Best-of list · City Guide

The Best Live Music Bars in Los Angeles

The best live music bars in Los Angeles, from jazz in Leimert Park and Atwater Village to indie rooms in Frogtown and rock on the Sunset Strip.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Zebulon.

7 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.

Los Angeles keeps its real music scene off the arena circuit. The rooms that matter sit on the eastside and in Leimert Park, booking acts that have not been processed into a product yet. The list below is sorted by where the music actually matters, not by decor or drinks. Two names that get repeated elsewhere are gone from this list: the Satellite stopped hosting shows in 2020 and is a restaurant now, so it does not belong here.

The Best Live Music Bars on the Eastside

The eastside, Frogtown through Atwater Village and Leimert Park, is where LA's independent and jazz scenes concentrate. Smaller stages, lower covers, booking calendars that reflect real curiosity. Walk-ins are usually fine on weeknights; weekends fill the seated areas.

Editor's №1

Zebulon

Zebulon brought its New York name to Frogtown in 2017, a 300-capacity room on Fletcher Drive with a patio and a booking sheet that leans jazz, global and experimental. After eleven on weekends the floor turns to dancing. No big cover, a kitchen out back, the crowd there for the music. Go on a weeknight for a seated set, weekend late if you want the floor.

World Stage Performance Gallery

The World Stage is a Leimert Park institution, a nonprofit performance gallery founded by drummer Billy Higgins and poet Kamau Daa'ood in 1989. No liquor license, no frills, just workshops and some of the best straight-ahead jazz in the city. The fourth-Sunday jazz series runs three to five. Go for a workshop night or the Sunday set, bring cash, and listen.

Blue Whale Jazz Club

Blue Whale closed in Little Tokyo in 2020 and came back in Atwater Village in 2024, same owner Joon Lee, same focus on adventurous jazz. The new room on Casitas keeps the listening-room rules: you come for the players, not the chatter. Modest cover, a short drinks list, sightlines that work. Go for a booked set midweek and treat it as a concert, not a bar.

Full listing & hours →

Hotel Cafe Hollywood

Hotel Cafe has run the Cahuenga back alley in Hollywood since 2000, the singer-songwriter room where careers start. Two small stages, low cover, a strict quiet-during-the-set policy. Worth knowing: the Cahuenga space closes in 2026 and the room reopens in 2027 inside the Lumina Hollywood development. Catch it at the original address while you still can, on a weeknight when the bookings are sharpest.

Troubadour West Hollywood

The Troubadour has held its West Hollywood corner since 1957, the room where Elton John broke America and the Eagles formed. Still an all-ages standing club, still booking rising and established acts most nights. The bar is functional, the stage is the point. Go for a specific gig, buy ahead for the names, and stand close; the room is small enough that every spot works.

Full listing & hours →

Resident DTLA

Resident sits in the DTLA Arts District, an indoor stage paired with a big outdoor beer garden and a shipping-container bar. Live bands and DJs most nights, free on many of them. The beer list is real, which is rare for a music room. Go for the garden on a warm night, and check the calendar for who is on the inside stage.

Highland Park Bowl

Highland Park Bowl is the oldest bowling alley in Los Angeles, a restored 1933 room on Figueroa with lanes, a long bar and a stage. Cocktails and wood-fired pizza, bands and DJs on the regular. It is a scene as much as a music room, so go for the building and the bookings both. Best early evening, before the lanes and the bar fill up.

Full listing & hours →

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.