Showing posts with label fireworks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fireworks. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 December 2009

Celebrate New Year's Eve with fireworks at the beach, or at the Freebutt's Free Bar (and party).




Right, New Year's Eve. Whilst I, like many will be getting drunk with friends and perhaps wandering to the beach to see inevitable fireworks, there are slightly more interesting going-ons in Brighton. Whilst there's lots of traditional expensive club nights, we're fond of The Freebutt, home of many a good live gig this year.

Tonight sees musical delights of 'big party tunes' aka silly things to cruise your way into 2010 to DJd by Smack That and Dark Party, who unfortunately I know little about. But tunes are tunes, and heralded DJs are always so for a reason. This is all upstairs in up-marketly-named 'The Penthouse', whilst downstairs Hip Hop Karaoke will be occurring which sounds horrendous and a must-do.

Quite importantly, sorry if this isn't your thing, but there's a free bar from 8pm until midnight when we hit 2010. And this we feel, ladies and gentlemen, is a fine way to celebrate.

Get tickets from Seetickets or Wegottickets, and unsurprisingly this is for over 18s.

Alternatively, Audio's got "a killer line-up" and the Riki Tik's promoting its New Year's Eve DJ night, promising audio and visual delights.

Monday, 21 December 2009

Burning Clocks and Fireworks at the Beach



With 20,000 people attending this event every year it would be impossible not to write about it. I've never witnessed a 'Burning the Clocks' event which, having lived in Brighton for two years is terrible since the event is absolutely massive. It sees about one thousand people gather with a giant number of paper and willow lanterns (there were a few flying about on Fireworks Night) parade through Brighton towards the Beach at which point they're burnt and a nice big fireworks display takes place.

The premise is thus:

"Burning the Clocks is an antidote to the excesses of the commercial Christmas. People gather to make paper and willow lanterns to carry through their city and burn on the beach as a token for the end of the year. No lantern is better for its purpose than any other, all are unique to the maker and precious, but all are given up to be burnt to greet the lengthening days. The lantern makers invest their lanterns with their wishes, hopes, and fears and then pass them into the fire."

The parade assembles in New Road (avoid this spot if you're not a participant) and travels down from North Street to Bartholomews, East Street and Madeira Drive. If you don't fancy being sharing small roads with a mass of people on the route down then Madeira Drive is the best place to locate yourself.

There's a wonderful video of Indonesia breaking the sky lantern record from the BBC - watch it here.

Burning the Clocks starts at 6:30pm and it's free, so come.