Le melange
Erasmus goes partying
'Show me how you party and I'll tell you who you are' - an accurate
modification of a well known proverb. Student party lifestyles reflect
their personality, social background and hint at where they come from
By
WLADYSLAW MANTEUFFEL
Story from www.cafebabel.com
Once you're Erasmus in Brussels, it's hard to leave.
Two reasons include the people - this city of friendly Belgians is
flooded with expats, international students and immigrants - and the
parties.
'Big bottle' beginnings
Germans and Austrians 'vorgluehen' (warm up-drink) in student residence
kitchen parties. 'Acclimatised' (or broke) southerners start with
botellón ('big bottle'), a tradition of drinking at someone's house
or outdoors in the street or a park. Formula: eat, play cards, smoke
thousands of cigarettes or a water pipe. Method: slowly and till late,
or con calma as Giulia from Italy says. It's normal to head to a disco
at midnight (the absolute record is Spaniards going to a club at 3am,
hombre!).
Northwards, people start earlier by eating around 9pm. 'We hang out
in Italian restaurants, Chinese and pitta places,' Pascaline from
Belgium puts it. 'Although it really depends on where you go after.'
Dress code: veni, vidi
A mini-skirted, high-heeled girl in a pub downs one beer after another.
'She's British,' a student informs me over a pint. Belgian girls wear
skirts with fancy tops, or jeans and fun t-shirts. The Greek and French
have that stylish look renowned by the Italians, who along with the
Brits follow a student 'goliardia' tradition of regularly wearing
themed outfits to parties. Slovenians, Hungarians Poles or Lithuanians
follow trends more.
There is a distinct difference in how the boys dress for partying
in Europe. In the UK, its a strictly shirt + trousers combination.
'Students who study economics or medicine dress more formally,' says
Florian from Austria. 'I got fed up with these preppies I met in France
or Brussels, decked out in Lacoste, Tommy sweaters and Polo shirts,'
a Polish girl comments. 'It's like a caste.'
Bibi, bali - drank, danced
The folks (especially girls) from across the Channel are pretty good
at (binge-)drinking - like their German, Austrian, Dutch, Belgian,
Polish or Russian counterparts. No surprise, considering the best
beer and vodka (Żubrówka or Wyborowa in Poland, or Sibirskaya 'Syberian',
Maskovskaya 'from Moscow' and ZYR Russian vodka), come from the latter
two.
Southerners
stick to wine, both straight or mixed. Popularities include sangría
(a punch with fruits and cinnamon, sugar, cognac or gin), tinto de
verano, (red wine with Sprite or soda), or Kalimotxo (red wine with
Coke). Northern Europe is Bierbauch (beerbelly)-owners domain, while
Germany has a select cocktail culture. Those from central and eastern
Europe simply dig all of it and have no special preferences, (but
naturally prefer not to mix alcohols). Jak się bawić, to się bawić…drzwi
wywalić potem wstawić ('If you party, party for real … break the door
and then repair), says Michał 'The Saint' from Poland.
Brussels bartenders are busy pouring beer (een pintje! in Dutch) for
the boys and 'kriek' (beer with fruit juice, or more precisely fruit
juice with beer), wine and Martinis for the girls. 'Foreign guests
drink less then the locals. And they tip more rarely,' complains Alain
from Le Cirio, a busy downtown pub.
Boogie 2night
The French, Brits and Swedes have their feet nailed to the ground.
But you will rarely see Spaniards or Poles people not 'hopping' on
the dancefloor (though reports describe some Poles 'dancing' as 'supporting
the walls so that they don't fall down'). Rule: dance in a circle
with friends (girls throw your handbags in the middle), in pairs to
maintain a longer distance, with a special mention for the grinding
Belgians who stick RnB close. Beer-lovers never lose grip of their
pint,
causing
others to complain about the resulting broken glass on the floor.
Southerners feel the music better - the Portuguese, Greek or Turks
whip out smooth samba or salsa moves, which the girls 'dig', says
Pascaline.
The spectrum of music tastes ranges from hot Meditteranean rhythms
to classy rock from the Isles, American hip-hop, Brit cheese, German
chart-toppers or 'Schlägern' and disco or techno 'steamin' beats mixed
by big DJs' from the Benelux. 'De gustibus (to each their own), as
the Poles say. 'But people party to a mixture of music genres,' says
Leyre from Spain.
Closing time
There is one thing all students have in common when it comes to parties
- the sad feeling when it's over. Some are more fortunate, like in
Belgium or Germany, where there are no defined pub hours. Brits are
used to the party ending at 11pm or 1am, whereas Italians protest
via anthems, and have been known to sing the traditional folk song
Bella Ciao in protest. Poles like to move on to parties like most
Europeans - the klubing (clubbing) phenomenon. Stalwart Spaniards
are famed for going only when others go. Then of course, there is
the British/ German/ Belgian post-party kebab culture - which is another
article.
(Published: 09.11.2007.)
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