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New Year’s Eve In Belgrade

By: Jelena Jovanovic

Belgrade, Nov.27, 2009 (Serbia Today) - The New Year’s Eve celebration is one of the most widely observed events of the year in Serbia, and for all of those who have decided to celebrate the New Year in Belgrade, this year’s celebration promises no shortage of events to choose from.

 The City Parliament of Belgrade, the organizer of  the traditional New Year’s celebration on the streets of Belgrade has not announced the details to that event yet. This celebration usually attracts a large number of people, both Belgrade natives as well as visitors to the capital.

 Last year the main stars of city celebration of New Year were Goran Bregovic,  with his Wedding and Funeral Orchestra,  Marija Serifovic, Eurovision winner. Ana Stanic, and Belgrade rock singer.

 If weather permitting, the New Year’s celebration on the streets of Belgrade should be a very interesting event. It is important to have good company, dress warmly and watch out for those firecrackers.

 The biggest event that has already been announced is the New Year’s party with folk star  Svetlana Ceca Raznatovic and  the new Grand Stars (Grand Music promotes CDs of young  folk music singers). Tickets for this widely advertised event has promotional prizes of RSD 2000 (EUR 20), until the end of November. Prizes in Ceca Fan Pit are RSD  3000 and the place in VIP Gallery costs RSD 8500. The organizers of this  event in Belgrade Fair (Halls 1 and 4) promises big folk party all night long and prizes for all.

 Club Verige, in Ada Ciganlija will organize a party with young pop-folk singer Damir Radanovic.  In  SPORT Cafe, popular cafe in the city center,  Sale Sax band and DJ Petar Ristic will perform.

 Another Club in the center of Belgrade, Latino Corazon, announced special party with DJ  Insomnia (Disco, Latino, R’N’B, House, MTV hits) and  Trumpet Band (participants in Guca Trumpet Festival).  The selection of drinks and food is also part of the ticket`s price, as well as cocktails. 

 The diversity of Belgrade venues organizing New Year’s celebrations is quite extensive. Celebrations in  more exclusive clubs last year cost  EUR 60  and up, and were  intended for the younger, well-dressed population which listens to various types of electro music(Clubs  Magacin, Genex Impuls Hall, Hotel Hyatt Regency - Club Ellington and in the Crystal Ballroom,  Grand Casino, and increasingly popular location on the Danube Quay in Zemun).  Clubs  Magacin and Stefan Braun has launched their event for New Year’s Eve and the  tickets are EUR 60 Euros for girls and  EUR 80 for men.

 Some big DJ  parties will certainly be organized this year. But, at the moment, exact information is still a unknown. New night club, Maximus (on the Sava bank, New Belgrade side) announced its own New Year Party with Maxi band (Stage 1), DJs from Greece and Slovenia (Stage 2) and big  house stage. Tickets are RSD 3000.

 Among the boat clubs (splavovi) which are also offering live performances (or DJs), are Freestyler, Bleywatch, Ambis, Amsterda.  Famous Belgrade boat club with gypsy music and authentic band with the same name – Black Panthers - announced that tickets for the big party would be  RSD 5500.

 A majority of Belgrade clubs, cafes and restaurants in all parts of the city will be open for guests on December 31st. And, most of the  people will decide where to go several weeks before New Year’s Eve.  That decision depends on age and taste, whether one prefers an upbeat party with a well-dressed crowd or a more modest time with a laid back crowd.

Average prices in average Belgrade clubs, last year, were from 30 to 50 euros.

 In the long line of Belgrade restaurants organizing a celebration for the New Year, it is well known that the restaurants in the Bohemian Quarter (Skadarlija) will all be completely full. In a mini inquiry carried out at several of the most well-known Bohemian Quarter restaurants (Ima Dana, Dva Jelena, Tri Šešira), we have discovered that prices for the New Year’s celebration last year were between RSD 4500 and 6000 which included  live music, a welcome drink, an array of alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks and a menu based on the national cuisine (corn bread, prosciutto, cheese, kajmak and the mandatory grilled meat). Prizes for this year are not yet fixed.

 Guests of the Bohemian Quarter on New Year's Eve are typically Belgrade natives with a long tradition of celebrating the New Year in one of the restaurants on this street, but there are also Serbs from abroad, Serbs from other parts of Serbia and international visitors to Serbia’s capital. It’s mostly middle-aged and older folks coming to the Bohemian Quarter to celebrate, but, as the restaurant owners in the Bohemian Quarter have said, over the last few years there has been a rise in attendance of younger guests as well. In the Bohemian Quarter they play exclusively Old City music and the orchestras which play for the New Year can be heard in the Bohemian Quarter restaurants all year round.

So, if you are in Belgrade to wait for 2010, you can definitely find a party that will suit you and keep you smiling as we enter into the New Year.

 

ENTERTAINMENT

Belgrade has a reputation for its nightlife, and for good reason. Unlike in other parts of Europe, there is no day of the week in Belgrade when you cannot have a night out. This is true whatever your age, whatever your lifestyle and however much you want to spend!

You just have to get to know the rhythm of Belgrade's nightlife. Firstly, a night out in Belgrade starts relatively late, not until after 10 or even 11 o'clock in the evening. The only exception is when there is something interesting going on earlier in the evening: the opening of an interesting exhibition, a fashion show or a film or theatre premiere. The prelude to a night out is usually a visit to the cafés concentrated in the following areas: Obilićev venac, Strahinjića Bana, Njegoševa, Skadarlija or another of the popular local spots. The next task is to choose the right place for your night out, depending on your musical taste, age and lifestyle. The choice boils down to two options: a floating river café-club ('splav') or a club.

The 'splavovi' on the banks of the Sava and Danube provide all-night entertainment accompanied by every imaginable musical rhythm - from folk music to homegrown pop, rock 'n' roll and techno. The main areas are: the bank of the Danube by the Hotel Jugoslavija, the bank of the Sava between the bridges, and Ada Ciganlija. It is not too difficult to choose the right place for a fun night out: check out the sounds and the atmosphere, see who is going into and coming out of the splav and decide whether it is the place for you. Here are a few tips to help you: the Danube bank is more "fancy", the Sava bank is more Bohemian and Ada Ciganlija is the most laid-back.

The clubs are mostly in the old part of town and vary greatly in terms of their interior decoration, atmosphere, prices and entrance policies.