— By Kevin Montgomery (@kevinmonty) |
Bad news, folks. We're being told that city officials paid a visit to renowned happy hour hotspot Casanova a few weeks back, telling the bewildered staff they had to unplug their turntable perched at the end of the bar immediately, or they'd close the place up for good.
This is what Casanova DJ Jacob Guillermo Peña had to say about the situation:
Y'know, it's a bummer to think about all the little niches that are gonna go unfilled without Casanova Lounge having DJs. I mean, I understand the decision. But really, there were some great folks playing some nice records there. I know you can hear some of em over at Hemlock (Caroline plays some great records for happy hour, you should really hear em) but some of these other nights would NEVER go over well at a “club”. I've been turned on to a ton of great records while hanging out there. Anyway, just wanted to throw that out there. I know Doyle's gonna have a killer jukebox (no, for real) but it's just not the same. Anyhow, I need to go there for a drink now. Cheers y'all.
Apparently, the city objected to the bar's lack of a cabaret license, and told them they had apply for a license ($1,600) and soundproof the joint ($8,000) if they ever wanted to do so much as plug an iPod in again. This, of course, seems particularly heavy-handed, given that Casanova is typically known for spinning slow jams at a reasonable volume—hardly a club, or even a rowdy dive bar. Alas, that's the situation.
DJ Sonny Phono has some thoughts on what's going on:
This summer has been one of the busiest on that area, and right after a kid got murdered on 16th the guillotine dropped hard. I know a lot of the Vice/ABC officers from my time at [111 Minna] and they tell me they work almost exclusively in the Mission this year. There's a much bigger picture [than NIMBYs] and a lot of it has to do with a basic liquor license being worth half a mil in that neighborhood, not just dudes with wicked record collections nerding out on each other.
I guess it's not just $15 burgers we have to worry about now…
Comments (7)
EW77 | [Permalink]
this happened at the Attic too….mostly because a lawyer neighbor made it an issue.
scum | [Permalink]
These small bars are lucky the don’t get busted for constantly being over capacity.
Herr Doktor Professor Deth Vegetable | [Permalink]
I don’t understand, why do you need a cabaret license to play recorded music? I thought that cabaret licenses were for live music?
PN | [Permalink]
They play good music at Iron and Gold.
Eric Gregory | [Permalink]
A while back I had this idea of starting a “quiet” bar where nobody is allowed to speak and there’s no music or TV. Not sure how the no talking rule would actually be enforced, but the idea is you’d have to write notes back and forth to communicate.
I bet the city would still have a beef with my bar, though.
Milk Steak | [Permalink]
EW77 is right about other bars being hit too. It seems they just made a broad sweep through the mission pulling the plug on everyone without the cabaret license. Perhaps the complaint at the Attic os what started it all?
And yes, ipods count too. So either these bars are going to have to become “quiet bars” or just use a jukebox - which requires a license of its own.
The war on fun finally hits the mission?
misogynistic man-hater | [Permalink]
If I stick an ipod up my bunghole while sitting in the forest when all of a sudden a tree falls down, does anyone hear it?