Music, home-style food, and the story of how a live music venue was able to navigate a business-crippling pandemic. This is The Alma Café. Stay for the ride — the tunes are vibey and the food is incredible.
Perched on the corner of a quiet southern suburbs neighbourhood is the Alma Café. The building, which houses the café in Rosebank, is perhaps as old as the neighbourhood itself, pre-dating the 1960’s. In 2004, it came into the ownership of Richard and Retha Tait and a new era of classic flavour began in Cape Town.
Initially, the Tait’s business functioned as a homestyle bakery and corner store until 2009 when the couple decided to combine their areas of expertise. The collaboration of fine food and music birthed the sacred live music hub that many worship as the Alma Café we know today.
Pre-COVID, the Alma operated from Wednesday to Sunday as a live music supper-theatre. Guests would arrive an hour before the show to mingle and enjoy something to eat and drink. You could expect a traditional homemade meal like Retha’s famous bobotie.
By 7pm, the dinner service would cease as Richard dimmed the lights, welcomed the guests and introduced the musicians from the sound desk. Showtime!
Forty-five minutes later came an interval with more drinks and the opportunity to treat yourself to a desert before the second act. In a spectacular nutshell, an evening at The Alma Café was an occasion seeped in authenticity and culture built around a shared appreciation of live music and real food.
It is very much the ethos of the Alma Café that, ‘music makes the world-go-round’, and view their position in keeping musicians on stage and performing for audiences with a fierceness and tenacity that I have seldom seen before, writes Cape {town} Etc’s James Redman.
Then came March 2020…
The venue was faced with the reality that the fundamental aspect of their business would cease to continue due to lockdown restrictions. Despite this setback, The Alma Café started a delivery service, providing fresh meals to the neighbourhood.
By the time lockdown moved to stage 3, the café decided to return to its original intention of being a homestyle bakery and corner store, with the addition of a coffee machine and beans provided by Truth Coffee — Cape Town’s local coffee guru’s.
This move was a success as community locals and intrigued outsiders flocked to the café in a desperate effort to return to some kind of normalcy after months of isolation. The café boasted homemade products of all kinds, from biscuits and cakes to jams and honey and offered toasted sandwiches and pies.
The buzz around the café sparked an idea to host a Saturday morning community market.
The market offered a space for other community members whose livelihoods had been disrupted by the pandemic to come and sell their products, which varied from fresh produce sourced in Phillipe to hand sewn linen and craft jewellery.
On the first Saturday market held at the Alma Café, there was a que that sprawled from the entrance of the building all the way down to the railway line, a good fifty meters long. Jono Tait describes the moments after the market: “If it had been a Hollywood film, they’d have depicted it with a scene of hugging and tears for all the characters involved”. A true feat of humanitarian success at the centre of which was The Alma Café.
With lockdown pleasantly in the past, the live music nights are back and the coffee shop lives on!
If you’re looking for an experience shrouded in history, where every item of cutlery has a backstory, the music is quality and the food is fabulous, visit The Alma Café. And when you do, remind yourself that you too are playing your part in keeping live music alive.
- Location: 20 Alma Rd, Rosebank, Cape Town
- Operating hours: Open from Tuesday’s to Saturdays 7am – 3pm.
- Show Bookings: [email protected]
- Mailing List: [email protected] (incl. DATABASE in the subject line)
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Pictures: Facebook