Credit: Michelle Mitchell

If thereโ€™s a stretch of Portland that feels its age no matter how much new construction comes in, itโ€™s North Interstate. Part of the roadโ€™s charm is a collection of glorious neon signage like that at the Palms Hotel, the Nite Hawk Cafe & Lounge, and the Alibi. Even if we didnโ€™t live through the โ€™50s, neon like that glows with both hot gas and ambient nostalgia. It reminds us of being reminded of things, which makes us happy.

That feeling lends itself to drunken sing-a-longs, and with karaoke every night from 9 pm til close, the Alibi has always been among the best options in Portland for dive bar karaoke. The lease recently changed hands, resulting in an impressive cleanup effort and a menu revamp. The result? The Alibi remains among the best options in Portland for dive bar karaoke.

If youโ€™ve been to the Alibi, I donโ€™t have to tell you why it excels: In contrast to its enormous neon sign, its windowless interior is so dark, dated, and idiosyncratically decorated that youโ€™re never sure what year it will be when you leave. The booths are deep; the bartop is edged with a padded elbow rest; itโ€™s lit by video lottery screens, stage lights, a fireplace, more neon; thereโ€™s both a fishtank and a koi pond, but no fish; thereโ€™s no TV; thereโ€™s karaoke.

All of this was true before the remodel.Whatโ€™s different now is whatโ€™s gone: It feels brighter, but itโ€™s not clear if the lights are turned slightly up or if a dull layer of grime has simply been buffed off every surface. The half-inch of standing letโ€™s-hope-itโ€™s-water in the menโ€™s room is reduced to a patchy sheen. Weโ€™ll see how long any of this lasts, but for now, itโ€™s heartening to see the place cleaned, but not cleaned up.

The old Alibi was proof that a compelling atmosphere and a thriving karaoke scene could overcome lackluster cocktails and flavorless food. Still, the biggest and most welcome change under its latest stewardship is the Alibiโ€™s new menu. The secret weapon was Emily Mistell (of Rum Club fame), who was a no-brainer to re-Tiki-fy what should always have been an iconic cocktail menu.

For those of us with light to moderate stage fright and a hopefully non-addictive personality, drinking and karaoke go hand in hand: Thereโ€™s nothing quite like a shot of tequila to convince you that you can and should tackle an Adele or Busta Rhymes song.

Tiki culture and karaoke both simultaneously have a bad reputation and can be intimidating. To help ease you into one or the other, Iโ€™ve compiled a list of songs to pair with most of the Alibiโ€™s new cocktail menu (and some youโ€™d better not sing).

Mai Tai ($10): The Mai Tai is a classic of rum, orange curacao, orgeat, and lime, and Iโ€™m happy to say the Alibiโ€™s is among the bestโ€”but it achieves that status with the inclusion of rawer, rougher Jamaican rum. So some funkier, weirder, or lightly tweaked version of a classic is called for.
DO: The Fugeesโ€™ โ€œKilling Me Softly,โ€ Soft Cellโ€™s โ€œTainted Love,โ€ orโ€”and not just because heโ€™s Jamaicanโ€”Shaggyโ€™s โ€œAngel (feat. Rayvon)โ€

DONโ€™T: Jeff Buckleyโ€™s โ€œHallelujahโ€

Shark Attack ($10): The sole vodka drink on the menu (it has rum, too, plus fruit, maraschino liqueur, and blue curacao) will sneak up on you, and without the warning of a fin slicing by.
DO: The Jaws theme has no words, so maybe something from West Side Story? This is the only blue drink on the menu, but still.
DONโ€™T: โ€œBlue Hawaii.โ€

Halekulani ($10): Bourbon drinkers arenโ€™t left off this list, so long as they donโ€™t mind their whiskey Tikiโ€™d up with pineapple, orange, and grenadine. Y
ES: โ€œOne Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beerโ€
NO: โ€œMoon Over Bourbon Street,โ€ in fact, nothing from Stingโ€™s solo work, ever.

Saturn ($10):
My favorite cocktail on the old Alibi menu (read: the only one Iโ€™d order sober) was their Suffering Bastard, which was a gin-and-brandy deal. The Saturn is not that similar, but has fast become a new favorite for its willingness to punch some color into the finest clear spirit there is. Passionfruit, orgeat, and falernum (which adds a dark, nutty spice) bring local New Deal #33 gin squarely into bittersweet faux-Caribbean-funtime territory. Still, for its ginly roots…
DO: โ€œLondon Callingโ€ or โ€œBitter Sweet Symphony.โ€

El Diablo ($10): Crรฉme de Cassis (blackcurrant liqueur), lime, and ginger beer combine with tequila to give the lie to this cocktailโ€™s devilish name. Itโ€™s basically the equivalent of an unexpected 16 measure sax solo in what you thought was a rollicking rock song.
DO: Air sax on Foreignerโ€™s โ€œUrgent,โ€ Bob Segerโ€™s โ€œOld Time Rock and Roll,โ€ or virtually any Springsteen song.

Alibi Old Fashioned ($10): Like any Old Fashioned worth its name, this glass of rums, bitters, honey, and orange peel is an adultโ€™s drink, a sitting-down-singing-a-sad-song drinkโ€”a Solomon Burke drink.
DO: โ€œCry to Meโ€ or โ€œIf You Need Meโ€ or, if you like crowd work more than singing, โ€œEverybody Needs Somebody to Love.โ€

Slushies ($9): The Alibi offers a strawberry daiquiri and a richly coconutty piรฑa colada, but also a combination of the two in the Miami Vice. This unlikely/uncooperative pairing calls for an odd mashup or an Oasis song.
DO: Request โ€œMatchmakerโ€ but sing โ€œChim Chim Cheree,โ€ or Google Jon Sudano, then sing Smash Mouthโ€™s โ€œAll Starโ€ over literally any song.

Bowls ($28): These suckers serve two or more people, and come packed with bendy straws wearing paper hula skirts, often adorned with an open flame. As such, they should be drunk with good friends and lovers, and call for classic karaoke duets and boy-band or girl-group hits.
DO: โ€œYouโ€™re the One that I Want,โ€ NSYNC, or Spice Girls.
DONโ€™T: drink the whole bowl alone and sing both parts of Captain and Tennilleโ€™s โ€œDo That to Me One More Time.โ€

Zombie ($12): The master and commander of all Tiki drinks, the Zombie is the one with all the ingredients. The Alibiโ€™s features rum from the Virgin Islands, falernum, cinnamon, grapefruit, lime, and angostura bitters, plus absinthe and 151-proof rum in case you werenโ€™t drunk just from reading that list. Itโ€™s got an admirable ability to tie disparate elements together, but requires a strict limit of two per person. And since thereโ€™s no cranberry juice in it, Iโ€™m going to forego all Zombie puns and recommend the other thing that needs a limit of two at any karaoke night.
DO: โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€ or sneak a third one and crush โ€œIn-A-Gadda-Da-Vida.โ€

Beer: You donโ€™t have to be into Tiki to get freaky. Especially during the all-day Sunday happy hour featuring a dollar off beers, wine and well drinks. (Happy Hour is 3-7 pm every other day, but karaoke doesnโ€™t start until 9 pm.)
DO: Obviously youโ€™ll be singing โ€œBeer for My Horses,โ€ including the horrible cop-show skit that opens the music video.

Thomas Ross writes about art and booze, and edits fiction, nonfiction, and poetry for Tin House.