Brighton

As I mentioned in my previous post, I managed to make it down to Brighton for the first time since getting to the UK (I know, I know!) on the Bank Holiday weekend. Getting there seemed to be a bit of an effort. My plan was to take a train directly from my closest tube, Farringdon but I totally forgot that they close it on weekends for the Cross Rail project. I ended up walking down in London Bridge to catch one but there was a bit of a stuff up and instead of being a fast train to Brighton, we had to get on a slow train that stopped almost everywhere on the way to Croyden before having to change again for the Brighton train.

nia

By the time I got to Brighton I was pretty famished so headed for one of the many cafes I’d noted down if I happened to be in the area. I ended up at Nia’s, a large bright cafe full of wooden tables and a small handful outside in the sun. Of course all of those were occupied so I took a seat where I could absorb the bustling atmosphere behind the counter, grab one of the many local magazines they had and indulge in a very tasty eggs benedict for brunch. Awesome value too with a flat white for about £11 including service. I’d definitely come back again.

northlanes

After breakfast, I wandered the North Lanes for a bit. It had a very colourful and alternative scene with lots of tiny little shops, plenty of cafes and a big variety of just interesting people around. I particularly liked a lot of the painted buildings that was done one of the streets.

northlanes2

Very colour and really detailed. I definitely preferred this much more than “The Lanes” on the other side of Brighton, even more full of tourists and plenty of stores that looked like high street ones.

brightonbeach

Of course, you can’t really visit Brighton without visiting the beach and it was definitely crowded the day I went down. I took it from the three people that were swimming (out of the 1000+) that the water wasn’t exactly inviting. I took their cue and didn’t even try to go down, instead simply walking up and down the beach side walkway and down to the cheesy Brighton Pier. I even wandered up into some of the residential parts of Brighton (the Fiveways) where they were having some artist open house exhibitions before heading back to London.

I really enjoyed the vibe and the atmosphere of Brighton. It probably helped they had great weather. It seemed like a very nice part of England and I can understand why people enjoy living there and commuting to London instead.

Summary

Well the last few weeks have been especially busy, starting a new project in Copenhagen, coming back for a short week to head to Brighton for the very first time on a sunny bank holiday weekend. I then went out to Sardinia again on a fairly remote part of the island with beautiful beaches and completely sunny days for a conference before returning only to head out to Copenhagen again.

Sardinia

Life probably will be busy for the next several weeks, so apologies in advance for the slow updates.

Andrew Bird @ Shepherd’s Bush Empire

Despite being slightly jet lagged from my trip to Chicago, I still ending up going to see the amazingly talented Andrew Bird at Shepherd’s Bush Empire. It was a ticket I had booked way back when. Strangely enough, I found out recently he’s based out of Chicago and here I was seeing him away from his country having just returned from his home city. Strange? Definitely.

The ground floor of Shepherd’s Bush was completely packed by the time he came on and from what I could tell there were plenty of Americans, English and a handful of antipodes around. Andrew Bird’s style of music is definitely unique. It’s laid back, almost music-box like and absolutely enchanting. Just perfect when you want some easy listening tunes. I realise that it doesn’t really do him that much justice however I don’t think words can really describe the performance he puts on for a live show.

For his first song, he made recorded snippets of him playing different instruments, playing them back almost immediately, effectively turning him into his own backing track while he carried on with the main melody. It was completely mesmerising both visually and audibly. It seems like he plays a bazillion instruments and I never realised that the whistling you hear in his songs is also him and not some sort of synthesiser, able to replicate the strength, pitch and tones perfectly in a live show just as much as on the albums.

As a musician, Andrew Bird produces some stunning sounds. As a performer, he’s even more captivating by the way that he produces these intricate sounds with what looks like such minimal fuss on stage that I always thought were produced using some sort of synthesiser.

thekua.com rating: 9 out of 10

Speaking Easy at the Violet Hour

Hands down one of the coolest places we visited in Chicago was The Violet Hour. It’s a speak-easy bar found in the Wicker Park area of Chicago. Its wall looks like a simple wall, and I believe is repainted every so often to keep it mysterious. You just have to try the door and see for yourself if it opens or not.

outside

We heard that it gets pretty busy sometimes, and they have a policy of not letting more people in than they have seats for. A wonderful policy that means there is no over crowding and the atmosphere inside remains calm and enjoyable. We decided to arrive early at around 7pm, meaning that our eyes had to do a bit of adjusting from the bright sunlight outside to the near darkness inside.

menu

The Violet Hour is split into a couple of different rooms separated by some long black flowing curtains. The first “room” is really the waiting area for those arriving too late, while the first room is part split into a bar and several booths for smaller crowds of people. There were about eight of us so we got some space out back, a loungier-type space with tall backed chairs, small tables and candles everywhere casting small shadows in every direction.

room

Their menu is spectacular with lots of different cocktail options (all at US12), plenty of single malt, brandy and tequila choices for those less inclined. They also have a nice selection of finger foods (we tried the kobe dogs, cajun prawns and the flatbread, all delicious options). Service was great with constant fill ups of the bottle of tap water and the waitress asking if we needed any help with the menu or ordering when someone new joined our group.

cocktails

I remember trying the Oldest Living Confederate Widow (Bombay Dry, Lemon, Honey Syrup, Pernod Absinthe, House Orange Bitters), the Juliet and Romeo (Beefeater, Mint, Cucumber, Rose Water) and the Sitting Limbo (Beefeater, Pineapple, St. Elizabeth Allspice Dram, Luxardo Bitter). All of the cocktails were amazingly delicious, never tasting like acrid alcohol but definitely strong as you feel the effects hitting you quickly.

The Violet Hour is definitely a place I want to return to when I come back to Chicago in August.

Name: The Violet Hour
Address: 1520 N Damen Avenue, Chicago, 60622
Website: http://www.theviolethour.com/
The good: Amazing cocktails at only US$12, fantastic food and nice ambiance
The bad: Getting in early to need to get a table.

Untouchables Tour of Chicago

One of the things recommended to me by numerous people was the Gangster Tour of Chicago run by these folks over here. As far as tours go, it’s a pretty easy one. You take off in a big black bus and two people (dressed in character) give you the low down of the history of the city with that special gangster point of view.

gangstertour

Unfortunately the bus itself, reminiscent of an old American-style school bus wasn’t particularly great for taking photos and let me focus more on the story that unwound itself. We visited many sites around Chicago, places where many of the gangsters grew up, where the battles were had, why turf wars started (and ended) and lots of little detail that would be easy to miss simply walking by.

untouchablestour

The tour covers a lot of greater chicago as well so is a great way to see parts of the city that you wouldn’t think of really visiting including a drive by through Chicago’s tiny Chinatown and probably just as sizeable Little Italy neighbourhoods. Some of it gets pretty cheesy at times but was still well worth the US$28.

Congratulations Gaz and Molly

I didn’t really elude to this in my last post but the reason I’m in Chicago at the moment is to celebrate the wedding of a couple of friends I met in the UK who ended up moving to Chicago. The day was a wonderful celebration including a large portion of family and friends from both sides of the pond (Gaz is English and Molly is American) starting the day with high tea at the very fancy Drake Hotel topping off the day with a sunset cruise around the Chicago shore line.

chicagosunset

As you can see from the sunset above, Chicago’s finest weather came out to help make the day a huge success. It obviously rubbed off on the couple who couldn’t be help beam for the entire day. Here’s a picture of both of them.

gazandmolly

The cruise ran particularly smooth considering that there was an unlimited tab on board and multiple decks. I don’t think there was any incidents whatsoever and everyone seemed to be really enjoying the time on board. I guess it’s hard *not* to if you have views like this to keep you entertained.

chicagoatnight

Thanks again and congratulations to both of them. I had a fantastic time and I know that many other people did as well!