Posts Tagged ‘Mallorca’

Mallorca Challenge For Ibiza Gay Tourism

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

euroweeklynews.com report on more gay tourists holidaying on Mallorca this year:

More than half a million gay tourists are expected to visit Mallorca this year reports reservasgays.com. This could have a positive effect on the island’s economy as the average gay tourist spends up to fifty euros a day more than a heterosexual one, and their visits are not limited to the peak summer seasons.

Juan Manel Ordinas, co-owner of the Pegasus Hotel, does not think that the figures are correct, “It’s certain that the numbers of gay visitors are increasing, but I think the numbers have been inflated.”

Gay tourism has seen a growth in popularity in Mallorca, and subsequently the island has seen an increase in the amount of specialist Mallorca hotels and services. However the owners of Kfé cafe in Gomila in Palma have not seen a higher demand this year from their clients.

“There is less business than in previous years” said Tito, one of the owners of the cafe, although he doesn’t know if this is due to tourism or the fact that to be gay has become more socially normal “The reason why people go to specialist gay bars is because it feels less aggressive and more protective of values, to be gay is more acceptable these days and for this reason they do not need to go to specialist bars and clubs so much, they can diversify more”, explained Tito.

‘Gay Friendly’ bars don’t always need the rainbow flag to identify them, it’s the individual gay person who decides where they are comfortable and it doesn’t matter to them if the premises have been labelled ‘Gay Friendly’ or not”.

Kristin Hansen, the creator of Mallorca Gay Map is adamant that Mallorca has enormous potential as a destination for gay tourists. “Mallorca has a great choice of hotels from basic to luxury standard, as well as being on the routes for many airlines”, however Mallorca is yet to match popular gay tourist destinations Sitges, Ibiza and Mykonos.

“The problem comes from the mentality of the local people. They are not prepared to see men or women walking hand in hand in the street or kissing. Many homosexuals in Mallorca are still ‘in the closet’ for fear of not being accepted”, he said. Kristin believes that “The future of gay tourism in Mallorca lies in leaving behind the segregation of gay from straight in order for everyone to mix and not just using the specialist hotels, bars and clubs”.

Juan Manel of the Pegasus Hotel was not so sure. “It’s clear that there are tourists of every sort, and some would prefer to go unnoticed in regular hotels, but others actually prefer a homosexual environment”. A report stated that the majority of gay tourists preferred to go to places which were sympathetic to their sexual orientation. “If someone belongs to this group, and there is a specialised service for them, it’s the normal thing to choose it”. Juan Manel did not think that specialising in gay tourism created a ghetto either, “It creates a comfortable atmosphere for the client, that’s all. Religious, political and social factors will always exist that will make gay people feel uncomfortable, and we are many years away from a society where everyone can feel equal in establishments which are not specialised”, concluded Juan Manel.

For a Majorca map visit yourmajorca.net

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Reasons Why The Balearics For A Late 2010 Summer Holiday

Friday, August 20th, 2010

The tourist board have been busy promoting Majorca and the other Balearic Islands for mid August to end September holidays, with Opodo reporting:

People considering a late summer break this year have been offered a number of reasons to choose Spain’s Balearic Islands as their destination.

The tourist board representing the archipelago pointed out that one of the region’s main advantages is its weather, with 300 days of sunshine every year.

Beach lovers will be spoilt for choice in the Balearics, with Salines in Ibiza, Cala Pregonda in Menorca and Es Trenc in Mallorca among the seafront hotspots being recommended.

People who enjoy a bit of celebrity spotting will be in with a good chance of seeing some famous faces on the Spanish islands, according to the tourist board.

Michelle Obama recently visited Mallorca, while Kate Moss regularly enjoys breaks in Ibiza and Formentera and both Claudia Schiffer and Elle Macpherson own villas in the region.

Travellers who enjoy outdoor activities were encouraged to try some of the sports on offer in the Balearics, with both Majorca and Ibiza boasting an extensive network of cycling routes and most islands providing facilities to go scuba diving.

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Mallorca Rocks Like Ibiza

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

The Sun has been to Mallorca Rocks, and report:

YOU’RE chilling on your hotel balcony, watching the sun set after a day of sizzling pool action.

And the best is yet to come - you grab a cocktail and prepare to enjoy top seats at one of the hottest gigs of the summer as the best bands around play just below your room!

Welcome to Mallorca Rocks - the coolest way to enjoy music and more this season at bargain prices.

The original, Ibiza Rocks, has been a favourite with celebs and now creator Andy McKay has opened a new budget hotel, bar and concert venue in Magaluf to offer young Brits another option for a music-soaked sunshine break from less than £112 a week. Over the summer, acts headlining at Mallorca Rocks include Dizzee Rascal, The Courteeners and Pendulum and all will be free for hotel guests.

I was invited to the sunny isle for the opening and was pleasantly surprised.

I had my doubts about going back to Magaluf ten years after my original visit as a wide-eyed, binge-drinking teenager.

But the planners have done a great job with the hotel, creating a clean and simple near-replica of the Ibiza Rocks resort. An enormous pool sits in the middle of a square of 12 apartment blocks, with a huge permanent stage for the gigs.

Rooms are basic-but-modern cool, with whitewashed walls and pop art prints. Most sleep four with a twin bedroom and sofa bed in the lounge. There’s also a kitchenette, maid service three times a week and either balcony or terrace.

The resort is a holiday destination in its own right, with three new bars, a restaurant and fashion store.

At the opening weekend gig some fans had to be turned away as the 2,000 capacity crowd, spanning 18 to 50, crammed in to see The Kooks.

Radio 1 DJ Zane Lowe and indie band Bombay Bicycle Club warmed things up before The Kooks’ Luke Pritchard launched into an energetic two-hour set.

Later Luke said: “I was chuffed to bits to be asked to open Mallorca Rocks. I’ve really enjoyed playing in Ibiza over the years but this feels like we’re on holiday.”

Mallorca Rocks is right in the centre of Magaluf and just 300 metres from the nearest beach, but there is plenty more on the doorstep if you fancy venturing out.

After a morning of sun worshipping by the pool, we caught a taxi to Camp De Mar Beach, a 20-minute ride away, for a paella and wine feast overlooking the Med at Resturante Illeta.

From there we headed to the capital, Palma, a further 15 minutes in a taxi, to catch a sunset harbour cruise. Back on dry land, we made straight for Palma institution Abaco.

This bar in the heart of the old town is part of a beautiful old mansion and features an eclectic interior as well as serving cocktails to die for.

Feeling slightly light-headed, we soaked up the view of glorious Palma Cathedral before stumbling upon a lovely tapas restaurant called Tast.

The next day we woke up bright and early to catch a two-hour ferry to Ibiza and a date with headliners Biffy Clyro - the first of 15 weekly gigs - at the original Ibiza Rocks hotel in San Antonio.

For photographs and to read the full article click here

For a Majorca map visit yourmajorca.net

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Summer In Ibiza Guardian Review

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Off the south-west coast of Ibiza stands Es Vedrà, a 400m-high limestone rock which legend suggests was the island of the Sirens who lured sailors to their deaths in Homer’s Odyssey. Since early history, Ibiza itself has attracted hedonists and freedom-seekers, from the Carthaginians in 654BC, to the hippies of the 1960s, to the clubbers of more recent times.

As Stephen Armstrong wrote in his history, The White Island: “Over the centuries, virtually every culture around the Mediterranean has used the island either as a playground or as a dump for the kind of people who didn’t quite fit in back home, but who you’d probably quite like to meet at a party.”

Now, following the clubbing explosion at the end of the 80s and two subsequent decades of partying, fatigue was setting in, with many clubbers put off by expensive tickets and the decline of the free party scene. But Ibiza has an unerring ability to reinvent itself. Invigorated by a breakthrough of dance music in the US, led by acts such as Deadmau5 and the French DJ David Guetta, a broadening of the music on offer and the authorities showing a more relaxed attitude following a clamp-down on free parties in recent years, it feels as if this could be one of the island’s hottest summers for a while.

“It’s nuts,” Guetta laughs when we meet in Ibiza. “It’s June and the clubs have been sold out for weeks already. The season hasn’t even really started yet. Where in the world can you find clubs where you can have this kind of party at this time of year?”

F**k Me I’m Famous, which he runs with his wife, Cathy, at the eternally glamorous Pacha, is currently the most high-profile night on the island. Its opening party this year crept forward to the last week of May, coinciding with the International Music Summit, which rivals Miami’s Winter Music Conference as the most important event in the calendar for the dance music industry. The mood at the latest IMS was upbeat, with 82% of those present claiming their business was in a better place than it was a year ago.

“Ibiza has had quite a tough few years,” says Ben Turner, co-founder of IMS and editorial director of Pacha magazine. “There’s been the recession, plus the greed of some club owners, who pushed entry and drinks prices up. I think they have seen sense now. And there’s a free party scene here again.”

Ibiza’s clubs certainly seem to have weathered the economic downturn much better than those in the UK, which have also been affected by competition from late-night pubs and bars since the change in licensing laws. The most high-profile casualties have been Matter at the O2 in Greenwich, which recently closed, its sibling Fabric, now up for sale, and institutions including the End, Turnmills and the Cross, also in London.

Although Ibiza was once synonymous with the Balearic mix of genres that DJs like Alfredo Fiorito created in the 80s, in recent years the bigger clubs had become dominated by minimal, tribal and commercial house. Some clubbers with more leftfield tastes moved on to Barcelona’s Sonar festival or places such as Petrcane in Croatia, now host to several eclectic boutique festivals. Over the last few years, however, Ibiza Rocks has reintroduced guitar music to the island and elsewhere there’s been a general broadening of tastes. The big statement this year was Pacha taking on Ibiza’s best-loved underground DJ, Luciano, who plays a mix of Latin-tinged house and techno that would previously have been thought too underground for the seminal club founded in 1973.

A few years ago, the Ibiza authorities, looking to encourage family tourism, began to clamp down on clubs opening into the daylight hours. But recently, their attitude has softened as they realise the importance of music to the island. “I do think there was an acknowledgement that they came down too hard in certain aspects,” says Turner. “But they needed to stop these horrible flashpoints where you had thousands of people leaving clubs at 8am and families taking kids to nursery in the other direction, which is not a pretty sight, and one I think everyone’s glad to see the back of.”

One high-profile victim of the clampdown was DC10, which had a one-year ban imposed at the end of 2008. A converted finca near the end of the airport runway, DC10 (”DC Diez”) started life as an after-hours venue for clubland workers and became one of the most influential underground clubs in the world. With its stripped-down space, it more closely resembled the warehouse raves of the acid house era than Ibiza’s other clubs like Privilege, Space and Es Paradis with their VIP areas.

DC10 opened again on 31 May for the season. Every Monday afternoon, a parade of clued-up clubbers, cultured casuals, cartoon caners, crazy characters, a few chic celebrities and the odd clown wind their way down the dusty road to join Circo Loco (Crazy Circus) at DC10.

I land in Ibiza a few minutes into Tuesday morning and head straight to DC10 but, frustratingly, it’s just closing. Instead, I go to Pacha in Ibiza Town where the Swedish House Mafia stage a night called Masquerade Motel. These three DJs-cum-producers – Axwell, Sebastian Ingrosso and Steve Angello – look set to have one of the smash hits of the summer with their new single “One”. Inside, the decor attempts to create the look of a 1950s motel and the club is rammed. I bump into former Stone Roses singer Ian Brown and his band, who are playing Ibiza Rocks tomorrow, on the main balcony, and then Manchester United footballer Wes Brown (no relation), who is in the VIP area, dancing with sunglasses on.

Next morning, I head to the town of San Antonio and check into Ibiza Rocks. Initially, Ibiza Rocks gigs took place at Bar M (now renamed Ibiza Rocks Bar), but in 2008 the promoters opened the Ibiza Rocks hotel, where the headline gigs take place every Tuesday. The project is the brainchild of Andy McKay who, with brother Mike and their partners Claire and Dawn, have been on the island since 1994, when they left Manchester after, Andy says: “I’d been doused in petrol.” They ran Manumission, Ibiza’s most infamously debauched club night, for 15 years.

It was McKay who decided to bring guitar music to the dance kids in Ibiza. “In 2005, we were promoting the biggest club night here, but I was sat there thinking, ‘This island is getting older and older.’ We wanted to make it younger again.”

After overcoming initial scepticism, Ibiza Rocks is now well established and as well as weekly gigs that take place at the hotel, they have launched a new night, Reclaim the Dancefloor at Eden. This features DJs such as Aeroplane, Chase & Status, Benga and Radio 1’s Zane Lowe, reflecting the more diverse tastes of a new generation. This season also sees the launch of Mallorca Rocks on Ibiza’s sister Balearic island.

The Ibiza Rocks hotel is aimed at a young clientele who’d never make it into the VIP section of Pacha. It’s the only hotel I’ve ever stayed in where you’re required to wear a wristband and show it to a bouncer every time you enter and the only one where fellow guests wear shades in the swimming pool. Arctic Monkeys were one of the first to play Ibiza Rocks in 2007, and their debut album seems to be on constant repeat in the foyer, which feels appropriate given the residents checking each other out around the pool, thinking something along the lines of: “I bet you look good on the dancefloor…” There is a small supermarket next door, over half of which is given over to alcohol. Of the three food aisles, one is devoted solely to varieties of Pot Noodle.

Ian Brown’s dressing room is much plusher than the hotel rooms, with day beds dotted around. “I love Ibiza,” the laid-back singer tells me. “I’ve been a few times on holiday, but until last night I’d never stepped foot in a nightclub and I thought it was knockout.”

When he comes on stage to a packed audience, those lucky enough to have a room overlooking the stage are dancing on their balconies, with one particularly enthusiastic girl dancing naked in her room above the stage, unaware others can see her. Brown plays the Roses’ own Balearic classic “Fools Gold” as an encore and is on a high in the dressing room afterwards.

“I thought it was beautiful,” he says. “Twenty years ago, the spirit of Ibiza was taken back home,” – he means by the Roses, Happy Mondays and acid house – “and 20 years later I’m asked back and I’m still a part of it. When I did martial arts, the whole point was that the circle is the lifeblood of the system and here it’s come full circle.”

In the morning, nobody is around. This is not a hotel where you need to rush out with a towel to reserve a sunlounger. I overhear two parties from Essex reacquainting themselves, the afternoon after the early hours before. “Hi mate, I’m Kev,” says one lad, offering his hand. “I know, you were in our room ’til 9am this morning werentcha?” comes the reply.

I chat to a young group by the pool. Antony Norfolk, 23, is from Chelmsford, Essex, and it’s his first time in Ibiza. “We chose Ibiza Rocks because everyone who came said it was awesome.” Norfolk and his mates’ itinerary includes Amnesia, Zoo Project on Saturday and Space on Sunday.

Ellie Cornish, 20, from Brentwood, Essex, came to Ibiza Rocks for a slightly different reason. “I saw Katie Price here on TV,” she says, a touch abashed. What Cornish and her friends are most looking forward to is David Guetta’s F**k Me I’m Famous night at Pacha. “I’m a massive fan and we’ve heard it’s the only place to go and it’s worth the money.” Won’t the €70 ticket eat into their budget? “Yeah, but if he played a concert in England it would probably be nearly £50 to go and see him.”

To read the full article click here

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Ibiza Rocks Mallorca

Monday, April 26th, 2010

News from The Independent about the imminent opening of Mallorca Rocks:

For years it was known as the “Gomorrah of the Med” – a paradise island of unparalleled hedonism where clubbers could behave as badly as they liked on the streets of San Antonio.

But Ibiza’s reputation rapidly improved when indie music invaded, bringing an altogether more calm clientele to the sun-kissed shores of the White Island. Now the promoter who helped cement Ibiza’s reputation as one of the summer’s best live music venues with “Ibiza Rocks” is hoping to do the same for nearby Mallorca.

Andy McKay, an Ibiza mainstay who has pioneered guitar music in his venues over the past five years, is currently putting the finishing touches to a major “Mallorca Rocks” hotel complex in Magaluf which will host many of the indie bands playing in Ibiza this year.

Speaking to The Independent today he said: “We invaded Ibiza with a guitar and we hope to do the same with Mallorca. As a tourist destination Mallorca is much more representative of UK youth culture than Ibiza which, because it was such a clubbing mecca, was initially quite difficult to break into. It’s a logical step to try and bring the Ibiza Rocks label to Mallorca.”

The opening of the hotel now means that bands and artists such as The Kooks, Calvin Harris, Dizzee Rascal and Pendulum will play sets in both Ibiza and Mallorca this summer. Other acts that have also been confirmed for Ibiza include The Prodigy, who were announced yesterday as the headline act, and Florence and the Machine.

Bloc Party frontman Kele Okereke will also play his first ever live solo set in Ibiza this summer after the group split to follow their own individual projects.

Whether the 18-25 crowd heading to Mallorca this summer will be as enamoured of indie music as Ibiza’s regulars remains to be seen, but McKay is confident that guitar music will catch on.

“The tickets for Mallorca Rocks have only been on sale for a month and they’ve already overtaken Ibiza,” he said. “And Ibiza’s up 59 per cent on last year so far.”

McKay also hopes that an influx of indie fans will help provide Magaluf with a balance to the more drunken revellers that often crowd into the resort bars each summer.

“Magaluf has a lot of the problems that San Antonio had a few years back,” he said. “Ibiza Rocks has helped to change the nature of youth culture out there. Perhaps the same could happen in Mallorca?”

Ibiza Rocks first took off in 2005 when McKay invited guitar bands such as Dirty Pretty Things and Kasabian to play live sets in Manumission, an iconic club night that was founded by McKay and his brother. Manumission, which was famous for its live sex shows, topless dancers and high wire acrobats, stopped running last year. The Ibiza Rocks brand has continued to go from strength to strength. To read the full article click here

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Ibiza Rocks Exports To Mallorca

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

The famous Ibiza Rocks hotel brand is expanding - to sister island Majorca.

The new Mallorca Rocks Hotel will have 330 bedrooms, and be in Magaluf. It’s set to open in May.

For more information about Ibiza hotels visit http://www.youribiza.net

For details of Majorca hotels visit yourmajorca.net

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