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Featured Bars/Clubs


Tucker's Bar and Grill is a small bar located on South Broadway near the River City Casino. It may not be the most high profile or sophisticated bar around, but it's also not trying to impress anyone. And maybe that's what makes Tucker's special: modesty. The patrons of Tucker's (most of whom seem to sport charming southern drawls) claim that no one is a stranger at Tucker's and everyone is welcome. Tucker's has a pool table, a small stage for the occasional live band and $1 beer all day Monday for Monday-night football. If you're a lady, you're in luck on Wednesdays: Beer and call drinks are just $1 each. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
Located on St. Charles' historic Main Street, this little bar has a historical significance all its own. Legend has it that some years ago, Chuck Berry's longtime pianist Johnnie Johnson stopped in with '60s pop legend Johnny Rivers ("Secret Agent Man") for an impromptu jam session here. So it behooves you to stop by on Friday and Saturday nights, when the club hosts live music. On other nights, dart lovers can avail themselves of the many boards that line the south wall - or merely take a seat at the center bar and watch the world roll by on Main Street. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
Like so many south-county bars, this one is nestled in a strip mall, amid a massive parking lot. On Friday and Saturday nights, there's a line of people out the door waiting to shell out their $5 to the bouncers. It's billed as a country bar (the word "saloon," we find, is usually a tip-off), but you won't find hay bales and Montgomery Clift posters here, just a large circular bar, Top-40 on the P.A. system and a wall of denim, interspersed with the occasional bandage-dress/stilettos combo. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.upstairslounge.com You won't find a sign advertising this popular South Grand institution. Nestled above Mekong on the corner of Grand Boulevard and Hartford Street, Upstairs is the go-to place for cheap drinks, dancing and local DJs spinning every night of the week. If sweating it out on the dance floor isn't your cup of tea, arrive early to snag a booth to people-watch; you won't be disappointed. If the scene upstairs gets stale, bounce down to uber-mod Barbarella, or the Blue Room, the two sister bars housed in the same building. The Upstairs draws a diverse crowd and is the unpretentious, South side alternative to the St. Louis club scene. There's generally a cover on the weekend, but if you're looking to party on the cheap, weeknights are your best bet. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.myspace.com/urbanloungestl This hidden gem is one of the most underrated places on South Grand. It's tiny and rarely crowded -- a dimly lit, Middle Eastern-inspired clubhouse where they may not already know your name, but they're about to ask you what it is. Bartender Nhat Nguyen mixes up a variety of cocktails infused with fresh fruit, and local DJ's incinerate the small dance floor on weekends. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.urbanchestnut.com We can see it now: St. Louis, Gateway to the ... Western Beer. Independent microbreweries are cropping up as fast as you can fall in love with their weisses and biers and lagers and pilsners, and Urban Chestnut Brewing Company is the latest to capitalize on our collective obsession. The antiseptic tap room and adjoining brewhouse almost look like a car dealership from the outside, but inside it's all warm fuzzies and cold suds in pristine pint glasses. A chalkboard above the bar gives the stats for the ten or so beers on tap, and also poses the question: "Revolution or Reverence?" Will the upstarts beat the InBev pros at their own game? Will Urban Chestnut flourish or founder? Judging by the strength of their first few batches of European-style beers, these guys aren't nuts. Gotta try: the blonde Zucker Weisse, a sour wheat beer that becomes transcendent with a splash of woodruff (a green syrup reminiscent of vanilla and chamomile) or raspberry syrup. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.urbaneatscafe.com Community hub Urban Eats is a stylish coffeehouse and eatery smack in the middle of Meramec, Dutchtown's version of a main drag. The place is clean and bright, and staffed by amiable baristas. Urban Eats recently doubled their square footage and expanded their offerings to include a full bar and juice bar, in addition to coffee, local art and choose-your-own-adventure sandwiches and wraps. The space doubles as the Urban Arts Collective, which promotes local artists and offers them a chance to show their work at Urban Eats' free gallery. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.vangoghz.com Van Goghz sits on the corner of Shenandoah and Compton avenues and contains two dining areas and a small patio for guests to make themselves comfortable for breakfast, happy hour, light snacks or a full meal. Waffles, eggs and oatmeal are among the breakfast offerings. Lunch and dinner options include sandwiches, quesadillas and salads, with vegetarian options such as the "Cheesy Artichoke" -- artichokes, black olives, marinated tomatoes, cream cheese and provolone in a spinach tortilla. Van Goghz' entrées include steaks, burgers and pastas. As its name implies, one of the highlights of Van Goghz Martini Bar & Bistro is its vast martini menu, which offers the classic choices as well as twists such as the pineapple-upside-down-cake martini or the St. Louis Garden District -- a rosewater rinse under Hendrick's gun. For those who don't fancy martinis, Van Goghz also offers an extensive menu of other specialty drinks, including an alcoholic version of the Arnold Palmer with lemonade and sweet tea vodka, and an ample selection of wine and beer. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.thevenicecafe.com Eccentric haven Venice Café provides a bright, colorful spot to take in live music and enjoy Caribbean fare - Rasta kabobs (available with jerk chicken, beef or veggie), Red Stripe Porker (pork tenderloin) and fried plantains are among the options. Venice Café's drinks include standard beer and liquor choices, and happy hour specials run Monday through Saturday. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.livenation.com/Verizon-Wireless-Amphitheater-St-Louis-tickets-Maryland-Heights/venue/49672 No St. Louisan's summer is complete without taking in a show at Verizon Wireless Amphitheater, the storied Maryland Heights venue formerly known as Riverport. It's where your parents sweated through the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin and where you've witnessed everything from Radiohead to Sugarland. The largest outdoor venue in the metro area, it's also one of the few egalitarian concert experiences left - from the 45-minute caravan through the Riverport business park to the endless series of parking lots, to making friends waiting for the Johnny on the Spot and sharing beer with the happy stoners a picnic blanket over. Concerts have become too sterile, but this venue still requires a commitment, and it's one we're happy to make in the sweltering St. Louis summer. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.vitosstl.info Every college kid worth his Animal House poster knows that pizza is the staff of life, so it's wise of Vito La Fata III to run his business on the eastern edge of Saint Louis University. But make no mistake: These aren't your typical, greasy, gotta-get-through-finals pies. La Fata's pizzas are for the connoisseur. The perfectly chewy crust is lifted into the stratosphere by zippy tomato sauce, mozzarella and super-fresh toppings. The number of choices (from traditional pizza margherita to an ooh-la-la shrimp-and-artichoke pie) can make for tough decisions, but you really can't go wrong. And don't forget to ask for fresh basil -- it's grown in the garden out back. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
https://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=268739333457&v=wall Unless you fled the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in the war-torn 1990s, be forewarned: You will turn heads walking into the Vivid Cafe. St. Louis is said to be home to the second largest Bosnian population of any city outside Sarajevo, and it's not often you get to feel like an interloper in your own city - so the exoticism of the Vivid Cafe should come as a welcome experience. The place is clean, dim and loungey, with fire-engine red club chairs and a sleek bar stocked with top-shelf liquor and plenty of ashtrays for the notoriously nicotine happy crowd. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.vocestl.com Since it opened in December 2012, Voce, "a venue for all voices," as owner Steve Scaglione puts it, has hosted everything from jazz, blues and folk to the occasional punk show. The black and red room features a small unintimidating stage, tables for sitting, a full bar and plenty of standing room to get up close to the performance. The downtown spot connects directly to Maurizio's Pizza & Sports Bar, which spits out hand-tossed New York style pizzas every night of the week late into the evening. Get an Italian tinged experience by pairing some pizza with a performance. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
The Waiting Room is a rock'n'roll joint done right, with wit and wisdom to spare. The bartenders and the patrons are some of the friendliest, down-to-earth people you can hope to meet, and the drinks and signature shots are fantastic. The Waiting Room carries excellent micro-brews, import and domestic beers, and TJ's pizza. It's also got a pool table, a darts league that meets on Wednesdays and a lovely patio out back. Every Thursday there's Beer League, a beer-tasting club that welcomes aficionados to sample international brews. Make sure to check out the beautiful hardwood counter -- it was fashioned from historic pocket doors. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
The Watson Bar and Grill is a dive bar for the true dive-bar devotee. Through a miasma of cigarette smoke, one can make out a U-shaped bar densely populated by the bar's grizzled yet gracious inhabitants. Conveniently located in the heart of south county, the Watson Bar and Grill is an ideal location to grab a cold one and commiserate with your fellow laborer after a day of backbreaking work. If conversation wanes, there's always a sports game on the tube or the tried-and-true dartboard (located in a dark corner festively lit by Christmas lights). Though it does offer a menu comprised of typical bar fare, the watering hole maintains no illusions of its primary appeal, which is clearly demarcated by the sign on the building's exterior: DRINK. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.wave-taco.com Wave Taco opened in early 2009 on a once-vacant lot just north of Washington Avenue in downtown St. Louis. It imported several tons of white sand from Florida, set up two immaculate outdoor beach volleyball courts and declared its motto to be "shirts optional." Order the house specialty -- a supersweet concoction called the Frozen Margarita Swirl -- at the tiki bar, then try not to stare too hard at the swimsuit-clad coeds frolicking on the faux beach. The only difference between this place and a south-of-the-border hotspot is that the kids are drinking Bud Light Lime instead of Corona with lime. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
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