Archive for the ‘music’ Category

Mallorca Rocks Sun Review

Saturday, August 7th, 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

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

New Wave Hits The Island

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Good news for those who like 80’s music - China Crisis are coming to the island!

Here’s an announcement from the Liverpool band we saw on our facebook page:

The Legendary Liverpool Band CHINA CRISIS are to perform their first ever concert in Mallorca. The venue is Zhan Lounge at Golf Pollensa, which is situated just outside the village of Pollensa on the road to Palma.

There are two Ticket Options. (Booking Fees may apply)

General Admission Tickets are 20 Euros each. This gives admission to a Standing Only area to the rear of the VIP Reserved Section

VIP Tickets are 40 Euros each and include admission plus a 3 course dinner menu with wine,water and coffee.
All Seating will be reserved and table numbers will be forwarded to customers nearer the event The Band will be performing on the terrace directly in front of the VIP Section.
A support act will be announced closer to the event.

We advise you to book early as admission is by ticket only and there are only a limited number available

Buy and Print Out Your Tickets Now via our secure booking link at http://rspromo.co.uk/#/crisis-in-pollensa-mallorca/4536980298

Tickets can be purchased in Mallorca by contacting Peter at digamemallorca.com by phoning (34) 696 229 923

For any flight,accommodation and transportation enquiries please contact via website www.rspromo.co.uk

There are a limited number of rooms left at Hotel Paris in Puerto Pollensa
where the band will be staying. To book a room now please click the following link. http://rspromo.co.uk/#/pollenca-accommodation/4538915072

Band Members:
Gary Daly
Eddie Lundon
Aided by a solid four-piece band comprising:
John Legit (drums)
Eddie Robinson (bass)
Glyn Williams (keyboard)
and Colin Hinds (guitar).

For flights and Majorca hotels visit yourmajorca.net

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Mallorca Gets Ready To Rock - Ibiza Style

Monday, April 26th, 2010

With Mallorca Rocks due to open its doors in May, The Independent recently ran an article about the new hotel:

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.

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?”

For more information about the island, including flights to Majorca visit yourmajorca.net

Reviews from the first guests at the Mallorca Rocks will be able to be read instantly on twitter

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Poetry And Music In Majorca

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

An interesting article appeared in the UK in the Daily Mail recently:

It’s hard to explain why visiting a writer’s home is exciting, but literary pilgrimages are very much my thing and I’ve made many a detour to pay homage. Mind you, thousands get excited following the Hollywood star trail, while a visit to Graceland is a must, both for true lovers of Elvis and the merely curious. Even sports-lovers gain a thrill rubber-necking at the tall gates of the homes of football stars.

So perhaps it’s not so strange that I should travel to the jewel-like island of Majorca for the first time, on the trail of not one writer, but two. Oh, and a genius of a composer as well.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Majorca And Her Music

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

While the new Mallorca Rocks is making the press before its opening in May, the island has a famous music history that goes back to when Chopin lived in Majorca.

The Daily Telegraph recently wrote about it in their travel section:

In 1838, the 28-year-old Polish composer Fryderyk Chopin arrived on the Spanish island of Majorca hoping for an exotic interlude of rest and work that would revive his tired spirits and failing health. With him was his lover, the radical-thinking, cigar-smoking, trouser-wearing French author Aurore Dupin, who published under the nom de plume George Sand. Just like us, they wanted to swap grey northern skies for warmth, romance and stimulating sights.

“Sun all day, and hot; everyone in summer clothing,” Chopin wrote home gleefully on November 19. His letters read like a brochure for the genteel station d’hiver that Majorca would become just 70 years later. “A sky like turquoise, a sea like lapis lazuli, mountains like emerald, air like heaven.” Accompanied by Sand’s two children, the couple settled into dreamy days of country walks and sightseeing while waiting for his beloved Pleyel piano to be shipped from Paris.

Sadly, the idyll didn’t last. The weather changed, Chopin was diagnosed with tuberculosis and the locals took against this unorthodox pair who didn’t go to church. Evicted from their palatial villa near the island capital, Palma, the family retreated inland to an abandoned Carthusian monastery in the hilltop town of Valldemossa, where they lived amid its sturdy cells for the next eight weeks. According to Robert Graves, who translated Sand’s spirited account of the holiday, Un hiver à Majorque, this scenic spot has “the worst weather of any village in the island”. “As the winter continued,” Sand duly noted, “every attempt at cheerfulness and calm was frozen in my breast by the gloom.”

Despite all this, it was a famously creative sojourn. While Sand’s description of the Majorcans as “monkeys” won her no favours, her book is both an enjoyable portrait of the island and an engaging meditation on why we travel. Chopin, meanwhile, wrote or completed some of his most loved works, including his Prelude in D flat major, appropriately known as the “Raindrop”. “His first days here were ones of great happiness,” explains the distinguished Majorcan pianist Joan Moll, who has studied this celebrated winter of discontent in depth. “They produced works that are intimate, contemplative and as luminous as the landscape. Then he realised his sickness was incurable …”

In 2010, as the world celebrates the 200th anniversary of Chopin’s birth, Valldemossa will be a key stop for fans touring the island. Once reviled, the two travellers are now miraculously rehabilitated in a whirl of commemorative events and souvenirs.

Every summer the monastery stages an acclaimed Chopin Festival, and visitors can tour the cells where the outrageous couple resided.

With three rooms and a garden terrace, a winter here doesn’t appear quite so bad. Star exhibits include a jar-filled pharmacy dating from the 1720s, an original manuscript from Chopin’s final works, and that long-awaited piano, which arrived three weeks before the party left.

So should we follow Chopin and Sand to Majorca? They were pioneers in what is now a well-established annual quest for winter sun, and their experience proves you can still have a fruitful time even if the weather is foul – but then, after three successive barbecue-less summers, we all know about that.

On the other hand, Majorca remains a choice spot for a winter weekend abroad. Easily reached and with more than 200 four or five-star hotels to choose from, the island is perfect for a few days of touring and tapas – come rain or shine.   To read the full article and see the photographs click here

For holidays in Majorca visit yourmajorca.net

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Majorca Set To Rock This Summer

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010
Majorca
Majorca

Neighbouring island Ibiza is the party capital of Europe - but now Majorca is to offer clubbers and music lovers everywhere the opportunity to dance the night away.

 

The well known Ibiza Rocks Hotel in Ibiza is opening a Mallorca Rocks hotel, and it is due to open in May ready for the summer holiday season.

 

The Mallorca Rocks will have an impressive 330 rooms and be in Magaluf - a good location as Magaluf is where those looking to party in Majorca tend to head for, and the town has the infrastructure to support the venture - and it doesn’t change the character of any of the island’s more peaceful areas and those good for family holidays.

 

With the first bands due to kick off the summer music early June and the curtain coming down mid September, the Rocks will be a lively venue throughout the peak summer Majorca holidays season.

 

The line up of artists and bands scheduled to play isn’t known yet, but in the past acts like the Arctic Monkeys have played Ibiza, and the quality is expected to be as high on Majorca as it is in Ibiza.

 

For the mainly young guests likely to stay at the Mallorca Rocks, the island is less than a two hour flight, flights to Majorca are cheap, and regional airports throughout the UK have cheap Majorca flights throughout the summer.

 

With her great beaches, cultural offerings and sporting opportunities, Majorca is an ideal holiday location for all age groups. The island is nearly 80 kilometres long and has over 500 kilometres of coastline. Much of that coastline features beaches ranging from pristine white sand stretches to tiny out of the way coves and inlets.

 

Holidaymakers have traditionally visited the outskirts of the island of Majorca where they can take advantage of the beautiful scenery, the beaches and water sports - holiday companies such as Thomson Holidays have been promoting beach holidays for years - and as a result it has been known for its beach areas and relaxing environment. But now tourists are discovering Majorca as a rural destination too.

 

By visiting the interior of the island, tourists will see the island’s true history and can for example sample farm life. Many older farmhouses have been transformed into bed and breakfast type rooms where families and couples can stay while on holiday.

 

Agro tourism is a growing concept. Holidaymakers enjoy the countryside and self catering accommodation like villas - in the UK companies like James Villas have a wide choice available - cottages, apartments and fincas. Located in charming villages, these living quarters offer character in a picturesque environment.

 

More details about Majorca are available by visiting http://www.yourmajorca.net where they have more news and articles available.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Majorca - And The Sydney Opera House

Sunday, February 1st, 2009
Sydney Opera House - Connections With Majorca

Sydney Opera House - Connections With Majorca

One of the great things about Majorca is the interesting people who come from the island - but also those who move to the island.

And there’s not a lot of islanders who know that the architect of one of the world’s most recognisable and iconic buildings was living in their midsts until he sadly recently passed away.

Jorn Utzon, originally from Denmark, was the architect who designed the Sydney Opera House, and he and his wife Lis moved to Majorca in the 1970’s.

Jorn never saw the Sydney Opera House in person complete as he fell out with the Australian Government due to funding pressures, but he knew that it was hailed as one of the modern architectural masterpieces.

Apart from Jorn’s Opera House, a holiday to Sydney can involve many other activities and sighteseeing trips.

Sydney’s beaches offer more than just the typical sun and sand. You can take a ferry from Palm Beach and visit the isolated bays. Another option is to take a ride on a seaplane from Rose Bay to Whale Beach followed by a fantastic lunch. Surfing enthusiasts will also find many ideal spots along the coast. If you’re interested in something a bit more laid back, take a walk along the coast while you soak up the amazing scenery.

In a city so rich with history, it’s not surprising that there are many places worth visiting as part of your Sydney experience. Aboriginal rock carvings can be seen on the Bondi Golf Course, which is close to Bondi Beach. While the Sydney Botanical Gardens should be on your itinerary, be sure to check out the Government House as well. It was designed in 1835 and features fine examples of 19th century furniture. Government House is now open to the public, and various blogs and articles have information on this.

The Sydney Harbour Bridge is another site of historical value. Opened in 1932, it took nine years to complete. The bridge accommodates both vehicular traffic and trains and has a walkway for pedestrians. Great views of the bridge can be had from any of the ferries in Circular Quay. Sydney also has world class art galleries, such as the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Gaval Aboriginal Art Gallery and the Museum of Contemporary Art.

And when you see the Sydney Opera House, it’s worth noting that the man who designed it could have lived pretty much anywhere in the world - and chose Majorca.

Save up to 20%


  • Share/Save/Bookmark