Calle Manuel Fernndez y Gonzles 7, with its painted tiles of Madrid scenes from the early 1900s. The Garamond, Calle de Claudio Coello 10, has a castle-like interior and suits a smart older crowd. Chicote, Grand Va 12, is Madrid’s most famous cocktail bar and has preserved its 1930s interior – it is easy to imagine American novelist Ernest Hemingway relaxing here during the Civil War. A former brothel run by gypsies, with a tiled interior depicting Velzquez’s The Drunkards, Los Gabrieles, Calle Echegaray 17, is now a respectable bar for a young chic clientele. Tapas bars cluster around Plaza de Santa Ana near Sol, Plaza de Santa Brbara in Calasaa and Cava Baja and Calle de Cuchilleros, behind Plaza Mayor. One of the best is Taberna los Austrias, Calle Nuncio 17, situated near metro La Latina. As dawn breaks, revellers head for Chocolatera San Gins, Pasadizo de San Gins 11, a Mecca for those in search of hot chocolate and churros.
Casinos: Casino Gran Madrid, Autova A6, Km 29 exit from Madrid, Carretera de la Coruna, (tel: 900 900 810; website: www.casinogranmadrid.es), is the only officially recognised casino in the area and is located outside the city, near Torrelodones – a free bus service leaves from Plaza Espana 6. The dress code is formal and ties must be worn, the age limit is 21 and passports are required for entry.
Clubs: Most tourists head for the clubs around Sol and Gran Va, although true hedonists might want to try out some of the locals’ haunts instead. A typical night might begin around 2300 with the exotic elite at Serrano 41, Calle Serrano 41, Independencia, Puerta de Alcal, or the tango-friendly Sportsman, Calle Alcal 65, before moving on to Fortuny, Calle Fortuney 23, the laid-back Caf del Foro, Calle San Andres 38, or super-trendy Mrmara, Calle Padre Damin, next to Hotel Eurobuilding. There are no admission charges here, although chic dress is recommended. The energetic dance to techno at Pach, Calle Barcel 11. Gabana 1800, Calle de Velzquez 6, is another popular venue for stylish 20- and 30-somethings – if the bouncer allows admission.
Live Music: Madrid offers an eclectic choice of flamenco, salsa, jazz, rock, world music and cantautores – Spanish singer-songwriters. The Caf de la Palma, Calle la Palma 62 (website: www.cafelapalma.com), is the venue of the moment for cantautores, as well as flamenco and Cuban music acts. For more Latino sounds, fans should head for La Negra Tomasa, Calle Cdiz 9, for live music nightly from 2100. Moby Dick, Avenida de Brasil 5 (website: www.mobydickclub.com) in the Castellana district, plays live pop and rock on weekdays and hosts DJs (reggae and rap) at weekends. The clientele is a charming mixture of foreigners and locals. At Caf Populart, Calle Huertas 22 (website: www.populart.es) punters can experience everything from live jazz to swing, salsa, blues, gospel, African and reggae. There are two shows nightly, at 2300 and 0030. The Irish Rover pub, Avenida de Brasil 7, imports Irish, folk and country music. International acts play regularly at the Caf Central, Plaza del Angel 10, Madrid’s top jazz venue. Pop stars and the best salsa bands perform at La Riviera, Paseo Bajo de la Virgen del Puerto.
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