It is February 2005. For over a month almost two months now, the city government of Buenos Aires has outlawed dancing in clubs, fully shutting the doors on numerous spots in the city following the tragedy at Cromagnon.
Clubbing in this city has gone on anyway, of course, but is uber-strange. First of all, most of the lounges / restaurants that double as posh, velvet rope clubs have been able to semi-legally stay open under the guise of a bar/restaurant.
In the past 3 days or so, I've been to more of these than I care to remember, but some of the top ones I happened into were Tequila, Jet Lounge, and Midlands. The usually difficult door policy might be a touch looser now, but the cover charge was still a surprising 20 pesos at Jet (included a mini-bottle of champagne nacional), and we avoided cover at Tequila by eating a ENTIRELY sub-par dinner.
At each of these places, there was dance music, and people obviously wanted to dance. At Jet, there was even a disco ball with a light on it, but it wasn't spinning. If you can picture it, these are dancy lounges playing dancy music for dancy people who aren't permitted to dance. So, everyone props themselves up at the bar, and solemnly stares at the empty dance floor. It's so odd - the closest thing I've ever experienced to this was going to some crappy dance bar in NYC that didn't have a cabaret license. If I recall that story correctly, I was 'escorted' out for dancing in disregard of the numerous posted signs to the contrary- by the bouncer.
I've yet to succeed in getting kicked out of clubs in BsAs for dancing in protest, but some girls I met at Tequila almost got thrown out by the bouncers for excess coordinated movement of their hips. I think it's pretty unfair to play dance music, then tell people they can't dance. Also, it brings up the grey area of what exactly is 'legally' considered dancing - and apparently, what I was doing at Tequila (that I considered dancing) didn't warrant a warning from the bouncers. Hmmm, am I to understand I'm so bad a dancer, that what I do actually isn't legally considered dancing in Argentina?!?!? Could be.
One of the reactions of people here (the one's that aren't still on vacation in other cities like Cordoba, Mar Del Plata, Punta Del Este, etc) is to throw house parties, charge, and invite big name DJs. Couple of friends caught a really good one last weekend in San Isidro, but I couldn't go due to some frustrating health issues. Blech.
Anyway, the most hilarious part is that the big clubs in suburbs (read: 10 minutes from the city on local streets, no tolls, 20 peso cab ride) are entirely open, and have been the whole time. That said, Sunset in Olivos is the next (and last) clubbing destination for me in Buenos Aires this time around, but I'll go begrudgingly.
It just sucks overall that the city couldn't get their red tape together to open the clubs by this weekend, which is also my last one in town for now. Would have been a nice way to remember this place, instead of trooping out to the burbs to dance. Guess I'll have to remember Buenos Aires as the city that danc-ed, at some point in the past.
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