1000Fryd is a small café, bar, and community center with a stage, a recording studio, a cinema, and an art gallery, located in Aalborg, Denmark. Since 1000Fryd opened in 1984 there have been thousands of concerts by both well known bands – such as Die Toten Hosen and Green Day – and utterly obscure local performers, such as Jimmy Justice and Columbian Neckties.[1] It is a focus of the successful novel Nordkraft by Jakob Ejersbo.
The bar and concert hall are located on the ground floor. Other floors in the building contain cots for touring bands, artists and vagrants as well as several art studios. The venue is operated by foreningen Tusindfryd and staffed by volunteers.[2][3][4] It has promoted non-traditional music, for example "Denmark's first grunge band"[5] and alternative rock.[6]
The bar has been plagued by vandalism and fighting, including a riot in front of it in 2007,[2] and at one point almost lost its liquor licence.[4][7]
1000Fryd plays a major role in Jakob Ejersbo's successful novel Nordkraft, which explores the culture of disaffected urban youth at the turn of the 1980s–1990s and was adapted as a film in 2005 (English title: Angels in Fast Motion)[citation needed] and as a play in 2011. According to one of those who worked on the stage adaptation:[8] "In Aalborg it's the culture surrounding 1000Fryd in the transition from the 80s to the 90s. It's an underground culture of middle-class and lower-middle-class kids that developed in a strong form during the 80s. Not working-class as such, but rather a sort of youth proletariat that made itself felt very strongly in Aalborg and Aarhus in those years".
References
edit- ^ Henning Due, "Smukke tabere", Dagbladet Information, 25 May 1986, at Kunst & Kultur, Information.dk, 9 February 2011 (in Danish): "En gang imellem savner jeg at være teenager. At møde halvfuld op på Café 1000FRYD i Ålborg en tirsdag aften, stille sig 50 centimeter fra scenen, råbe med på sangene fra et obskurt garagerockband og gå derfra med gennemblødt t-shirt, ringetoner for ørerne og et kæmpe smil på læberne." - "Sometimes I miss being a teenager. Meeting half-crocked at Café 1000FRYD in Ålborg on a Tuesday afternoon, standing 50 centimetres from the stage, shouting along to songs from an obscure garage rock band and leaving with a soaked T-shirt, ringing in my ears and a huge smile on my lips."
- ^ a b "Betjente vil rydde 1000fryd", Nordjyske, 28 February 2009 (in Danish)
- ^ "Forsker: Ungdomshuse er sunde", DR, 15 January 2007 (in Danish)
- ^ a b "1000Fryd beholder sin bevilling", DR P4 Nordjylland, 24 June 2008 (in Danish)
- ^ Boghandle; Ditte Giese, 90'erbogen: fortællinger fra det sjove årti, Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 2009, ISBN 9788702079500, picture caption, p. 53 (in Danish)
- ^ Ny rockklub i Aalborg, Gaffa.dk, 13 August 2005 (in Danish)
- ^ Mette Ziwes, "1000fryd får forlænget bevilling", TV2/Nord, 24 June 2008 (in Danish)
- ^ "Forenede Nordkræfter" Archived 2012-09-07 at archive.today, Nordjyske, 29 January 2011 (in Danish): "I Aalborg er det kulturen omkring 1000Fryd i overgangen mellem firserne og halvfemserne. Det er undergrundskultur blandt borgerskabets og småborgerskabets børn, som udviklede sig stærkt igennem firserne. Ikke arbejderklasse i den forstand, men sådan en slags ungdomsproletariat, som markerede sig særlig stærkt i Aalborg og Aarhus i de år", quoting Hans Henrikson.
Further reading
edit- Jakob Ejersbo. Nordkraft: roman. Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 2002. ISBN 9788702012118. 5th paperback edition 2010. ISBN 9788702060423 (in Danish)
- Jakob Ejersbo. Nordkraft: A Novel. English translation. Toronto: McArthur, 2004. ISBN 9781552784617