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Nightlife in İstanbul!!!
(35 Messages in 4 pages - View all)
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1.       kurtlovesgrunge
1435 posts
 03 Sep 2007 Mon 10:13 pm

It is a mystery to anyone who has spent more than a few nights sampling Istanbul's extensive and diverse nightlife that the city has never really managed to establishing international reputation for fun. Unlike many of the east European capitals Istanbul is more associated by outsiders to mosques, battlements and hamams than bars, nightclubs and restaurants. This is a travesty. From the bohemian backstreets of Beyoglu to the pumping ostentation of Ortakoy or Etiler, Istanbul really does boast one of the most engaging and vibrant scenes in the region. The only potential nightmare for any would-be reveller in Turkey's biggest city is the agony of choice. The city is generally safe, the people extremely welcoming and, best of all, the prices relatively cheap.

Istanbul is a city that eats and sleeps late and those wishing to sink a few early drinks without doing so alone must be selective. Beyoglu, the area stretching south down Istiklal Caddesi from Taksim Square is a good place to start. The area itself is rumoured
to boast over 950 bars. As the offices of central Istanbul close, the small cafes at the top of the street begin to fill up with an eclectic selection of locals, from students and intellectuals to businessmen and wannabe rock stars. Kaktus and Pia are typical haunts; small but cosy and, although half the people seem to be reading on their own, you get the impression that at least half the clientele are keeping one eye permanently fixed on the door .On the opposite side of the main street is Dulcinea, a larger, trendier brasserie that has become a staple for the city's young. This converts effort- lessly from a warm relaxed afternoon coffee-house to a lively mid-price eaterie in the evening and finally to a swinging cocktail bar after 11 pm.

Just off the main thoroughfare to Tepebasý, sits the James Joyce, arguably the best Irish pub in the area. Although such bars are usually on the list of places to avoid for all except the terminally homesick, this pub tends to rustle-up a spirited atmosphere and offers possibly the best full- size pool table around.

Taksim's smartest bar is on the ground floor of the renowned Pera Palace Hotel, which was built in the late 19th century as the resting house for guests arriving on the Orient Express. Although the establishment may have lost some of its panache it has lost none of its charm. You may wait longer to be served here than you would anywhere else in the city or but a few extra minutes in a room full of 1920s memorabilias highly pleasant.

For those looking to indulge in a slightly more upmarket evening, a mile away in the fashionable Nisantasý area are some of the hippest evening spots to be found anywhere in Turkey. After a tiring day shopping for over-priced foreign fashion brands,there is nothing better than to treat
yourself to a 6 o 'clock gin and tonic at Istanbul's own Armani Caffe.
With more leather on display than at your average Harley Davidson convention, this is not a place to pitch up in a faded rock tour t-shirt and jeanss; but it is fun all the same .

If you are lucky enough to arrive in the city during the long summer months it is essential to take advantage of the long afternoons when Istanbul glows a deep orange. Around 7pm
there is no better place to admire the historic Sultanahmet skyline than from the Q Bar terrace along the Bosphorus at the Cýragan Palace hotel. Nothing can destroy the serenity of the scene except possibly the cheque.
Further along the waterfront in Bebek is one of the best kept secrets in town, the terrace of the Bebek Hotel. Although a glance from the main street reveals nothing except a slightly tacky sign and a forgettable facade, the entrance hall leads directly through to a terrace in the rear that juts out into the Bosphorus, offering guests an incredible view of the Asian mainland across the waterway. The bill is more reflective of the fleet of German cars parked outside.

A brief mention must be made for sport lovers. The centre of Istanbul offers just a handful of sports bars, none of which have invested in anything except the local league (this is worth watching, though, if only to enjoy everyone else's reaction.). Fans of English football are forced to travel all the way to the Champions Bar at the Polat Renaissance Hotel.

At around 9pm, Istanbul's bars and restaurants begin to heat up. Those who find themselves in Taksim may decide just to stay put. A local favourite, tucked away close to the British consulate, is Pano bar, an old Greek wine bar first opened in 1896. The bar, which also has an extremely atmospheric basement restaurant, is packed on most nights and you may have to wait before being given a place at one of the long wooden tables. The bar's policy of promoting its own, pretty dubious wine tends to encourage a convival atmosphere. With most of the clientele standing wherever possible, it is very easy to meet people.

Further up Istiklal Caddesi, nestled inside the Atlas cinema, is the small but thriving Sefahathane bar, home to an eclectic group of musicians, students, and bankers wishing they were students again. Always good for a brief stop, Sefahathane's unique characteristic is a large video screen showing some of the most obscure movies ever made, including the hugely popular Turkish cult classic 'The Man Who saved the World' which has footage taken (literally) straight from Star Wars. Other fun bars on this stretch include the original Hayal Kahvesi and, closer to Taksim Square, Andon bar. Andon is great for those who are undecided; four different themes on four floors, from a dark, candle lit bar on the ground floor pumping out a mixture of Arabic, Spanish and Greek music to real Turkish tavern upstairs.

Those with a more sensitive palate (and a slightly thicker wallet) may prefer the yuppie restaurant bars of Abdi Ipekci Caddesi down the road in Nisantasi. Of these, Downtown and Bice, near the top of the street, are probably the most popular. Both offer smart, well-run bars full of pretty young things who have managed to make it through the bustle of Istanbul's streets without putting a hair out of place. A slightly more down- at -the-heel environment can be found at Touchdown, further down the road. Here a mixture of journalists and advertising executives meet in an almost homely atmosphere.

Istanbul has not escaped, the fad for so-called British pubs, a term which here refers to a European style bar that serves Turkish lager in halves, charges at the door, and dishes out sliced carrots with drinks. Indeed, except for the almost mandatory pic- ture of the Queen, it is hard to spot anything particularly English in the place at all; except possibly half the patrons who have been overseas for so long they have evidently forgot- ten what a British pub looks like. Still, if that is your pleasure, the most popular pub remains the Sherlock Holmes in Levent, which is packed at weekends despite the flu cover charge.

As evening turns to night, the city really starts to show its colours. in the summer, after 11pm there are some wonderful nightspots worth investigating on the Bosphorus. Of these, Pasha, the huge open-air club in Ortakoy, with its five restaurants and two dance-floors, is the most stunning. As with all of the city's smartest hangouts, entrance fees are extortionate. They can be avoided by making a reservation at any one of the surprisingly reasonably-priced restaurants. Having made it past the door- man, you are in for a real treat. This really is the summum for Istanbul's beautiful set.

Pasha is nothing if not a place to indulge. Although the club is huge, it is divided into distinct sections with different styles of music, avoiding the monotony of some of large clubs on the south coast. The glamour of Pasha is not unique: opposite at Zihni, up the road at Havana or, better still, across the water to Hayal Kahvesi similar scenes are played out almost nightly in the summer. At Hayal Kahvesi guests are taken across to the Asian side on a private boat that departs regularly from Rumeli Hisarý close to the second bridge.

Although all of these nightspots are only open from May to October, winter visitors need not worry: Istanbul's social scene simply shifts about a mile inland. The best of these, Havana, is tucked away under a large office block in Mecidiyekoy .Again, it is worth booking the restaurant to avoid the entrance fees. Inside one finds the usual cigar-smoking set on a Well-trodden circuit. For a slightly more relaxed atmosphere we would recommend Vogue, particularly on Thursdays. The people are equally beautiful but here they look as though they are really having fun. AII of these clubs are open until at least 2am-3am.

Late night entertainment is not restricted to the more expensive venues. The whole of Beyoglu thrives until at least 2am and many clubs stay open until 4am or 5am. Barfly has some good bands and close-by is the more saloubrious Roxy bar. This venue avoids the spit and sawdust feel of other bars in the area, while maintaining a raw, exciting atmosphere that has long since gone from the more expensive and exclusive clubs of Etiler.

Like everywhere else at the weekends, there is a cover charge and groups of men are not iooked upon particularly favourably by the doormen.

2.       pagliaccio
770 posts
 03 Sep 2007 Mon 11:24 pm

"Böyledir akşamları İstanbul'un
Bir efkar basar içini çoğu zaman
Çaresizliğin, yalnızlığın aklına gelir
Hatıralar kayıp gider avuçlarından"

3.       Badiabdancer74
382 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 12:30 am

I liked 'Aura Pera', it is somewhere just off Taksim. Nice waitstaff and good DJ, interesting mixes of Turkish Pop and other.
Why do they have rules about 1 guy for 1 girl? This is non-existant in the United States. No one in the U.S. monitors guy-girl ratio and I could really care less, I'm there to dance. My fiance and I went to a club in Kemer and he wanted to leave immediately saying it was not a good place because of all the men. He starts yelling about it when we leave, I didn't understand what the problem was...seemed to be more than jealousy. I remember this rule in Istanbul as well. To discourage gang activity and drunken fighting?

4.       longinotti1
1090 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:13 am

Quoting Badiabdancer74:

My fiance and I went to a club in Kemer and he wanted to leave immediately saying it was not a good place because of all the men. He starts yelling about it when we leave, I didn't understand what the problem was...seemed to be more than jealousy. I remember this rule in Istanbul as well. To discourage gang activity and drunken fighting?



You have mentioned this incident before, and I wonder if there was "more to know" in that situation. Where is "Kemer", is it a distict in Istanbul? When you learn Turkish I hope you can ask him and explain to us.

For selfish reason, I hope the group can explain if clubs with more men than women should be avoided? My wife and I will be coming next year.

5.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:18 am

Quoting Badiabdancer74:

Why do they have rules about 1 guy for 1 girl? This is non-existant in the United States. No one in the U.S. monitors guy-girl ratio and I could really care less, I'm there to dance.



I am glad to hear that some places in Istanbul do this. There is nothing worse than going out and finding groups of drunken, slurring men hanging around...

Actually its quite common in the UK for groups of men to be refused admittance into clubs and pubs. Small groups (2 or 3) are allowed, but no more. It has been proven that large groups of guys together create more trouble and damage to the clubs, so its a pretty sensible rule.

It has spread to hotels now too....in fact a recent incident hit the news. A group of 20 men booked their annual holiday in Blackpool together. Their booking was refused...even though the men were in the 60, 70 and even 80 age group, and their holiday was nothing more than playing dominos and walking along the seafront lol lol

Maybe that is taking it too far

6.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:53 am

i love the nights of istanbul... i already missed it alot...
if you know where to go... with whom to go... then you have no problems...

as sometimes we enter the places with 5 men

7.       gezbelle
1542 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 05:32 am

Quoting AEnigma III:

Quoting Badiabdancer74:

Why do they have rules about 1 guy for 1 girl? This is non-existant in the United States. No one in the U.S. monitors guy-girl ratio and I could really care less, I'm there to dance.



I am glad to hear that some places in Istanbul do this. There is nothing worse than going out and finding groups of drunken, slurring men hanging around...



+1

Quoting AEnigma III:


Actually its quite common in the UK for groups of men to be refused admittance into clubs and pubs. Small groups (2 or 3) are allowed, but no more. It has been proven that large groups of guys together create more trouble and damage to the clubs, so its a pretty sensible rule.



this is also common in australia.

if a club is filling up, sometimes even small groups of men are refused. then they try and get around it by asking groups of females if they can pretend that they are with them, so they can get in.

8.       Badiabdancer74
382 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 05:43 am

1. Kemer is a city in Turkey on the Southern Coast.
2. I am not big into the 'club scene' maybe in big cities in the U.S. this might be a rule but I don't think so. We have 2 airforce bases and 1 army post in my city...this rule would NEVER work here!

9.       KeithL
1455 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 05:57 am

Quoting kurtlovesgrunge:


Just off the main thoroughfare to Tepebasý, sits the James Joyce, arguably the best Irish pub in the area. Although such bars are usually on the list of places to avoid for all except the terminally homesick, this pub tends to rustle-up a spirited atmosphere and offers possibly the best full- size pool table around.



2002 and 2003, the old James Joyce (behind the french consulate) was the best bar in Taksim. Great bands, great crowds, those were some fun days. The pub lost its atmosphere when it moved.

10.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 11:49 am

Quoting kurtlovesgrunge:


Just off the main thoroughfare to Tepebasý, sits the James Joyce, arguably the best Irish pub in the area. Although such bars are usually on the list of places to avoid for all except the terminally homesick,



exactly my thought!
Why go to a place like that in a city where options are unlimited... Oh maybe it's just me and my prejudiced old mind, but for me an Irish pub would be the last place to go to in Istanbul..

11.       ciko
784 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 12:45 pm

offffffff i am living in Taksim ( Tunel) but i hardly go out at nights lol i am so tired of sound of Taksim. and and i think at least 900 ones of 950 bars in taksim are crap and and.. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.grrrrrrrrrrrrrr i like neither daylife ( ijust made this word up) nor nightlife here .. maybe just because i love being home :-S

12.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 12:55 pm

Quoting ciko:

and and.. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.



Haha, it was surprising to see that those Bolivian and Peruvian bands that have been terrorizing West of Europe for years are now pestering Turkey. We kicked them all out, now it's your turn

Quoting ciko:

maybe just because i love being home :-S



Yeah, me too, and there is nothing wrong with that

13.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:03 pm

Quoting Elisa:


Yeah, me too, and there is nothing wrong with that



you werent saying this when it was 4 in the morning

14.       ciko
784 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:03 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting ciko:

and and.. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.



Haha, it was surprising to see that those Bolivian and Peruvian bands that have been terrorizing West of Europe for years are now pestering Turkey. We kicked them all out, now it's your turn



hahahahah i hope we can kick them out..offffffff that stupid peruvian band (i thought they were mexican:shy are around my house..with their weird kind of guitars and harmonica..and and they sell their own CD s as if they are professional brand awwwww they make me laugh 90 % of street musicians are con

15.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:06 pm

Quoting SuiGeneris:

Quoting Elisa:


Yeah, me too, and there is nothing wrong with that



you werent saying this when it was 4 in the morning




It was 6am btw
You should not generalize dear. I like being home but I don't always prefer being home

Hadi, go back to your cows now!

16.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:08 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting SuiGeneris:

Quoting Elisa:


Yeah, me too, and there is nothing wrong with that



you werent saying this when it was 4 in the morning




It was 6am btw
You should not generalize dear. I like being home but I don't always prefer being home

Hadi, go back to your cows now!



yeah also we had seen the morning...

yeah i should better go near them... at least they like to listen to me! huh!

17.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:10 pm

Quoting ciko:

90 % of street musicians are con



They're a kind of mob really. At the end of the day they get picked up in vans, have to give the money they earned and go back to some dumphole where they live. It's maffia.

Still, I hate them on the streets

18.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 01:16 pm

Quoting SuiGeneris:

yeah also we had seen the morning...



and fresh people.... tourists at 07am taking pictures in front of Starbucks

Quoting SuiGeneris:

yeah i should better go near them... at least they like to listen to me! huh!



Aren't you one of the poorest and most pitiable people on earth

19.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:11 pm

Quoting ciko:

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting ciko:

and and.. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.



Haha, it was surprising to see that those Bolivian and Peruvian bands that have been terrorizing West of Europe for years are now pestering Turkey. We kicked them all out, now it's your turn



hahahahah i hope we can kick them out..offffffff that stupid peruvian band (i thought they were mexican:shy are around my house..with their weird kind of guitars and harmonica..and and they sell their own CD s as if they are professional brand awwwww they make me laugh 90 % of street musicians are con



Istanbul has them too?

20.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:16 pm

Quoting AEnigma III:


Istanbul has them too?



is istanbul out of the world you live in?

21.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:17 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting SuiGeneris:

yeah i should better go near them... at least they like to listen to me! huh!



Aren't you one of the poorest and most pitiable people on earth



Awwwwwwww poor cowboy

22.       KeithL
1455 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:17 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting kurtlovesgrunge:


Just off the main thoroughfare to Tepebasý, sits the James Joyce, arguably the best Irish pub in the area. Although such bars are usually on the list of places to avoid for all except the terminally homesick,



exactly my thought!
Why go to a place like that in a city where options are unlimited... Oh maybe it's just me and my prejudiced old mind, but for me an Irish pub would be the last place to go to in Istanbul..



All the rock bars in taksim and beyoglu are imitating the west. This place for 2 years had the best bands in istanbul, bar none. Another great place was (and maybe still is) is kemanci. And that place didnt have a 1:1 policy, they had about a 5:1 policy. % women for every man.

23.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:18 pm

Quoting SuiGeneris:

Quoting AEnigma III:


Istanbul has them too?



is istanbul out of the world you live in?



Hehehe no! But I never see them in UK (although I am sure London must have them!) only when I am on holiday in Spain or France

24.       KeithL
1455 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:20 pm

Quoting ciko:

offffffff i am living in Taksim ( Tunel) but i hardly go out at nights lol i am so tired of sound of Taksim. and and i think at least 900 ones of 950 bars in taksim are crap and and.. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.grrrrrrrrrrrrrr i like neither daylife ( ijust made this word up) nor nightlife here .. maybe just because i love being home :-S



I agree with you ciko. I probably go to Takism 6 times a year now. Its just too crowded. And by the way, this could be another thread. Things we hate in taksim. For me, its the bird whistle guy that has been playing "The Godfather" theme for the last 7 years... Learn a new song for God's sake!!!

25.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:21 pm

Quoting Elisa:

exactly my thought!
Why go to a place like that in a city where options are unlimited... Oh maybe it's just me and my prejudiced old mind, but for me an Irish pub would be the last place to go to in Istanbul..



+1000000000000
Its so weird how people gravitate to places that are exactly the same as you get at home. You see Germans in German bars, English in "pubs", and Irish in Irish bars..... is really strange, but I guess that some people don't go abroad to experience culture, merely to have fun or get some sun

26.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:23 pm

Quoting AEnigma III:

Quoting SuiGeneris:

Quoting AEnigma III:


Istanbul has them too?



is istanbul out of the world you live in?



Hehehe no! But I never see them in UK (although I am sure London must have them!) only when I am on holiday in Spain or France



oh come on... just ignore them...
dont you feel like abit Hitler now
perfectionist hahaha

27.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:24 pm


Quoting KeithL:

For me, its the bird whistle guy that has been playing "The Godfather" theme for the last 7 years... Learn a new song for God's sake!!!

28.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:26 pm

Quoting SuiGeneris:

dont you feel like abit Hitler now
perfectionist hahaha



Eh?
I don't even have a moustache

29.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:56 pm

Quoting AEnigma III:

Quoting SuiGeneris:

dont you feel like abit Hitler now
perfectionist hahaha



Eh?
I don't even have a moustache



i said feel like not look like

30.       SuiGeneris
3922 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 02:59 pm

Quoting KeithL:

I agree with you ciko. I probably go to Takism 6 times a year now. Its just too crowded. And by the way, this could be another thread. Things we hate in taksim. For me, its the bird whistle guy that has been playing "The Godfather" theme for the last 7 years... Learn a new song for God's sake!!!



oh come on man!

ok when i come back to istanbul we will have a rush in taksim and you will love it again hehehehe and the places are more beautiful in winter time

31.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 03:10 pm

Quoting KeithL:

And by the way, this could be another thread. Things we hate in taksim.



Or "Grumpy old men"?


32.       ciko
784 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 04:24 pm

Quoting KeithL:

Quoting ciko:

offffffff i am living in Taksim ( Tunel) but i hardly go out at nights lol i am so tired of sound of Taksim. and and i think at least 900 ones of 950 bars in taksim are crap and and.. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.grrrrrrrrrrrrrr i like neither daylife ( ijust made this word up) nor nightlife here .. maybe just because i love being home :-S



For me, its the bird whistle guy that has been playing 'The Godfather' theme for the last 7 years... Learn a new song for God's sake!!!



ahahahahahhaha you made me laugh out loud it is good to know i am not the only person who hates that man he has been playing The Godfather for at least 7 years and what i hate more is that people still find it interesting i can tell you more than 50 guys who have been doing same things for years in taksim grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr lol

33.       AEnigma III
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 04:40 pm

Quoting ciko:

offffffff i am living in Taksim ( Tunel) .. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.



Can you hear them from your home?!?! I hope you have an iPOD or something?

34.       Elisa
0 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 04:45 pm

Quoting ciko:

he has been playing The Godfather for at least 7 years



I saw him in April and in August I thought, what a coincidence, I'm here and he's here again as well

But 7 years is a long time...

35.       ciko
784 posts
 04 Sep 2007 Tue 04:54 pm

Quoting AEnigma III:

Quoting ciko:

offffffff i am living in Taksim ( Tunel) .. ermmm i swear i will kill one of those street musicians that foreigners love to watch they play same songs every single night.



Can you hear them from your home?!?! I hope you have an iPOD or something?



hahaha no fortunately i cant hear them from home..but but offffff there are some studio flats around where i live and i sometimes ( at midnight) hear some boys are playing in those flats with their discordant electric guitars lol ...why do i not move out of taksim instead of moaning? lol and and yes i have a wonderful ipod so i dont have to hear bird whistle man lol

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