Postcards from Texas #1: the Continental Club
The Continental Club is dim in that dive bar way that makes you wonder whether the lights are actually on or actually off. Who ever really knows. Grandpa over there in the belt buckle doesn’t. Maybe he was Sheriff once but that’s history now. It’s Saturday night in Texas in the early fall. South Congress Avenue in Austin is lit and The Continental Club is evidently open.
The lady behind the bar is busy digging out ice, fetching bottles from the fridge and gassing the soda hose for a steady stream of drinkers. She’s simultaneously cranky and affectionate. She might as well be deaf too. Shout all you will over the din; all she’ll do is wince and move her ear closer.
The shelves of booze behind her are glinting like rhinestones. A tangle of fairy lights webbing high on the bar’s back wall marries with a busy nest of framed photos that features everybody from Elvis to Kinky Friedman. Every time you line up for a beer at the Continental, it’s a museum experience.
The Tender Things (with Jonathan Tyler) nailed ‘I Ain’t Living Long Like This’.
Drunk prophecies doom in cemetery in Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
I dump a dollar bill in the tip jar. My abstractions of Texas are so grotesque I keep waiting for Jerry Jeff Walker to walk in. Or the drunk splayed on the blistered Bagdad Cemetery grass in Texas Chainsaw Massacre. I’m stricken with the unshakable impression it's always 1974 in Texas.
The Continental Club site was a laundromat in the 1940s. It’s also been a jazz club, topless bar (as some parlance goes), disco and tavern. Legend has it, once upon a time, the site was distinguishable by a happy hour that began at 6am and finished at 8pm. You could say that sounds much more sensible than any happy hour that begins at 6am and ends at 9pm. But the seedier element that gravitated to South Congress Avenue for what was formerly a more red-lit vibe has since been ghosted by hip shops, music venues, restaurants and gentrification’s continual rumble about curing everything.
So long as you can see the neon.