This uptown bar attracts many accolades for its inventive cocktails and laid-back vibe. Using fresh juices and innovative techniques, the friendly, unpretentious staff serve a young, sophisticated clientele. It is housed in a converted fire station and is more New York in style than traditional New Orleans. Give the bar staff dealer’s choice for a tasty surprise.
New Orleans Nightlife
New Orleans has a nightlife that is as diverse as it is abundant. It draws people from around the world, in some measure because the bars and clubs are permitted to remain open 24 hours and it is one of the few places in the USA where you can consume alcohol on the street provided it is in a plastic container.
The French Quarter (known locally as ‘The Quarter’) is the main hub, with Bourbon Street at its centre. Bourbon is a brash, neon-lit street full of bars, restaurants and (towards the west side) strip clubs. The locals are more likely to go to neighbourhood bars on Decatur Street.
Jazz is generally considered to be a New Orleans' creation and the city is constantly buzzing with music. There are dozens of live venues, as well as numerous jazz trumpeters and other buskers on the streets. Those in the know head to Frenchman Street, where some of the city’s best musicians play informal bars and clubs, often for a small cover.
Listings are available from the daily newspaper Times-Picayune (www.nola.com/entertainment), the free monthly publication OffBeat (www.offbeat.com), as well as from free weekly Gambit and the monthly New Orleans Magazine (www.neworleansmagazine.com). Gambit's affiliated online outfit (www.bestofneworleans.com) also posts weekly cultural events and performances. In preparation for your trip, listen to the live stream of WWOZ (www.wwoz.org) to get to know the local music scene.
Tickets are available from the venues or from Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com), which levies a surcharge per ticket.
Bars in New Orleans
Opened in 1806, this is one of the oldest bars in town, but is youthful for a historical artefact. It’s also one of the few bars on Bourbon Street that isn’t completely touristy, and if you want to avoid weirdly coloured daiquiris, then it’s a step up on the scale. Go on a Friday afternoon to watch New Orleans high society file in from their boozy lunches at neighbouring Galatoires.
A compact cocktail bar located on the edge of the Quarter, Tonique gets good foot traffic thanks to its position and inventive drinks menus. The bartenders here serve up classic local cocktails as well as their own contemporary creations, and many of the ingredients (the tonic, for example) are made in-house fresh each day.
Clubs in New Orleans
This Bourbon Street institution is regularly voted the city's best dance club and attracts a mostly gay clientele. During Mardi Gras, it is one of the most popular spots in the city, and to get on the balcony there is considered a major achievement. As well as a dance floor, there are paid (male) dancers on the bar tops.
Live Music in New Orleans
The city’s largest regular music venue (stadium acts play at the Superdome) covers many musical genres, from blues and funk to rock and country. It is now one in a chain of restaurant-clubs, owned in part by comedian Dan Aykroyd. Headline acts are usually nationally touring names or at least local legends.
Held as one of the most authentic venues in the city, ‘Prez Hall’ attracts music fans in some number. Come early and queue for entrance to the legendary hall itself, where guests sit on the floor, if they must, to catch musicians trained in the 'Louis Armstrong school'. The Preservation Hall band is a collection of the city’s fine musicians.
Set in a converted storefront dating from the 1800s, this jazz venue has three rooms: a wood-and-brick bar, a restaurant serving Creole food and an intimate performance space with mezzanine seating. Book in advance to hear top-notch jazz in an enthusiastic backroom of aficionados.
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