Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Nightclub. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Nightclub Quotes And Sayings by 99 Authors including Shirley Horn,Larry Howes,Daniel Craig,Bernie Mac,Shia Labeouf for you to enjoy and share.
There's a place in Paris where I'd like to work one day. It's called the Slow Club.
I loved being around live rocking music, but I never knew what to do with myself socially at a show or club. I discovered that the dance floor was the perfect place to hide in plain sight.
I've got to be high class ... Which is sad, because I like bars.
When I started in the clubs, I had to work places where didn't nobody else want to work. I had to do clubs where street gangs were, had to do motorcycle gangs, gay balls and things of that nature.
Clubs are so lame. Nobody even dances at these clubs. They stand around and get drunk and they schmooze. There is no enjoyment factor.
'What you doing in the club on a Thursday?'
She say she only here for her girl birthday ...
They ordered champagne but still look thirsty,
Rock Forever 21 but just turned 30.
If you're in a company, you're dancing from 9 a.m. till 7 in the evening, and then you go home and get in a hot tub and get some Epsom salts and try to get your body goin' again. There's no social life, no anything.
I like the clubs because ... we have two or three acoustic guitars up there and we're not hard-core slamming or stomping through the music. We're singing it with intricate harmonies and really showing the craftsmanship.
Don't get me wrong - I've gone to a club. But I'd much rather be with my close friends at home or a concert, or on a trip. I'll go dancing with my grandma. She likes to cut a rug!
I wanna go to the clubs and actually have a good time too, but at the same time, when the party's over, I have to go back to the real world and try to figure out who I am.
I don't go to clubs. I don't know what club mixes are supposed to sound like.
Club culture is about leaving your cares behind, and I am trying to create that environment.
I guess there seems to be clubs opening up again, which is strange.
I don't go out to clubs. You'll never see me on a table at a bar, jumping up and down.
the den, drinking beer and arguing over
I love doing club shows. I love that tight sound.
The club scene is terrible.
Buffet." "Do you know what casino she
I've been in clubs. I don't like being in an enclosed place with really loud music, and a lot of drunk people. It's not my idea of a good time. It's just such a miserable life.
Club: An assembly of good fellows, meeting under certain conditions.
I don't really go to clubs so I don't know what sounds are made there,
I'm all about nightlife. I live during the night.
I was working at this club in downtown L.A. from four to eight at night, just Eddie Rubin, the drummer, and I.
I'm not necessarily that big of a clubbing junkie, but I really like dance music as a genre.
Hello - what hotel is this - ?
I'm not a party person or someone who likes to sit and drink in clubs all night, and never really have been. I have a good time through work.
I don't do the whole L.A. nightlife thing.
I've never done this before. I didn't go to human bars. Mudslides aside, I'm not much of a drinker. Club people are not my people. Now, book-club people -
A party, isn't party without an a entertainment!
There was no club but the Hells Angels as far as I was concerned.
I founded a club, which is called the Brutally Early Club. It's basically a breakfast salon for the 21st century where art meets science meets architecture meets literature.
Dance bars are seen as the place where gangsters go to relax and spend money.
I'm not much of a club goer because every time I do go I get in trouble.
My father ran a famous L.A. nightclub complete with roller-rink - Flippers - in the early Eighties which was the West Coast's answer to Studio 54.
Then I got a gig with an older friend who had the equipment and he played in this bar. They would bring me in the bar through the backdoor and I would DJ in the back room most of the night. Then they'd take me out the backdoor, so I was never really in the bar.
I don't go out anywhere. I don't go to nightclubs, so meeting somebody in the nightclub is out of question.
I like to go to the clubs. As long as the environment permits, and it's not too knuckleheadish, I'm there, I go to the club. Because that's where you get inspiration from.
The bar ... is an exercise in solitude. Above all else, it must be quiet, dark, very comfortable - and, contrary to modern mores, no music of any kind, no matter how faint. In sum, there should be no more than a dozen tables, and a client that doesn't like to talk.
A pub can be a magical place.
At night, when no one's there, the dancers and the musicians on the walls come to life and there's a glamorous ball. Sometimes their lights are so bright I can see the glow from my bedroom.
So I'm in my 51st year of playin' mostly nightclubs. I do some concerts.
I was a bouncer for ten years in New York City.
If you can handle a nightclub audience successfully, you can handle anything.
No, I did night clubs right here in Los Angeles. My partner, Phil Erickson, put me in the business, a guy from my home town, a dear friend who we just lost a couple of months ago.
the tables were taken by law students talking about rave parties or 'junior associates', in other words, those things which interest law students
My first year of university, I ran around and signed up for these clubs, and I noticed they were all drama clubs: really lame, artsy things.
I'm not really into clubbing, I like to go to parties after events, and those do end up at clubs or bars. But in my free time I go grocery shopping or to the gym, or I talk on the phone.
The law don't like jazz clubs. No one wants anything to do with that kind of trouble.
There is room enough indoors in New York City for the whole 1963 world's population to enter, with room enough inside for all hands to dance the twist in average nightclub proximity.
I've never been a big nightlife person. I have a pretty low-key life.
No real man would take something as sweet as his penis and turn it into a club.
New York is like a disco, but without the music
My first job was at a Chicago night club called Mr. Kelly's.
To be honest, unless you rocket straight to stardom as a gorgeous young vampire, you can spend a lot of time working behind a bar.
I was known around the college for jamming in the lounge.
The club shows are really intense and powerful, but for a shorter time, and the audiences are in close proximity than when I'm performing at The Palace Theatre.
I didn't mind working in the clubs, but I resented it being a club where pimps hang out. Because the music that I create is of a higher intellect than that. It not only encompasses pimps, but whores, ballplayers, executives ... everybody.
I like the club. It looks nice with all the tables out. They were freaking out, the Gilly's people.
One of those middle-aged mediocrities so common in London clubs who have no enemies, but are thoroughly disliked by their friends;
I don't go clubing. So, I don't smoke or drink.
I love to dance in the disco, but that's about it.
I go to screenings, then plays, then after-parties, then clubs.
I used to look at older people who bothered to still attend nightclubs and couldn't help but wonder why. Didn't they realize how foolish they looked? Of course, now that I'm one of those people myself, I have decided that such rules don't apply to me.
At heart, I guess I'm a saloon singer because there's a greater intimacy between performer and audience in a nightclub. Then again, I love the excitement of appearing before a big concert audience. Let's just say that the place isn't important, as long as everybody has a good time.
I love the DJ scene out in the clubs. It is a great way to party and make people happy, the atmosphere is one that I use as an escape from reality.
A friend of mine that happened to be a DJ at another club actually offered me a job [as a DJ]. I didn't think I could do it but he said, "You know all the music. You are at all the parties, and everybody knows you."
Most of the guys from the club who are employees for the security company are out on runs. The other half of the club, the guys who work normal jobs, are out doing their thing
Mixologist at a bar in the heavily gentrified Shaw neighbourhood, I fear I haven't a skinny-jeaned leg to stand on. S.D. PLATTON Washington, DC
The inside is packed with people. Lots of them crowding the bar, passing drinks back for people to carry to tables. A bunch of guys are pouring shots of vodka.
"To Zacharov!" one toasts.
"To open hearts and open bars!" calls another.
"And open legs," says Anton.
It wasn't even a bar. It was just a room where people drank while they waited for other people with whom they had business. The business usually involved the transfer of ownership of something from one person to another, but then, what business doesn't?
Work in nightclubs was interesting. There were interesting people and places, but by and large, the commercial music experience.
I don't run with anybody's herd. I don't like crowds. I don't like going to fancy places. I don't like the whole nightclub scene. Cocktail parties drive me mad. So I do my job and I stay away from the rest of it.
Why people used to go to clubs was to have a great time and to forget their troubles and worries and stresses of the week and enjoy themselves and I think that the music was a huge, important part of that
For whoever is lonely there is a tavern.
Partying means drinking. It also means playing records by Lou Reed and Chicago, which I thought was a city but is also a band it turns out.
We don't want your kind in this city.
Take your pack of animals and go back to where you came from.
Mark my words
if you open this club, it will be the last thing you ever do.
Blood will run.
Palace of Crystal
I like to dance, but it's not my weekend activity. I'm not a clubber.
We always play clubs. It's not something that I feel above. Those are my favorite shows because they're intimate, they're tight, their sweaty, they're hot. You're close to the people. Those are my favorites.
Sweat, scalded meat, puke, blood, smoke and a dozen kinds of bad ale and wine: the bouquet of civilized nightlife
The club is not a business. It's a populist democracy.
It started off at a club called Disobey, around the corner from where I live.
I go to dance clubs ... about once a year just to justify the other 364 days I spend in my apartment going 'God, what idiots!'
Angleterre Hotel,
When I first went to New York, I didn't really go out to clubs. It was the height of Culture Club so I didn't really have a social life. It was only after I had been to New York a few times that I started going out.
Midnight shout and revelry, Tipsy dance and jollity.
This is the biggest night of my entire life and everybody's career rides on my DJ set
It was the kind of bar where everybody knew your name, as long as your name was 'Motherfucker'.
A modest critique of an age in which an actor is the President, in which fashion models are asked for their opinions, in which getting into a nightclub is seen as a significant human achievement.
By the time I started doing stand-up, the club scene had died.
London is a city of clubs and private houses. You have to be a member.
The party at the bar was for an Internet literary journal that prints a hard copy version that was famous in the world of Internet literary journals that prints hard copy versions. What that means, I do not know.
I am worn to a raveling.
I refuse to believe that clubbing is how people are supposed to meet to establish relationships on a level for beyond what we consider to be a norm in modern society.
Parties are the nightly ritual of the sophisticated society.
I enjoy playing clubs. I still enjoy the closeness of the nightclub venue. However, after a certain period of time and after playing around some of the clubs in New YorkI felt that jazz should be presented in a more prestigious atmosphere.
To be in the dance bar you have to be young, good looking, able to dance, and comfortable talking to people.
Bars are meeting places and places to unwind. But at some point, what is culture unwinding from, and why can't they meet anywhere else?
Playing clubs is the ultimate - you see the faces; you hear the 'clicking' glasses - I love all that atmosphere and seeing people's mouths singing the words to the songs.
She's in the club. The hopelessly-outnumbered-and-surrounded-by-monsters club.Club-- M.r. Carey