friendlyfun wrote: » I am in my 20s and when I talk to people in maybe their 30, 40s, 50s etc I feel like going out on the town in Waterford was better in the 80s, 90s, 2000s. I'm curious why people feel this way. Lack of drugs? No social media? The different fashion. Happy to hear people's experiences.
bullpost wrote: » no social media to zombiefy us.
Harry Palmr wrote: » Music music music! Every Friday or Saturday night there was someone somewhere who you'd not be appalled to listen to for 60-90 minutes be it the actual Waterboys or Human League or some proficient covers band and then the disco!
PTH2009 wrote: » Def Leppard played one of the gigs down there
hardybuck wrote: » I also don't think that the current generation of 18-30 year olds drink as much as their predecessors from previous generations. Drink is more expensive, and contains more calories, than certain chemical alternatives.
JimWinters wrote: » There was never really the going out crowd in Waterford to support two full clubs, there was always one busy club and half full. Late bars killed the nightclubs in town, why would people pay in to a nightclub when they can stay in a bar wth the same closing time? There was a race to the bottom in the late 00s where clubs dropped the price of drink and free entry. They've never fully recovered from that, Waterford people won't pay in. Bars and clubs used to busy four or five nights per week, at the start of this year it was barely busy on a Saturday night. Predrinks have killed the town too with pubs not getting busy until 11 on a Friday or Saturday three or four busy hours a week aren't enough to sustain many businesses. Many of the venues in town are seen with rose tinted glasses, the music of their time and great mates around are what made the great nights out for people in venues like The Roxy, The Reg, Axis Mundi, Metropole, Bridge Hotel, Preachers, Club LA, Merlins, Oxegen, Rubys, Ten, Factory, Foundry, Shortts, Kazbar and others. There was some great nights for big acts in town too! Geoffs has been the one constant through it all...
PTH2009 wrote: » I don't get the love for Geoffs. Is it the large smoking area ?? The staff in there can be very rude and the place itself doesn't have that pub feel. Your not allowed sing or have too much craic
kuang1 wrote: » Yes I was having too much craic there one night and got warned. Then we started having the normal amount of craic and they left us stay.
Murphy2020 wrote: » Really enjoying this thread. My nights out in town started early 1998 to end of the 00's before kids arrived. After that it was random nights out when babysitters allowed 😠1998 to 2000: Egans, Flare, Flo Motion, Preachers, Temple Bar, The pulpit, Club LA and the Junction Bar, Fitzgeralds 2000 to 2002: Rubys, Merlins, Muldoons, Flashs 2003: Axis Mundi and The Old Stand 2004 to 2005: Gingerman, Masons, Muldoons, Oxygen, Revolution, Geoffs, Kazbar 2006 to 2009: Harvey's, Rubys Lounge, Woodman 2010 onwards: The Reg Now the pubs I prefer are Tully's, Walsh's, Jordan's, The Tap Room, Geoffs Any I've forgotten??
aziz wrote: » That gig in Katie's was Rick Allen's first gig after losing his Arm,he wasn't supposed to play the full gig as they had the drummer from status quo there to back him up ,but the stage was too small for two drum kits so he had to play the full gig by himself
Boooourns wrote: » Treated their former staff like sh1te, the staff that were great to go into and have a chat with. There's one or two stories i know about the place that keeps me away from it, the management are full of themselves. It's completely lost that interaction between staff and the customer. Massive shame how that place has turned out.
Roanmore wrote: » Not his first gig, that was Connolly Hall in Cork (I was at it). My have been his first on his own though.
aziz wrote: » Yeah, I can't remember the tour dates but they were I think two gigs before the Katie's gig and they were able to use the back up drummer and Katie's was the first he played solo and I think the next solo gig was monsters of rock in donington,