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Europe Travel Guide



Night Life in Brussels

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Most of Brussels’ nightlife revolves around Belgian activities of cinema (locals go at least once a week); dining out in gourmet restaurants; or consuming large amounts of the local beers. Best bar crawl is down rue du March au Charbon where every other building houses a lively drinking place. Of the many, Au Soleil at No.86 and the popular Pablo Disco Bar at No.60 are the best picks. Brussels renown as a clubbing town is down to one club: the Fuse , its best, where the DJ, Pierre, is the towns top turntablist. Fast gaining a reputation for democratic partying is Recyclart, a gallery-cum-nightclub hosting dynamic one-nighters .

Brussels location at the heart of Europe encourages top artists and budding stars to tour here. However, the city has a thriving homegrown scene of its own. Jazz has been strong since the 1920s and there is year-round live jazz in a cluster of venues, climaxing in the annual Brussels Jazz Festival. The club scene is relatively new, drawing the crowds after much lingering in the citys many bars and Irish pubs that overflow with expatriates. The legal drinking age in Belgium is 16 years and the price of a beer is around 2.

Aside from the tacky discos for tourists, there is the big-name-DJ-drawing The Fuse. If theres one discotheque that makes us then envy of the world, its the Fuse, the temple of techno, where the top DJs have appeared, to the delight of enthusiasts of this style. Ten years after it opened, the Fuse is still around, withstanding the passage of time. Numerous famous discotheques make Brussels a highly prized city for evenings out. The best send out their sounds into the night, around Place de St-Gry, Manneken-Pis and in the Marolles district. Clubs open at 2300, heat up at midnight and survive until about 0600. Being foreign and dressed in tune with the clubs image helps the admission process along considerably. Entrance is sometimes free but will more likely cost around 7.

The Fnac, in the City 2 complex on Rue Neuve, is the best place for club tickets, although the Tourist Office on Grand-Place may also be of help. Perhaps the highlight of the clubbing year is the Klinkende Munt outdoor music festival, held every July in Brussels at the Place de la Monnaie, Petit-Chateau and the Beursschouwburg.

Live music: Jazz dominates the live music scene in Brussels. There is jazz on Saturday and most Sundays at LArchiduc, Rue Antoine Dansaert 6. Frequent concerts at Fool Moon, Quai de Mariemont 26, featuring anything from jazz-funk to drumnbass and Latin music. Although VK is a trek away at Rue de lEcole 76, this is where alternative sounds hip hop, rock and indie music are given a hearing. Magasin 4, Rue du Magasin 4, offers a more central venue for indie and hip hop. Folk fans should try Thunderbird Caf, Quai du Commerce 48, where there are usually twice-weekly gigs on offer, as well as good food. Informal weekend jazz jam sessions are a feature of the LopLop Caf (see Bars above).

The main venues for touring big-names are the Forest National, Avenue du Globe 36, and AB (Ancienne Belgique), Boulevard Anspach, for the bigger gigs, and Botanique, Rue Royale 236, and Cirque Royal, Rue de lEnseignement 81, for smaller acts.

Related Travel Information

Brussels : Belgium

Brussels Travel Guide Beer, waffles and festivals - if this is what youre looking for you will find them in abundance when you visit the countrys capital city (pop. 1 000 000). Brussels is the major gateway for the country: it is on the main routes heading inland from the Channel ports via the Flemish art towns and it is as well a convenient stopover on the train between France .and the Netherlands. Brussels took its name from Broekzele, or city of the marsh, which grew up in the sixth century on the trade route between Cologne and Bruges / Gent. Under

Dining & Food in Brussels

Brussels has restaurants to rival Paris and London both for price and quality. Brussels is no place for weight watching - fries, chocolate and mussels are everywhere you look - and portions are large. Give in to temptation by experimenting with some of Belgium's famous beers - like Hoegaarden, an example of blanche beer, or, Trappiste beers such as Chimay, Orval, or Achel made in abbey breweries (Leffe is an abbey beer, but is not made in a monastery!). Other varieties include the non-malted lambic, blended gueuze, red beers aged in oak and kriek - fermented with cherries or raspberries.

The Grand Place Grote Market - Market Square

"One of the most beautiful town squares in Europe, if not in the world", is a phrase often heard when visitors in Brussels try to describe the beauty of the central market square. French-speakers refer to it as the 'Grand-Place', whereas in Dutch it is called 'de grote Markt'. The tourists of the 20th century are not alone in their admiration . Archduchess Isabella, daughter of Filip II of Spain wrote about the square during her visit to Brussels on September the 5th 1599: " Never have I seen something so beautiful and exquisite as the town square of

Events in Brussels

Europalia Festival The first Europalia (from the Roman ‘Opalia’, meaning ‘rich harvest’) was conceived in Brussels in 1969, and the festival has been held annually since to showcase the visual and performing arts of a different designated guest country each year. The latest country to be featured was Italy, and in 2005 Russia will be the invited country. Numerous art exhibits, concerts, film screenings and other events are held in and around Brussels between October and early February of the following year. Art Brussels Tens of thousands of art experts and art lovers from all over the world eagerly await ArtBrussels, Belgium’s premier

Brussels Travel Guide

Brussels climate Best: May-Sept, though the weather is notoriously erratic. Worst: Nov-March. Short daylight hours, cold and grey, but floodlighting and hyper-beers will enlighten midnight minds. Brussel Festivals Feb 6,7,8, the Carnival of Binche. An ancient and famously kaleidoscopic event with costumes and masks. Binche is 54kms [34 miles] from Brussels. May 22, the Battle of Lumecon & The Procession of the Golden Chariot, Mons. A George and the Dragon battle and religious procession in this pretty city [40 mins by train]. May-November, Festival of Flanders. Superb classical music in magnificent locations, such as cathedrals, all over Flanders [just north a bit]. Last Thurs of June,