A tiny Banglamphu blues room that has been the city's most-recommended live-music bar since the late 1990s.
Published Feb 8, 2026 Adhere 13th sits on Samsen Road, a five-minute walk from Khao San and a long block from the river. The room is the size of a shipping container — long bar, six tables, a corner stage barely wide enough for a four-piece band. Live music plays every single night, mostly Bangkok-based blues acts that rotate through a residency that has run, in some form, since 1997. Time Out Bangkok's 2024 live-music roundup called Adhere "the city's most-recommended blues bar — and the only one that has not changed."
This is the bar for a visitor who wants the Bangkok that does not photograph well: cramped, loud-but-conversational, ฿120 Singha pints, a band that may or may not finish their set on time. Regulars on r/Bangkok consistently flag Adhere as the city's most-recommended live-music destination outside the hotel-bar circuit. Skip it if you came for cocktails — order beer or whisky neat.
Walk-in or reserve via the bar's official channels. For groups or to confirm hours, check the bar's site or social pages.
The room is a single corridor: a polished wood bar runs the left wall, three small tables sit opposite, and the stage occupies the back. Photographs of past acts cover every vertical surface. The Bangkok Post's 2024 nightlife guide described the room as "closer to a New Orleans corner bar than anywhere in Thailand."
Drinks are simple by design: this is a music room first and a bar second. Order the beer or the whisky and accept that classic cocktails are not the brief.
Skip anything with more than three ingredients. The bar is built for fast pours during set changes.
The crowd is a 50/50 split between Bangkok expats and Thai locals in their 30s and 40s, with a slow build of tourists who heard about it on Reddit by 10pm. The room shifts at the start of the second set (typically 10.30pm) — the residency band's regulars arrive and the front row fills. Time Out Bangkok flagged the bar as "the only Banglamphu room that locals will outnumber tourists in."