Articles (7)
The 20 best pubs in Glasgow
After a cosy spot to spend an evening with your nearest and dearest? Or are you more in the market for somewhere big and boisterous to celebrate with a big group? Thankfully, Glasgow has plenty of pubs to pick from. Whether itâs the traditional joints or the trendy, up-and-coming hotspots, thereâs something to suit all tastes and dispositions. Hereâs our list of the top-rated pubs in town â and then if youâre up for it, why not treat yourself at one of the best cocktail bars in Glasgow? RECOMMENDED: Full guide to the best bars in Glasgow
The 27 best things to do in Glasgow right now
 Glasgow is a city of many unforgettable and sometimes contrasting characteristics, which together make it a place that is well-worth your time. Aside from the friendly and welcoming patter of the city's residents, Glasgow is renowned for âthe elegance of its Victorian architecture and its downright cool music and club scenes. You'll never be far from a Michelin-recommended restaurant or a trendy bar, but if it's culture you're after, youâll be kept entertained by the many museums, galleries, parks and other event spaces all over. There's naturally plenty happening in the city all year-round but it can be perfect for both a quick weekend break timed around something special or a longer trip away. Ready to get exploring? Hereâs our pick of the best things to do in Glasgow right now.Â
The 32 best restaurants in Glasgow you need to try
When Cail Bruich became the first restaurant in Glasgow to land a Michelin star in 18 years in 2021, it was an indication of the level at which contemporary Glaswegian dining is currently operating. Though Edinburgh is known for its many Michelin-starred institutions, there's also plenty to get excited about further west. Scotland's biggest city can boast quality and variety in its offerings, with something to suit every diet and culinary craving. Whether you're after adventurous international cuisine or locally-sourced delights, our list of the best restaurants in Glasgow will give you all the top tips you need to eat your way around the city. Eaten somewhere on this list and loved it? Share it with the hashtag #TimeOutEatList. You can find out more about how Time Out makes recommendations and reviews restaurants here.
The 18 best bars in Glasgow
The Scots are known around the world for enjoying a drink. So it should come as no surprise to learn the countryâs biggest city is home to some properly fantastic watering holes. Whether youâre after a quiet hideyhole ideal for a lazy afternoon pint, bars with kitchens serving superb food or drinking dens with DJs ready-made for pre-club drinks, our pick of the best bars in Glasgow has you covered. And thatâs even before you peruse our round-ups of the cityâs best pubs and best cocktail bars. Non-alcoholic options also available (this is the country that invented Irn-Bru, after all). Drank somewhere on this list and loved it? Share it with the hashtag #TimeOutDrinkList. You can also find out more about how Time Out makes recommendations and reviews bars.
The 11 best museums in Glasgow
Glasgow has given so much to the world over the centuries. From the television to the first-ever international football match â not to mention a whole host of pioneering figures in art, music and literature â you can learn much about this heritage at the cityâs array of brilliant museums. Major general interest institutions such as the Kelvingrove, the Riverside Museum and the Hunterian are housed in striking buildings that are attractions in themselves, while smaller, more specialised galleries are dedicated to everything from policing to piping. Most of them, too, are free. To help get you started, weâve picked out some of the best museums in Glasgow right now. Youâll be able to trace not just the story of the city itself, but also find out how itâs helped shape the world in ways that are often under-appreciated. Expect surprises, discoveries, wonderment â and a whole lot of Charles Rennie Mackintosh. RECOMMENDED: Full guide to the best things to do in Glasgow
What to do in Kelvinbridge, Glasgowâs coolest neighbourhood
Whatâs the deal with Kelvinbridge? Walking westwards across the Kelvin Bridge by night, the glowing apex of the illuminated university spire just visible behind the Hillhead tenement skyline, the moonlight rippling on the typically rain-swollen waters of the river as it roars beneath your feet â can there be any more quintessential or enchanting view anywhere in Glasgow? The point where Great Western Road spans the River Kelvin (technically the Great Western Bridge, but nobody calls it that) has been a key nexus of the West End for centuries. And in recent years, as Byres Roadâs fortunes have faded and Finnieston has reached trendiness saturation point, the Kelvinbridge area has seen a flurry of new openings â shops, bars, restaurants, cafĂ©s, arts venues and even a radio station â helping to reinvigorate what was already one of the prettiest, most historic and most happening neighbourhoods in the city. RECOMMENDED: Full guide to the 50 coolest neighbourhoods in the world If you only do one thing... Go vintage. The Kelvinbridge area is one of the best in Glasgow for retro retail therapy of every kind â be it vintage clothes at Glasgow Vintage Co or Retro, furniture at Authentics, books at Thistle Books or vinyl from Mixed Up. Go off the beaten track Find the leafy riverside footpath beneath Kelvin Bridge and follow your feet. Head south through Kelvingrove Park or north past the Botanic Gardens â two of the cityâs most gorgeous green spaces. Fancy exploring a little further? H
Whatâs it really like being a barber in Finnieston, Glasgow?
Scott Hughes, 46, thinks men need more places where they can just rock up and chat â and says barbers like his, Soul Barber Room, are the perfect fit. So, what else has he learned styling hair in Glasgowâs Finnieston? Itâs all about the chatâCutting hair is the middle ground to a good conversation. The amount of people you meet, from every walk of life, is the great thing with this profession. Iâve worked everywhere from London to San Francisco and Dublin. But Scottish people will talk about anything.â Barbering has enjoyed a big renaissance in recent yearsâA massive hole developed in barbering in the 1980s, for the simple fact that a lot of older barbers were dying off. A lot of guys started visiting ladiesâ hair salons, because it was a much more pleasing environment. Now there are loads of new barbers, doing super-cool cuts, which is great. Men need more places where they can come and just chat. There should be a barber shop or hairdressers for everybody.â Some men will open up to their barber more than they would to a therapistâThereâs not a desk between us, a barrier. Weâre in close proximity, thereâs contact, itâs a pretty personal thing. Iâve had people who have told me about coming into hundreds of thousands of pounds and going to some exotic destination and squandering it all. An elderly gent who had been in the shop bequeathed me his northern soul record collection after he passed away â it turned out he had been a DJ at Wigan Casino.â Boring conversation is the
Listings and reviews (1)
Public House by Nico
Flushed by the success of his other two establishments â flagship 111 by Nico in Kelvindale and its younger sister Six by Nico in Finnieston â itâs with justifiable swagger that Scots-Italian restaurateur Nico Simeone takes over the former premises of The Mallard for his new, rustic-yet-refined gastropub. The idea may have been knocking around for a while. High-end (yet still affordable) chippy food was a theme of Six by Nico, and Public House similarly plays on elevating unassuming Scottish classics. Indeed, some flourishes, such as serving one dish â smoked chicken âsandwichâ cock-a-leekie â under a smoke-filled transparent cloche for a theatrical reveal, are recycled from the Six repertoire. But in terms of value for money, Public House doesnât compete with Six. The standard of cooking is consistently high (try the fish pie with dulse seaweed butter, and the flat iron steak with chimmichuri) but youâre paying gastropub main prices for small dishes. Somewhere between the delicious, yet lonely-looking, burger, or the beer-battered haddock on mushy peas, sans chips (theyâre extra), you may yearn for the comfort of tradition: filling, rib-sticking portions, bang for your buck and a few pints (not schooners as they serve here). The chestnut gnocchi diced up with sprout tops and smoked pancetta or tender lamb faggots with zingy mint sauce may leave you wanting more, but not necessarily ina good way.
News (42)
Seven must-see comedy shows at the Edinburgh Fringe
Your laughter muscles duly rested by a diet of Dostoevsky and Adam Sandler movies throughout the early summer, youâll be ready and crying out by now for the comedic onslaught of the Edinburgh Fringe. Everywhere from street corners to enormo-venues, youâll find all kinds of people vying to make you think theyâre the most hilarious thing since internet videos of cats, be they stand-ups, sketch troupes, improvisers, absurdist performance artists or just plain freeform weirdoes. Let us help you sort the funny hahas from the funny hows by highlighting six shows we think will be definite winners this Fringe, from promising up-and-comers to senior stars.  Katy Brand: I Was a Teenage ChristianLong before her critically-acclaimed Big Ass Show for ITV and subsequent sidestep into novel writing, Katy Brand (pictured) was literally a teenage Christian who attended church four times a week between the ages of 13 and 20, doing her utmost to put the âfunâ into fundamentalism. An autobiographical solo show on that subject heralds Brandâs very welcome return to live comedy for the first time since 2010, as she relives seven years of being âan obnoxious, self-important dickâ, albeit one who at least knew she was going to heaven. If heaven is a three-week run of daily shows at the Pleasance, then truly she has made it. Pleasance Courtyard, until August 29 (not 15), 4.45pm  Burnistoun Live at the FringeGlaswegians go where no true Glaswegian goes willingly: 50 minutes east on the train to that
Eight of the best late-night shows at the Fringe
The massive irony of paying so much for digs in Edinburgh during the Fringe is that you donât go there to do boring things like sleep. With opening hours relaxed during August â 3am for most pubs, 5am for clubs and some of the larger venues â you can entertain yourself more or less 24/7. There are always a load of good (and typically quite noisy/rowdy) shows on to cater to the night owls. Hereâs a round-up of eight different reasons to stay up well past your bedtime at the Fringe, from late-night comedy and cabaret, to club nights. Who eats breakfast anyway?  Russian Standard House of Davai presents PingTronWeâre not sure who had the ingenious idea of a quickfire table tennis tournament with the lights turned off and a load of Russian vodka poured into the mix, but we definitely salute them. Illuminated only by the spooky-futuristic glow of UV lights to help guide the balls over the net, this sure to be wildly popular event sounds like stupidly good fun. Gilded Balloon Teviot, August 11-14, 18-21 and 26-28, 12.15am  Beardyman: One Album Per HourLondon beatboxer, live looping maestro and comedian Beardyman â AKA Darren Foreman â takes musical prolificacy to the next level with his latest sure-to-sell-out Fringe show. The vocal virtuoso capable of emitting, manipulating and capturing just about any sound you can conceivably think of will create a whole album every night based on audience suggestions. Pleasance Courtyard, August 18-24, 11.45pm  Frisky and Mannish: CabaRIOTFam
Five of the best circus acts at the Fringe
Circus is increasingly becoming an established part of the Edinburgh Fringe, as one of the worldâs oldest forms of public entertainment only rightly should. The Underbelly Circus Hub venue on The Meadows has returned for 2016 with an even bigger programme of British and international artists, each of them helping to reshape audienceâs preconceptions of what circus is all about (clue: itâs not custard pie throwing clowns or lion-tamers). Thereâs a whole variety of other acrobatic, gymnastic, equilibristic and comedic circus routines to be seen at other venues throughout the city. Hereâs a round-up of five that have caught our eye.  Ockhamâs Razor: Tipping Point Returning for a second consecutive year, following 2015âs award-winning double-bill âArc and Every ActionâŠâ, one of the UKâs leading aerial theatre companies present another inspired and fearless new work at the Fringe. Performed in the round, up close and personal with the audience, its sees five performers manipulate five-metre metal poles to create a rich variety of images and situations; from a seesaw with a 360-degree rotation to a swaying forest. The original music is by Adem Ilhan and Quinta, who are know for collaborations with Radiohead, Hot Chip and Bat for Lashes as well as their respective solo outputs. C Venues â C Scala, until Aug 25 (not 16, 23), 3pm  Silver Lining & Jacksons Lane: Throwback Youthful and energetic aerial and acrobatic work from one of the fast-rising companies in British theatre Silve
Seven of the best club nights during the Edinburgh festivals
While you wonât find many of them listed in the Fringe programme, the club nights and parties that roll on through the night are one of the best things about Edinburgh in August. Thanks to 5am extended licenses and a huge influx of young people looking for a good time the cityâs nightlife takes on a whole new dimension. Hereâs a round-up of some of the best ones to look out for this month, running the gamut of music styles from funk and soul, to house and techno, hip-hop, Afrobeat, dub and more.  Horse Meat DiscoAnother one of 99 Hanoverâs free Thursday specials sees London leftfield disco tastemakers Horse Meat Discoâs James Hillard head north for a night of anything-goes dancefloor movers from classic to cosmic to deep disco, italo, punk funk, house, techno, oddities and a whole lot more. Get down early to avoid disappointment. 99 Hanover Street, August 11  Hot Dub Time MachineAn annual Fringe fixture, self-styled âBest.Party.Everâ Hot Dub Time Machine is a nostalgia-powered decades-and-genres spanning club experience that sees party goers travel back in time and music history, to the birth of rock'n'roll - and then dance, sing, yell, rave and hug their way back to the present day. Itâs a twisting to âTwist and Shoutâ, doing the running man to New Kids On The Block and bouncing around to The Proclaimers kind of night out. Corn Exchange, August 12-13, 18-20  Soulsville presents Rhythm Machine âTom tom heavy âsynth boogie and smoke hazed new wave disco,â so they say, with
Six great shows for kids and teens at the Edinburgh Fringe
From highly-strung thespians in homemade dress-up to attention seeking comedians; youâll find no shortage of overgrown kids at the Edinburgh Fringe. But what is there to appeal to actual young people at the festival this summer? A great deal as it happens â 183 shows in the programme altogether, variously made for newborns, toddlers, teenagers and everyone in-between (plus their adults). Hereâs a round-up of a mere six among many that have caught our eye, including a couple of popular book adaptations, a playful introduction to a theatre great and an inspirational true-life story.  MermaladeLike her hit at last yearâs Fringe âLand of the Dragonsâ, Laura Stevensâ new interactive comedy play features a strong female role model who wonât let anyone get in her way. Based on the book by Clare Cockburn-Martin, âMermaladeâ is the story of a mermaid left to try and make sense of a cryptic note, with just three annoying oysters for company. Sheâs brave enough to stand up to some of the biggest entities in the universe â the booming-voiced God of Thunder included â but is she wise enough to find the answers sheâs looking for? Pleasance Courtyard, until August 29 (not 17-18, 22-24), 11.15am.  Molly WhuppieThe return of an old favourite from Edinburgh kids theatre company Licketyspit. Adventuring young maiden Molly Whuppie is determined not to let the great winter that's frozen even the sea, stop her, her mum and her sister from enjoying a winter feast. So sheâs off on a journey, over
Five I-canât-believe-itâs-free things to do at the Edinburgh festivals
One of the most common criticisms youâll hear of the Edinburgh festivals is the damage a visit is liable to inflict on your bank balance. Itâs true that you can be grossly overcharged for accommodation, food, and some event ticket prices among other things. And donât even talk to us about the price of a soapy pint of mass-produced lager. But if you know where to go and what to do, you can just as easily spend a whole August day in Auld Reekie entertaining yourself at no cost whatsoever, such are the preponderance of free things happening around the city during festival time. Hereâs a handful of suggestions to get you started. Â Investigate the fringe of the Fringe at the Free Fringe Get back to the grassroots outsider spirit of the Fringe with the variety of volunteer promoted shows presented by PBHâs Free Fringe at different venues around the city. Set up 20 years ago as an antidote to unreasonable hire charges for venues and high ticket prices for the public, they charge nothing for their shows spanning comedy, theatre, music and much more, save for a voluntary donation in a bucket at the end. Suffice to say, thereâs a lot of very unremarkable stuff to sift through, but surefire hits too, including London-based Danish comedian and podcaster Sofie Hagen (Liquid Room Annexe, August 6-28, 7.50pm), who charmed the pants off crowds and critics alike last year with her show about being a teenage Westlife obsessive, eventually walking off with the Fosterâs Edinburgh Comedy Award f
Five must-see gigs at the Edinburgh festivals
Thanks to the Edinburgh International Festivalâs bold new programming ethos under Artistic Director Fergus Linehan, rock, pop and electronic music is no longer relegated to the margins during August like it once was. You can find a whole variety of gigs, big and small, in rooms throughout the city this month, featuring an eclectic range of local and touring artists from post-rock heroes to Mercury Prize-winners and fast-rising outsiders. Here are five of the best â and a sample song from each to help seal the deal.  Anohni Responsible for one of the best and most fiercely political albums of 2016 so far in the shape of the Mercury Prize shortlisted âHopelessnessâ, you may better recognise Anohni as Antony Hegarty, the England raised, New York-made lead singer and songwriter of the Mercury Prize winning band Antony and the Johnsons. Now self-identifying as a woman, sheâs taken a new tangent into electronic music, with the help of a pair of cutting-edge producers in Scottish sometimes Kanye West go-to-guy Ross Birchard AKA Hudson Mohawke and American experimental musician and composer Daniel Lopatin AKA Oneohtrix Point Never. As it comes to the Edinburgh International Festival, the accompanying live show â incorporating live music, film and dance â promises to prove as visceral and uncompromising as Anohniâs songs, which rage against mass surveillance, drone warfare and ecocide through the medium of soulfully transcendent synthpop. Wednesday August 17, The Playhouse, ÂŁ25-ÂŁ30.
Eight reasons why we will (and wonât) miss the Red Road Flats
The remaining six of the original eight blocks of the Red Road Flats high-rise housing complex are, after standing for decades as hulking, doomy, dilapidated monuments to an unsuccessful social experiment, set to be demolished this Sunday with a single controlled explosion. Many people will be happy to see the end of these brutalist eyesores, and their constant reminder of all the political and planning folly and attendant societal misery that theyâve come to represent. Others will miss their epic silhouettes on the Glasgow skyline, and lament the very public destruction of places many people once happily called home. Hereâs a quick history of these infamous buildings, which have proven controversial from first to last. Construction of Glasgow's Red Road flats. 1960s. http://t.co/jq47aTcKDm pic.twitter.com/Y8UCaEvar8 â Yoor Wullie (@YoorWullie) July 25, 2015 The Red Road Flats symbolised an idealistic attempt to make a better GlasgowBuilt in the 1960s to house nearly 5,000 people displaced from inner-city tenement slums as part of Glasgowâs massive post-war regeneration project, Red Road was the biggest of many ambitious tower housing projects around the city spearheaded by idealistic Glasgow Corporation architect Sam Bunton. The tallest of the developmentâs eight blocks â which between them comprised two 28-storey 'slabs' and six 31-storey 'points' â were for a while the highest residential buildings in Europe. To new residents leaving behind outdoor toilets, inadequate
Seven late nights on the Fringe
Thereâs just a week left before Edinburgh returns to its old sleepy self again, but donât fret. With opening hours being relaxed as they are during Fringe time â 3am for most pubs, 5am for clubs and some of the larger venues â thereâs plenty of opportunity to wring every last millisecond of fun out of the festival monthâs final seven days. Assuming youâre not the kind of person whoâs into boring things like sleeping, anyway. To aid you in planning your after-hours shenanigans, hereâs a round-up of seven different reasons to stay up well past your bedtime, from late night comedy and cabaret shows to club nights. Just donât be making any breakfast plans for the next day. The Stand Late ClubNo trip to the Fringe would be complete without some late night comedy, nor indeed some late night comedy at The Stand. Across two hours each night, five different stand-ups perform their best and bawdiest material while the audience â and probably the stand-ups too for that matter â get steadily trollied on a late bar. Keep an eye on @StandComedyClub for lineup announcements. Guests so far this year have included Johnny Vegas, Stephen K Amos, Tiffany Stevenson and Craig Campbell.The Stand, August 28-29, 11.45pm Late Night Phantasmagoria with Jack LukemanVeteran Irish cabaret, rock and folk singer Jack Lukeman â better known as Jack L â returns to The Famous Spiegeltent for a late night stint after appearing on the Fringe last year as part of La Clique, and following a UK tour with Jools Holl
Three Fringe shows about mental health
With 3000 different shows in the 2015 programme, you could pick practically any subject from fruit carving to nudity and try and argue that itâs some kind of a theme at the Edinburgh Fringe. But if thereâs any one subject in particular that seems to be generating a lot of interest and attention this year â and there's always one â then itâs mental health. Everyone from The Guardian to BBC News and i-D have reported on the trend in Edinburgh this August for shows tackling depression and other mental health issues. Perhaps itâs got something to do with the fact of Tory cuts drastically reducing spending in mental health care? Or possibly the fact that depression and addiction-suffering comedian Robin Williams committed suicide exactly a year ago? Or maybe the performing arts is simply reflecting a loosening of the traditionally stiff British upper lip when it comes to the stigma of discussing, yâknow, feelings and stuff? (The Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival, which announces its 2015 programme on September 9, has been using the arts to raise awareness of mental health issues for many years). Whatever the explanation, itâs encouraging to see a once taboo subject become so widely addressed and discussed at the world's biggest arts festival. Hereâs a round-up of some of the specific shows and events that have been piquing such interest. Fake It âTil You Make It A four-star hit says our expert, Fringe First-winning Edinburgh regular Bryony Kimmingsâ âFake It âTil You M
Top five circus acts at the Edinburgh Fringe
The circus is coming to town like never before. For the first time, this year's Edinburgh Fringe has its own dedicated circus venue in the form of two big tops on the Meadows called the Underbelly Circus Hub. Forget hackneyed ideas about clowns with cream pies, human cannonballs and lion tamers (as if anyone will ever dare mess with a lion again in the wake of #cecilgate). Here you can expect a first class line-up of 12 international circus shows including European, UK and Fringe premieres by global artists from Belgium to France the Czech Republic, Australia, Canada and Palestine. Itâs a reflection of the growing popularity of one of the worldâs oldest forms of public entertainment at the Fringe. As ever thereâs a whole variety of acrobatic, gymnastic, equilibristic (thatâs balancing and stuff) and comedic circus routines to be seen across Edinburgh this August, at the Circus Hub and venues beyond. Hereâs a round-up of five of the best in the ring. Ockham's Razor: Arc and Every ActionâŠOne of the UKâs leading circus companies bring an award-winning double-bill to the Fringe that will completely shift your perception of what circus is all about. Far from trying to portray themselves as superhuman daredevils as circus performers tend to, Ockhamâs Razor instead attempt to create acrobatic aerial spectacles full of humanity and vulnerability. âArcâ is the story of three people at close proximity but somehow isolated from one another, suspended on a rotating rig three and a half m
Ten times bagpipes werenât ear-splitting and horrible
Letâs face it, the sound of bagpipes is a pretty Marmite-y proposition â for every person who goes glassy-eyed at a stirring reel, thereâs someone else who wouldnât wish such dour tunelessness upon their worst enemy (admittedly dodgy buskers are mostly to blame for this). But weâre sure that Piping Live! will again do much to endear doubting listeners to Scotlandâs national instrument as the annual Glasgow festival comes around again this week, assembling some of the finest pipers from all over the world for a week-long jubilee of droning. If youâre not convinced, hereâs a round-up of ten occasions when the bagpipes crossed over into other, often unlikely genres of music and actually sounded pretty cool. 1. The White Stripes â âPrickly Thorn, But Sweetly WornâIn honour of his family heritage (heâs Scots-Polish by descent) Jack White went full Scottish on this song from The White Stripesâ sixth and final album, 2007âs âIcky Thumpâ. Written about the thistle, the Scottish national flower, it features piping from London-born Pipe Major of the Tennessee Scots Pipe Band Jim Drury. 'Bagpipes are due a revival,' said White in an interview around the time. 'They a very somber instrument, very beautiful in the right context.'  2. AC/DC â 'Itâs A Long Way To The Top (If You Wanna RockânâRoll)'An AC/DC song about rockânâroll â whoâd believe it! But whatâs unusually novel about this tightly-wound opening track from 1975âs âTNTâ â a classic of the Australiansâ Bon Scott-fronted, pre-mega