Nightclub entertainment in Glasgow
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A
Art School
An impressive occasional venue in the Glasgow School of Art (would CRM have approved?), this is where the style-cats of the student world hang out in force. It's a welcoming place and the dance nights are legendary. Cheap booze and a good selection of DJs rounds off the happy picture.
reviewed
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B
Tunnel
Tunnel is a good venue for young clubbers or those new to the scene, with plenty of cheap drink promos and a variety of beats. Wednesday (Home) is a big gay night, Friday is UN of Dance, while Saturday is devoted to RnB, funky tunes and disco – something for everyone.
reviewed
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C
Cathouse
Mostly rock, emo and metal at this long-standing indie, goth and alternative venue. There are two dance floors: upstairs is pretty intense with lots of metal and hard rock, downstairs is a little less scary if you're not keen on moshing.
reviewed
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D
Sub Club
Saturdays at the Sub Club are one of Glasgow's legendary nights, offering serious clubbing with a sound system that aficionados usually rate the city's best. The claustrophobic, last-one-in vibe is not for those faint of heart.
reviewed
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E
ABC
A beautiful creature of the clubbing world, ABC, also a music venue, has gorgeous bars, punters who scrub up pretty darn good and a varied music selection. It attracts heaps of students and is a good all-round venue. Indie lovers should check out Thursday nights.
reviewed
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F
Arches
R-e-s-p-e-c-t is the mantra with the Arches. The Godfather of Glaswegian clubs, it has a design based around hundreds of arches slammed together, and is a must for funk and hip-hop freaks. It is one of the city's biggest clubs pulling top DJs, and you'll also hear some of the UK's up-and-coming turntable spinners. It's off Jamaica St.
reviewed
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G
Arches
R-e-s-p-e-c-t is the mantra with the Arches. The Godfather of Glaswegian clubs, it has a design based around hundreds of arches slammed together, and is a must for funk and hip-hop freaks. It is one of the city's biggest clubs pulling top DJs, and you'll also hear some of the UK's up-and-coming turntable spinners. It's off Jamaica St.
reviewed






