102 Elm Street
Manchester, NH 03101
Hillsborough County
Phone: (603) 669-4678
Fax: unknownWebsite: no website on fileEmail: no email on fileHours: unknown
by Sharee Gelen on
I think this place may be getting dinged for serving real Mexican in the land of tex-mex. I did have to deduct a star for absolutely awful sangria. Otherwise my tacos were great. The chips and salsa were good, and the service was super friendly.
by Darby Stdenis on
Okay so reading the other reviews, I wonder if mine will do justice. First of all - it's hard to find a good hip hop club/lounge in this city. Either that, or no one has informed me of where to go. I'm from Chicago where most places have great hip hop nights...sorry, LA. Anyway, so when I found this place I was ecstatic. 1) Music was BOMB. I'm talking old school hip hop...fun times. It really brought me back in the day haha. Actually...this is the only reason I'm giving it 5 stars...because I enjoyed the music a LOT. I SHOULD take stars away....but the music saved you guys. I mean, sorry but the place is small which is good for your typical hip hop joints...but c'mon - don't let everyone and their moms in then. There's no air ventilation in that place but one fan that everyone's trying to gather around. Second...what's with the "VIP" tables...it's a hip hop lounge. It's not like a high class Hollywood club...sorry. When I go to a lounge, I'm expecting a joint where I can sit, drink, and bob my head to some great music. Again, you guys are lucky you got the music down. I WILL go back to experience the sounds once again, but note to self: bring a personal fan.
by Sam P. on
A truly singular New York experience, top to bottom. I have never seen or experienced anything quite like it in this city, and yet everything about it is SO New York. I may be overstating things here, but it renewed my faith in New York nightlife. I was invited to the Virgin America launch party there, and even then my guest and I had to wait about 20 min to get in. The facade is nothing: an old, run down graffitied door. If it weren't for the crowds outside, you would walk right by it. But it's by far one of the toughest doors I've seen. There were 6 (count 'em), PR girls with headsets outside the door, including the one who invited me, and we still couldn't get in right away - "capacity issues," and all that. Even a personal friend of the CEO of Virgin America couldn't get in. The CEO had to come out and get him. Quintessential New York exclusivity. Once inside, it's a whole other ballgame. Beautiful people fill the maze like, bi-level interior, modeled after a New Orleans theater in homage to the Hammerstein Ballroom. Gorgeous bartenders and servers passed champagne and special cocktails (thank god for open bar - I hear the price tags are outrageous). Music bounced from hip-hop, to house, to Prince, to funk and soul, without blinking an eye. Somehow it worked. But what made the night superb was the Variety Show which apparently happens nightly at midnight. It's here that you get transported to somewhere between 20's Berlin and 19th Century Paris. The androgynous, bleach-blond, inked host (whose name escapes me) MC's a list of acts that includes a blues singer, burlesque dancers, a hip-hop Harlem trio, a Double Dutch team, a bluegrass duo, acrobats, and tops it all off with a full-on Can-Can. I couldn't stop smiling the entire time The whole experience was classic, modern, urban, exclusive, diverse, and utterly fabulous. Without a similar invite or someone else picking up the tab, I doubt I'll be back, but it's an experience I won't soon forget.