City Guides
Huddersfield
Nightclubs
Although it is easier to find pubs and bars in Huddersfield than it is club nights, there are certainly enough nightclubs to enjoy a good weekend out, including half a dozen with capacities of over 800. Nightlife is the city continues to improve alongside an ever-growing student population.
The Camel Club is open three nights a week and offers a combination of pop and commercial dance with some underground music. The club has a capacity of 450, and presents party tunes in Ministry of Mayhem on Mondays; indie, R’n’B, dance and party anthems in Your Camel on Thursdays; and Asylum on Fridays with punk, rock, ska and metal. Saturday is Hump, with the quirky gimmick of allocating all clubbers a number and providing notice boards for people to post the numbers of those they’re interested in. The club is in Byram Court on John William Street, and can be contacted on 01484 535 303.
Club Tokyo hasn’t been open very long, but is steadily building a reputation as a fashionable venue. The club has four rooms – the Club, the Courtroom, the Basement and the Bar – each with its own style of music and ambience. The Club presents funky house tunes, the Courtroom R’n’B, Indie and rock’n’roll in the Basement, and funk and disco in the Bar. There are live bands and live music on non-club nights. To see the latest flyer, log on to www.tokyohuddersfield.com, or call 01484 432100 for details.
The official Tokyo afterparty is at Rouge. Open until 6am on Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, the club can be found opposite the Packhorse Centre in the city centre.
Visage and Ethos is possibly Huddersfield’s most popular club, offering chart, commercial dance, funky house, disco, hip-hop and R’n’B from the sixties to the modern day. The club is actually spread over three venues, the Union, Visage and Ethos, and has a total capacity of 3000 people.
There are a number of smaller clubs and live music venues in and around the city centre, and Huddersfield is also home to a branch of the Chicago Rock Café, a family-friendly café in the day and a club with DJs at night.
The Camel Club is open three nights a week and offers a combination of pop and commercial dance with some underground music. The club has a capacity of 450, and presents party tunes in Ministry of Mayhem on Mondays; indie, R’n’B, dance and party anthems in Your Camel on Thursdays; and Asylum on Fridays with punk, rock, ska and metal. Saturday is Hump, with the quirky gimmick of allocating all clubbers a number and providing notice boards for people to post the numbers of those they’re interested in. The club is in Byram Court on John William Street, and can be contacted on 01484 535 303.
Club Tokyo hasn’t been open very long, but is steadily building a reputation as a fashionable venue. The club has four rooms – the Club, the Courtroom, the Basement and the Bar – each with its own style of music and ambience. The Club presents funky house tunes, the Courtroom R’n’B, Indie and rock’n’roll in the Basement, and funk and disco in the Bar. There are live bands and live music on non-club nights. To see the latest flyer, log on to www.tokyohuddersfield.com, or call 01484 432100 for details.
The official Tokyo afterparty is at Rouge. Open until 6am on Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, the club can be found opposite the Packhorse Centre in the city centre.
Visage and Ethos is possibly Huddersfield’s most popular club, offering chart, commercial dance, funky house, disco, hip-hop and R’n’B from the sixties to the modern day. The club is actually spread over three venues, the Union, Visage and Ethos, and has a total capacity of 3000 people.
There are a number of smaller clubs and live music venues in and around the city centre, and Huddersfield is also home to a branch of the Chicago Rock Café, a family-friendly café in the day and a club with DJs at night.
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