There is a bar upstairs that is open until one o'clock ( I think ) and a nightclub downstairs that opens at ten o'clock. The drinks go up 50p when you go downstairs. You can take your drink downstairs when you go down. The club is mostly empty for the first two hours, probably because there is a financial saving to be made in not going downstairs too soon. There is a karaoke DJ upstairs in the pub and a few regulars are bold enough to get up and sing a song.
The DJ downstairs gets the chance to play all his old favourites while there is nobody in, but when the punters start coming in, he has a few up-to-date charty dance tracks. Unlike a lot of DJs that pride themselves in not repeating a track, saving the best to later, if a track gets them up dancing, play it again. Two tracks were played four times throughout the night. The customers all danced again anyway, so, why not?
I visited the gents a couple of times and was pleasantly amused to hear some of the young chaps talking to each other in the quiet of it. I thought that the accents of the 'neds' on the TV programme, 'Still Game', were exaggerated for the comedy effect, but, no, it seems that they DO actually talk like that in Maryhill. Pure brilliant!
The club was laid out like a social club with neat rows of tables, each with four chairs under them, like a canteen. Comfortable seats though. I think that most of the punters were still too young to go into the city centre and stay here to avoid any big taxi fares. read more