Where to go clubbing in Joburg this festive season
The club scene is still a festive favourite and worth a night out with friends or colleagues.
Picture: iStock
With the silly season upon us, you can’t avoid the boom-box banter of office workers at their year-end parties.
As I walk by a popular indoors-outdoors pub and bistro in Greenside, I hear a drunken slur: “Kyle! My ou! My brother from another mother! Which club are we taking the larnie’s credit card to after this disaster?”
An equally inebriated Kyle responds: “Bra, we probs gonna have to schlep all the way to Midrand and I don’t even know if they’re happening tonight.”
Silence! “Eish ek sê, let’s rather check out one of those bougie hotel rooftop lounges vibes.”
There seems to be a dwindling in South Africa’s once-thriving nightclub scene, with industry players believing it’s a generational thing, with millennials (aged between 22 and 37) having the biggest impact.
A US study published in Urban Land magazine, which observed the social and buying power of millennials in America, shows this generation aren’t frequenting nightclubs the way the preceding Gen Y did.
“Slightly more than 60% of millennials go out to clubs and among those who do, only 25% do so more than once a month,” according to the study.
And the situation is not uniquely American.
“There may not be the same urgency to get into clubs as there was with previous generations, who looked forward to their 18th birthday because they’d finally be allowed into a club but the need is still there,” Tadeu Andre, 23, a Johannesburg-based electronic artist and DJ told The Citizen.
While acknowledging the accuracy of the study, Andre says there is still an attraction to clubs. “Once people get into clubs, particularly clubs which allow for true freedom of expression, they find it hard to not want to go back.”
Olwee, a popular local events DJ and TV personality (and a millennial), feels clubs are not really a thing for his generation. “We go … on special occasions. But even then it’s a drag because it’s the same thing.”
He added what’s popular is experiences: a theme, a strange place, a fun crowd.
Andre says it’s important that today’s generation feel free to explore and experiment with their sexuality and culture, “to have spaces … to be yourself”.
In South Africa there’s an apparent shift to monthly, seasonal and more memorable events. That said, the club scene is still a festive favourite and worth a night out with friends or colleagues.
Info
Get your groove on
• Harem: Said to be one of Africa’s finest clubbing venues, it caters specifically to Johannesburg’s sophisticates.
• Truth: Situated at the old snake park in Midrand, Truth is Joburg’s ultimate dance club if you’re craving a night of rhythm and dance.
• Madison Avenue: One of the best clubs in Johannesburg. They play mostly house and commercial music and offer a safe place to party the night away.
• Great Dane: This quirky, noncommercial, party bar is a favourite in the Braamfontein nightlife scene! It offers good food (particularly the gourmet hot dogs), good drinks and most importantly, a good vibe.
For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.
For more news your way
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.