Blues Pub: Difference between revisions
Evelyne san (talk | contribs) Added history and offers, food prices, edited mistakes and outdated info, updated team and added photos |
Evelyne san (talk | contribs) Corrected hopefully the indentation |
||
Line 72: | Line 72: | ||
You can get your own Blues Pub sticker to decorate your laptop or water bottle or forehead by asking a volunteer during blues, or contacting the Blues pages or managers! | You can get your own Blues Pub sticker to decorate your laptop or water bottle or forehead by asking a volunteer during blues, or contacting the Blues pages or managers! | ||
By participating to our weekly events, you can even get a chance to win our merch for free! | By participating to our weekly events, you can even get a chance to win our merch for free! | ||
Line 230: | Line 234: | ||
[[File:History4.jpg|200px|thumb|The live music]] | [[File:History4.jpg|200px|thumb|The live music]] | ||
Blues Pub was created/introduced by Tony Manolikakis, Andrew Leccese, Mike Prichett and Matthew Mathers. Tony and Andrew (aka O'Boogie & Cheese) were the common room managers in the 92’-93’ academic year. Part of the mandate for the common room was to provide a space for various engineering groups to hold fundraising events and social gatherings. A lot of the gatherings created a bit of segregation among the various departments (ex: Chemical engineering wine and cheese or Mechanical mixer). One day a U1 named Mike Prichett approached Andrew and Tony and suggested the idea of having a party in the common room (they suspected Matthew Mathers put him up to this). So they chose a day that was not already booked for fundraising and decided that they would have cheap beer, pizza, live music and a relaxing atmosphere. The first song for every party was “Little Bones” by Tragically Hip. Aside from being a pretty chill song, the song also repeatedly says “Happy hour is here” and thus is a pretty appropriate song choice. They couldn’t figure out what to name the event but right before the first party, Tony said that they needed to figure something out and write it on the LED sign they had in the common room. Mike walked in, and with time running out he said “let’s just call it Blues Pub, for now, and we’ll figure something out later.” They never thought of another name, and so the name stuck and pretty soon every Friday was Blues Pub. Why Blues pub? In contrast to PubNite they wanted to offer a low-key environment for the engineers to relax after a long week, the blues being the no-nonsense predecessor to much contemporary popular music conjures up that type of atmosphere. | Blues Pub was created/introduced by Tony Manolikakis, Andrew Leccese, Mike Prichett and Matthew Mathers. Tony and Andrew (aka O'Boogie & Cheese) were the common room managers in the 92’-93’ academic year. Part of the mandate for the common room was to provide a space for various engineering groups to hold fundraising events and social gatherings. A lot of the gatherings created a bit of segregation among the various departments (ex: Chemical engineering wine and cheese or Mechanical mixer). One day a U1 named Mike Prichett approached Andrew and Tony and suggested the idea of having a party in the common room (they suspected Matthew Mathers put him up to this). So they chose a day that was not already booked for fundraising and decided that they would have cheap beer, pizza, live music and a relaxing atmosphere. The first song for every party was “Little Bones” by Tragically Hip. Aside from being a pretty chill song, the song also repeatedly says “Happy hour is here” and thus is a pretty appropriate song choice. They couldn’t figure out what to name the event but right before the first party, Tony said that they needed to figure something out and write it on the LED sign they had in the common room. Mike walked in, and with time running out he said “let’s just call it Blues Pub, for now, and we’ll figure something out later.” They never thought of another name, and so the name stuck and pretty soon every Friday was Blues Pub. Why Blues pub? In contrast to PubNite they wanted to offer a low-key environment for the engineers to relax after a long week, the blues being the no-nonsense predecessor to much contemporary popular music conjures up that type of atmosphere. | ||