Reykjavík Grapevine - 20.05.2011, Side 21

Reykjavík Grapevine - 20.05.2011, Side 21
21 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 6 — 2011 EVERY BAR IN 101 REYKJAVÍK REVIEWED AND RATED English Pub Austurstræti 12 Saturday, 22:40 800 1400 700 Relaxed, quiet, kind of British. Classy, dark, old black and white photos all over the place. At the time of our visit, we saw 40+ and 50+ folks and mature couples mixed with pseudo-intellectuals and wannabe gentlemen. At other times its reportedly a sports-hnakki haven. Seasoned alcoholics. Troubadour alert! Fast food (pizza, nachos, paninis…) and some snacks. “Hey! Don’t you know there are a lot of good writers in Spain?” If you feel lucky you can try to win some free beers spinning the wheel. Live football matches of the Premier and Champions League. A nice bar for chatting relaxed with friends while listening to some good live music. Esja Austurstræti 16 Friday, 18:00 850 1100 800 Fairly empty. Classy, but sterile. Aiming at the 30+ real estate agent and banker demographic, to seemingly little avail. Top 40. Tapas. “...” Place really needs a little time to set in order to develop some. Not quite there yet. Faktorý Smiðjustígur 6 Saturday, 23:40 750 1000 750 A place people come to drink alcoholic beverages. A lot of them. Dark, mismatched chairs and tables, bar stools and tall tables. Twentysomethings, some in their early 30s, all out for a night of heavy drinking. Mismatched like the décor; everything from rock to techno. The upstairs bar is a live music venue that features great concerts many times a week. None “Whoooo!!! Wazzzuuup!” When the weather is good the large courtyard in front can turn into an outdoor festival, good stop for very late bar hopping. The ideal place for someone looking for the rowdy drunken atmosphere, or a concert. (more if you’re seeing a show there) Gamla Pósthúsið Pósthússtræti 13 Satuday, 00:07 750 1800 800 American Psycho in a bistro with ugly people. White walls, Habitat couches, those weird beige drapes that look like they’re made of translucent burlap sacks. Still-moneyed baby boomers and their trust-fund offspring. MPs. House remixes of whatever these people remember of the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s. Plenty of snacks and a full daytime menu (that looks pretty expensive). Where the remainder of Iceland’s post-collapse nouveau riche like to hide out, drink up and make out, with perfume-drenched results. Clinton’s inauguration, after Tipper Gore passed out and Marion Barry turned the cameras off. Hotel 101 Bar Hverfisgata 10 Sunday, 23:40 990-1350 1350 700-1000 2007 Modern, Nordic, minimalist, black and white. Real Estate Agents, 25+, High Income, King of Sweden. Nondescript background lounge music. Mediterranean appetizers like marinated olives and bruschetta with marinated artichoke. “This place is sooo 2007”. Reportedly owned by bankster Jón Ásgeir and his wife, Ingibjörg S. Pálmadóttir. Designed by Ingibjörg. Once had been a popular spot to party, before Iceland’s financial meltdown. If chic and modern is your thang, this could be your bar. Hótel Holt Gallery Bar Bergstaðastræti 37 Sunday, 22:40 900-1000 1800 950 Warm, cosy, dimly lit The room is full of big comfortable leather couches. The walls are adorned by paintings and sketches by Iceland’s most notable artists. Average patrons are from 25+ upwards. It’s mostly Icelanders who stop by to have a drink before or after dinner. Eric Clapton has been known to drop by as well. Soft, nondescript lounge music. Small plates like, ‘Duck confit dumplings’, and ‘Tandoori tiger prawn and papadum biscuits and pumpkin salad’. “They make a really good whiskey sour”. The bar really doubles as a museum and a gallery. Built in 1964, Hótel Holt is classic, sophisticated luxury. That said, the bar welcomes everyone and prices can be quite affordable, especially during Happy Hour. This is a great place to spend a relaxing evening catching up with friends. Hressingarskálinn, Hressó Austurstræti 20 Wednesday, 20:30 890 1000 650 Relaxed, family friendly, half empty. Faded American diner, with leather booths next to the main window, simple tables and chairs. Long L-shaped bar. A mix of young couples and students chatting or hunched over Apple MacBooks. Playlist mix of non-threatening acoustic indie, Cold War Kids and French pop. DJs on weekends, as well as live music in the form of troubadours and cover bands. A wide and varied menu. Standards such as burgers, sandwiches and pizza are combined with daily specials. “Why is the internet not working?!?” The massive and beautiful courtyard where people can sit, drink, eat and (more importantly to some), smoke. No great shakes, but a perfectly relaxing place to go and chat with friends during the day. Hvíta Perlan Austurstræti 12a Sunday, 16:00 850 950 700-850 Dark and relaxed. Stylish, grey, minimal. Footballer of the fancier type, wearing designer sportswear, drinking Breezers. None during football matches (top 40 at other times). A slim selection of antipasti and burgers. "He should've gotten a red card!" High-Definition screens. High-class sports viewing. In Short: A nice place to go to drink beer in a dark corner and watch your team play. Íslenski Barinn Pósthússtræti 9 Sunday 16:00 900 1200 850 Very relaxed, nice. Feels like grandma’s living room. Embroidery on the walls, nice black and white photos of old Iceland upstairs. 25+. Basically anyone could fit in. Nice atmosphere for writers and journalists to sit and write. Couples, young or old. Suitable for people working in the area to sit outside in the summer for lunch. Icelandic music. Very Icelandic menu. ‘Mother’s special lamb’, then the very Icelandic one with shark, rúgbrauð and harðfiskur. They also have some plain bar snack, nuts, chips, etc. "We’re the only bar in town that sells Kaldi as draft!” My grandmother had the exact same embroidery picture of old Greek goddesses A very nice place to sit down and relax. Good service and with the variety of people in there you don’t need to worry if you belong to the group or not, there is no “group!” Kaffi Amsterdam Hafnarstræti 5 Saturday, 22:00 900 1300 700-900 Vaguely seasoned hard-drinker dive—vaguely normal folks out for a pint dive. Wood panelling, classic dive. A nice mix of seasoned drinkers, folks from out of town that don’t know better and Bakkus hipsters that snuck in to use the bathroom but find themselves enamoured. Top 40 ‘party music’. DJs on weekends, sometimes live bands. Nope. “CAN YOU PLAY ROD STEWART’S TEARS FROM HEAVEN?” One of Iceland’s only dives that’s not totally end-of-the-line in a horrible way. Occasional alt. concerts will mix up the crowd. Amsterdam often functions as a venue during Iceland Airwaves. This often-empty (sometimes-crowded) divey dive bar is not without its charm. You’ll at least have the chance to meet some interesting people. That said, the drinks are kind of expensive and it’s not the kinda place you seek out. Kaffi Grand Frakkastígur 9 Sunday, 15:00 400 700 400 The cheapest bar in town. Plain. College students, rockers, seasoned alcoholics. 30+ Zeppelin oozed out of a broken sound system. Not really. “I really should be studying...” The cheapest bar in town. Go there for drinking. Kaffi Zimsen Hafnarstræti 18 Saturday, 03:44 750 1800 700 Like the world is about to be swallowed by a sports car. An eclectic mix of incredibly random stuff, with vintage gramophones and sewing machines clashing violently with disco balls, IKEA furniture and a Lascaux-type cave painting. After midnight, this is where teenhood goes to die. Every pot-smoking, moonshine-drinking, hair-bleaching, SAT-failing unwanted pregnancy in greater Reykjavík is dancing to shitty techno in here. During the day you can find pretty much anyone. Dance versions of songs you hear every- where else. Daytime means Pearl Jam and other ‘90s rock heroes. No. You used to be able to buy Pizza King slices in the smoking area. That might still be the case. Come for the teenagers, stay because you’re still in line to get in. At night: Don’t. During daytime: sure why not? Kaffibarinn Bergstaðastræti 1 Friday, 03:00 750 1000 600 It’s Kaffibarinn. Very crowded and charged with pheromones of all sorts. It’s Kaffibarinn. No interior decorations can be seen after 2AM. I did see a picture of a dog hanging on the wall besides the bar. It’s Kaffibarinn. DJs, live music, events. It’s Kaffibarinn. It’s Kaffibarinn. Sometimes sandwiches. Free nuts for those who show up early! Free cheese and crackers on Wednesday nights. “It’s so crowded, sexual harassment is called dancing around here. It’s Kaffibarinn.” It’s Kaffibarinn. It has a great smoking area unlike many other bars in Iceland. It also remains the only bar in Reykjavík that has its own men’s choir. They practice Sunday nights if you’re interested… It’s Kaffibarinn. Don’t expect affection from the service personnel after midnight. However, Kaffibarinn has an excellent feel to it. One can easily say it is a must-visit if you want to experience the core of Icelandic nightlife. Kofi Tómasar Frænda Laugavegur 2. Sunday, 01:15 790 1150 700 Quiet before midnight, dance-y after midnight. Black leather, wood and candles. PM: Quiet people. AM: Drunks dancing badly. PM: Quiet. AM: Dance music. Full menu, includes sandwiches, soups and so on. "The name of this place means what?!" A jarring shift from quiet to loud. Whenever an Icelander complains that Americans fail to understand other cultures bring up the fact that a downtown café-bar is named after ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’. That said, once you pick your jaw up off the floor, this is a nice place before midnight. Then it changes into the world's smallest dance club. Laundromat Austurstræti 9 14:00, Sunday 800 1100 700 Bustling, new. Complicated, nice. Lots of Grapevines in the basement. Hipsters, 101 celebs, Icelandic celebs and the tourists that love them. Modern hipster fare A full menu of bistro/grill food. “Where can I plug in my MacBook?” It’s new and fresh and full of stuff. Seems like ideal for hanging out for prolonged periods. REVIEWER INSTRUCTIONS These are the instructions we hand- ed out to our reviewers before they embarked upon their mission. DEFINE: BAR A bar is an establishment that has 'the sale and consumption of alco- hol' as its main purpose and goal. It cannot regularly charge an entry fee (thus excluding, for instance, NASA and Sódóma), and it must remain open until 1AM on week- days (thus excluding, for instance, Tíu Dropar). It can sell food, but emphasis must be placed on, again, the sale and consumption of alco- holic beverages. METHOD One beer per bar, one reviewer per bar. At the bar, we will ask the bar- tender the average price of beer there (as well as the average price of a 'single + mixer' and 'shot'), and if they have 'happy hour'. We will note down the time given and offer on offer in our fancy notebook that we did not forget to bring (because forgetting that would be horrible!). We will then, if at all possible, seek to engage a patron or two in con- versation. This is important. We will then write down the follow- ing: MOOD/ATMOSPHERE Describe the mood in a few words. INTERIOR DECORATIONS A note on the style of the place. AVERAGE PATRON What type of person frequents it (don't be judgmental here!). STYLE OF MUSIC (NOTE IF THEY SOMETIMES OFFER LIVE MU- SIC) What kind of music do they play? Do they have DJs or live music in the evening? MUNCHIES? Can you get something to eat there? QUOTE OF NOTE When you were chatting with the patrons, did they say anything in- teresting? IDENTIFYING CHARACTERIS- TICS, IF ANY What sets this one apart. IN SHORT Sum up your experience in a few words. RATING OUT OF FIVE Based on your overall enjoyment/ feel (extremely high or low ratings should be argued for) HAPPY HOURS Do they have any ‘happy hours’? When? What do they entail? By: Anna Andersen, José Angel Hernandez García, Bogi Bjarnason, Þórður Hermannsson, Ólafur Sindri Ólafsson, Haukur S. Magnússon, Jón Örn Loðmfjörð, Megan Herbert, Kári Tulinius, Paul Fontaine, Sindri Eldon, Vala Þóroddsdóttir, Helgi Þór Harðarson, Magnús Sveinn Helgason

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