
Nightlife of Aberdeen
Aberdeen is a very good place for nightout.There are many clubs,dance bars, and many things.The Aberdeen Arts Centre, King Street has a 350-seat theater that is rented to professional and amateur groups hosting everything from poetry readings and plays to musical concerts in various styles. A large gallery room holds month-long exhibitions of visual art in many different styles and mediums. A cafe/bar, offering light meals and drinks, is open during performance times.Near Tarves, about 32km (20 miles) from Aberdeen, you'll find Haddo House, which hosts operas, ballets, and plays from Easter to October. An early-20th-century hall built of pitch pine, Haddo House is based on the Canadian town halls that Lord Aberdeen saw in his travels abroad. The hall was built for the people of the surrounding area on Aberdeen family land, and the present Lady Aberdeen still lives in a house on this property. The 19th-century Music Hall, Union Street is an ornately gilded 1,282-seat theater that stages concerts by the Scottish National Orchestra, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, visiting international orchestras, and pop bands, as well as hosting ceilidhs, crafts fairs, and book sales. The Aberdeen International Youth Festival is held annually in this hall in August, and features youth orchestras, choirs, and dance and theater ensembles.His Majesty's Theatre, Rosemount Viaduct ,was designed by Frank Matcham in 1906 and is the only theater in the world build entirely of granite. Dance Clubs DeNiro’s, 120 Union St. has dancing to house music from 10pm until 2am on Friday and Saturday only. The ever-popular Ministry, 16 Dee St. is a sophisticated dance club that features different theme nights throughout the week.A Pub The Prince of Wales, 7 St. Nicholas Lane in the heart of the shopping district, is the best place in the old city center to go for a pint. Furnished with pews in screened booths, it boasts Aberdeen's longest bar counter.