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Bars where Pete has had a Drink (5,752 bars; 1,754 bars in Seattle) - Click titles below for Lists:


Bars where Pete has had a drink

Saturday, February 25, 2012

#1654 #S977 - Volume, Seattle - 12/23/2011

Update: Volume closed May 3, 2015. The space subsequently hosted another club called "Stage."


Volume is a new ultra lounge style nightclub, which means the standard sort of techno and hiphop music, VIP sections, and women with heels as long as their skirts.  It is a very young and primarily Asian crowd, and owned by the former owner of Aura.  The drinks are exactly what you would predict based on this.  But while the current club may be fairly unremarkable, it is located in what is probably the most storied bar space in Seattle, previous home of the Catwalk, the Casino, and the People's Theater.

Volume nightclub, Pioneer Square, Seattle, WA
The basement space is a remaining portion of the People's Theater, constructed in 1890, and the most notorious of Seattle's 19th century "box houses."  In these saloons with card rooms and theaters, women performers would serve drinks in between their stage acts, and if a patron was feeling particularly generous, the women would accompany them to curtained off boxes for more personalized services.  The People's Theater was eventually run by John Considine (AKA "Boss Sport"), who would battle it out for Seattle's theater and gambling audiences with such rivals as Alexander Pantages and Wyatt Earp (yes, THAT Wyatt Earp, who owned the Union Club on the next block).  He also battled Seattle Chief of Police William L. Meredith, a feud that culminated in a shootout in a drug store on 2nd and Yesler that left Meredith dead.

Considine would go on to establish theaters across the west and midwest, create the first popularly-priced vaudeville chain in the world*, co-found the Fraternal Order of the Eagles, and eventually move to Los Angeles and produce movies.  His lasting legacy to the Seattle bar and nightclub world was his leading role in establishing Seattle's "Tolerance Policy," a well-established system for paying off the police, which lasted through the 1960s.  It was this very tolerance policy that in the 1930s would allow the old People's Theater space to become the most famous open place for gay people on the west coast.

In 1930, Joseph Bellotti purchased the space, with John and Margaret Delevitti operating it, and it soon became a nationally known club for gays, unofficially known as "Madame Peabody's Dancing Academy for Young Ladies." With Delevitti paying off the police, men could dance openly with other men at The Casino (an impossibility in most other cities) and drag queens could remain largely unharrassed.  The Casino and the Double Header upstairs, which remains to this day, would attract gay visitors and various celebrities from around the country, including the likes of Rudolph Nureyev, Johnny Ray, Margot Fonteyn, and Tallulah Bankhead. The unrestrained Ms. Bankhead is cited by historical sources as entering the upper bar with her retinue, ringing a cow bell, and shouting to the assembled queens, "Avon calling all you beautiful motherf***ers!" To this day the cow bell remains hanging on the wall of the Double Header (which has a fairly compelling argument for being the oldest continually running gay bar in the United States).

Before it became the rather formulaic 21st century dance clubs Heaven and then Volume, the space also hosted The Catwalk from 1994 to 2005.  The Catwalk brought a modernized edge to the place's bawdy history, hosting various S&M and gothic events, as well as fetish fashion shows.

172 S Washington, Seattle, WA 98104 - (206) 467-1828
Est. Oct. 29, 2010 - Building constructed: 1890
Previous bars in this location: People's Theater, The Casino, The Catwalk, Heaven
volumeseattle.com - facebook - yelp
*Murray Morgan, "Skid Road", 1995 p149

#1653 #S976 - Underground Asian Fusion Bistro, Seattle - 12/23/2011

About 6 months ago the friendly Korean owner of the pan-Asian restaurant upstairs moved his business into the former space of Marcus's Martini Heaven, in a basement space of the old Yesler Building, constructed right after the Great Seattle Fire.  The current owner can advise on sake and has various ideas for getting building up the bar, but at this point he could very much use the help of someone like Marcus Charles on how to attract a night-time crowd.

88 Yesler Way, Seattle, WA 98104 - (206) 326-4800
Est. 2011 - Building constructed: 1890-1893
Previous bars in this location: Marcus's Martini Heaven
yelp

#1652 #S975 - Lalibela, Seattle - 12/23/2011

This Ethiopian restaurant has a tiny little lounge with a tiny selection of drinks.

2800 E Cherry St #A, Seattle, WA 98122-5007 - (206) 322-8565
Building constructed: 1954
Previous bars in this location: None known
urbanspoon - yelp - seattletimes - voiceplaces  

#1651 #S974 - Ras Dashen, Seattle - 12/23/2011

Ras Dashen is one of 5 Ethiopian restaurants within 1 block of Cherry and Martin Luther King Blvd.  From the web site, "There are several Ethiopian choices at the intersection of East Cherry Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Way, but Ras-Dashen distinguishes itself with friendly service and an atmosphere spruced up courtesy of colorful woven baskets and massive jugs."

It is a large restaurant with a small bar, in a long building that feels like a manufactured home and used to be a church.  The restaurant has been open for about 5 years, and has a slightly formal but also comfortable neighborhood feel.  The food is quite good, and I much enjoyed the Meat Combo (Beef Tips, Gored Gored, Kitfo, Quanta Fir Fir, and Qey Wot).  The bar, well, not so much.  The woman working the bar while I was there convincingly debunked the theory that you can't really mess up a Gin & Tonic.  But they do appear to feature a very strong pour for a low price, and on weekends they turn into a nightclub (perhaps with slightly more experienced bartenders).



2801 East Cherry St, Seattle, WA 98122 - (206) 709-7626
Est. 2006 - Building constructed: 1960
Previous bars in this location: None known
rasdashenseattle.com - seattleweekly - centraldistrictnews - seattletimes - yelp - urbanspoon

Thursday, February 16, 2012

#1650 #S973 - The Royal Room, Seattle - 12/19/2011


The Royal Room is a bar built around music, and features local artists in a 99 seat room with no cover charge Thursdays through Mondays. Tuesdays and Wednesdays feature touring national performers. They have some decent bar food and some fairly good cocktails (try "The King," a rye Manhattan).  It is owned by Seattle jazz musician Wayne Horvitz, along with Tia Matthies and Steve Freeborn of the OK Hotel, the Rendezvous, and others.


The bar space is carved out the Royal Esquire Club, the premier black social club in the Pacific Northwest.  The Royal Esquire Club was established in 1948 and moved to 5016 Rainier Ave S in 1986.  They continue to host various community based civic and social events.



5000 Rainier Ave South, Seattle, WA 98118 - (206) 906-9920
Est. Dec 16, 2011 - Building constructed: 1910
Previous bars in this location: Los Pancho's Cantina, Rainier Inn/Tavern, La Esquina
theroyalroomseattle.com - facebook - seattleweekly - seattletimes - yelp

Saturday, February 11, 2012

#1649 #S972 - The Sexton, Seattle - 12/17/2011

 Good southern style small plates and excellent cocktails by Marley Tomic-Beard (Spur, Bathtub Gin, Golden Beetle).


5327 Ballard Ave NW, Seattle, WA 98107 - (206) 829-8645
Est. Dec 11, 2011 - Building constructed: 1906
Previous bars at this location: Madame K's Pizza Bistro
sextonseattle.com - facebook - thrillist - seattlemet - seattleweekly - eater - seattletimes - DList - thestranger - urbanspoon - yelp

#1648 #S971 - iMusic, Seattle - 12/17/2011

This two-floored space across from the street from the Space Needle and EMP has hosted a rotating number of dance clubs (Tropix, Polly Esther, Element, Level 5). For an idea of vibe and decor of the current iMusic incarnation, you could pretty much check out any other cookie cutter, VIP section, pink and purple lighting, bouncer pat-down, velvet rope line, oontz oontz dance club anywhere. And for an understanding of the crowd you can check out this Ted Talk. The nuanced differences in these clubs -- the ethnic balance, random differences in poorly made drinks, which nights there are and are not shootings outside -- are less related to the actual club than the arbitrary set of attendees on any given night.


332 5th Ave N, Seattle, WA 98109
Est. Dec 31, 2010 - Building constructed: 1929
Previous bars at this location: Tropix Cafe, Polly Esther, Level 5, Element
imusicseattle.com - facebook - yelp