Donn's Depot

Live Music $

Donn himself still plays select nights; check the calendar on the official site before you go.

Donn's Depot occupies an actual train depot and three retired railcars at 1600 W 5th St, a setup that started in 1972 when developer Bob Ogden bought the depot and hired a piano playing tire salesman named Donn Adelman to run the music. Adelman took the bar over and put his name on it in 1978, per the bar's own published history, and PUNCH has profiled the regulars who never left.

It suits two steppers, piano bar romantics, and anyone grieving what Austin used to be. It will baffle drinkers who want a menu; the bar pours simple and the room does the rest.

A depot front room with a piano stage, two dance floors, and railcars for wandering, including bathrooms built into an actual train car. Christmas lights stay up all year, the decor has not moved in decades, and the free popcorn machine runs nightly.

Longnecks, well drinks, and no speeches, with prices that read like a different city. Order a cold Lone Star and a whiskey neat and you have used the menu correctly. Yelp reviewers call it a dive with soul, and the phrase fits the bill exactly.

Silver haired regulars who have danced here for forty years, service industry kids discovering the place, and couples learning to two step in real time. PUNCH's profile of the bar's regulars captures the mix better than any review aggregate could.

West 5th at the edge of Clarksville, a five minute cab from downtown. Mean Eyed Cat Austin keeps the Johnny Cash shrine two blocks away, Deep Eddy Cabaret Austin holds the neighborhood dive line further west, and Broken Spoke Austin is the other essential honky tonk south of the river.

Weeknights for piano sets with room to dance; Friday and Saturday for the full packed floor. Live country and blues acts play most nights, per the bar's calendar.

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