It was some beautiful evenings, they had live music events at Cafe Aegir.
once a month, on Thursdays from pm. 20 to at. 22, played the little acoustic tomandsband, Thomas and Amalie, traditional, Danish community singing at the bar on Nørrebro in Copenhagen.
Cafe Depiction manager Pernille Sørensen remembers the very special atmosphere that occurred when the young and old bodegagæster sang with the Teddy Edelmans bodega classic “Himmelhunden”.
But it’s over now.
the Commune has a public Cafe Aegir to play live music, because they have received complaints about the noise from the other residents in the building.
It can TV2 Lorry tell.
It arouses the wrath of the foreman in the room, Pernille Sørensen. She sees the complaints and the ban on live music as part of a wider development in the city, that encumber the lives of the bodegas.
“It is difficult to have a bodega now-a-days. It doesn’t feel as if people understand that when you move to Nørrebro, so if you live in the city and not the country,” she said to B. T., and continues:
“It is as if people think that it is fine and hip to stay in an apartment in Nørrebro, but at the same time expecting peace and quiet at. 20 in the evening,” says Pernille Sørensen.
She got the message from the Municipality of Copenhagen, as she stood and watched the bar one quiet morning recently.
the Man from the municipality came into the bar and told that the municipality had measured the noise in an apartment on top of the tavern. According to TV2 Lorry was the noise in the apartment has been measured at a noise level of 35 decibels. The permitted level is 30 decibels.
“We asked if we could make actions such as to turn down. There we got to know that it would be silly to try, for if he was going to have to come again, it would cost,” says Pernille Sørensen.
It took she and her boss as to their alkoholbeviling would be in danger of being withdrawn if they only turned down the livemusikken.
It will not run the risk, and therefore it is now quite over with livemusikken every Thursday.
Pernille Sørensen mentions that it is only once a month for two hours, they played live music.
“It is so strange that it suddenly is too much,” she says.
At the city of Copenhagen is one intervened, because they have received complaints from other residents in the building.
“There are taverns, which have existed for many years without having received the complaints, but then it may be that some new comers think it is too high, and so must the tavern stop playing, if we determine it is too high,” says Max Miller, miljøinspektør in Technique and environment department under the division of noise, to TV 2 Lorry.
Now is the bar gone back to only playing music from the jukebox.
“I think it is such a pity that we have lost the live music now. It was a super nice actions, which took us back to the old days and childhood at fairs, where you sat and sang with the Himmelhunden,” says Pernille Sørensen.