The 5 Spot sits on Forrest Avenue in the Five Points intersection of East Nashville, the neighborhood that quietly became one of the most creatively charged parts of any American city over the past two decades. The bar opened in the early 2000s as a neighborhood hangout and has remained exactly that, which in Nashville terms means it is also a serious live music venue where emerging artists perform to crowds that pay attention.
The room is small by the standards of Broadway's honky-tonks, maybe 120 people at capacity, with a low stage, a well-stocked bar running the length of the room, and a covered outdoor patio that works in every season. The music programming changes nightly: country one night, soul the next, rock and roll, bluegrass, R&B, folk. Whatever is on, it is usually excellent and priced at no cover or a few dollars at the door.
This is where Nashville's working musicians drink when they are not working. It is also where the artists who go on to fill Bridgestone Arena played their first headlining shows. The atmosphere reflects that dual identity: unpretentious, warm, and slightly chaotic in the best possible way. East Nashville has its own character distinct from the Broadway strip, and Nashville's hidden gem bars in this neighborhood offer a completely different experience from the tourist corridor.
The 5 Spot serves a full bar menu with more sophistication than the room suggests. Draft beers include a rotating selection of Tennessee craft beers alongside the standard domestic options. The well cocktails are properly made and priced for a neighborhood bar, not a hotel rooftop. The bar staff is fast and knows most of the regulars by name.
Order a local craft beer on draft, a whiskey and soda, or a classic Jack and Coke. If you want something more considered, the bartenders know what they are doing. The outdoor patio is the best place to drink when the weather allows, close enough to hear the music from inside but quiet enough for conversation between songs.
For the more polished cocktail experience in Nashville's East Side, the Crying Wolf is a few blocks away and offers a more considered menu. But the 5 Spot is where you come when the music is the point.
East Nashville across the Cumberland River from downtown was the city's overlooked working-class neighborhood for most of the 20th century. A tornado in 1998 destroyed much of the housing stock and inadvertently attracted a wave of artists, musicians, and independent business owners who could afford the property prices. The neighborhood rebuilt itself with a distinct creative character that has intensified as Nashville's broader real estate market has risen.
Five Points, the intersection at the center of East Nashville's social life, has Margot Cafe, The Crying Wolf, and The 5 Spot within two blocks of each other. The demographic skews younger and more local than the Broadway corridor. You are more likely to sit next to a session musician or a Vanderbilt professor than a group of bachelorettes in matching sashes.
For another Nashville room worth a stop, see Dee's Country Cocktail Lounge in Nashville.
