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The Best Live Music Bars in New York

The best live music bars in New York: jazz rooms, blues joints, and rock venues where the music is the reason you go. Our insider guide to NYC live.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Smalls Jazz Club.

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

Best overallSmalls Jazz Club
Runner-upTerra Blues
Third pickBarbès

New York has more live music bars per square mile than almost any city on earth, and the quality range runs from the tourist trap to the genuinely extraordinary. If you want to understand how New York stacks up against New Orleans, Tokyo, London, and Chicago, our top 10 cities for jazz bars worldwide ranking explains exactly why this city lands at number 2. We have spent years separating the two. The best live music bars in New York are the rooms where the booking is serious, the sound is good, and the drinks do not cost you a week's rent. This is that list, the places we send people when they ask where to actually go.

The Best Live Music Bars in Manhattan

Manhattan's live music bar scene is anchored by a handful of rooms that have been operating for decades and know exactly what they are doing. The Village and the Lower East Side remain the two most productive neighbourhoods for finding live music that is worth showing up specifically for.

Editor's №1

Smalls Jazz Club

Smalls is the West Village basement where New York's serious jazz happens late, a cramped room that has run nightly sets and after-hours jams since 1994. The booking favors working musicians over big names, and one cover gets you the whole night. Cash and patience help, since seats are few. Best after 10:30 PM, when the headline set gives way to the jam and the players outnumber the tourists.

Full listing & hours →

Terra Blues

Terra Blues on Bleecker Street is the city's last dedicated blues room, an arched second-floor space running more than 30 years. An acoustic set opens around 7 PM and electric bands take over at 10 PM, backed by a rock-solid house band. The room holds 74, with a ten-dollar cover and a two-drink minimum. Best late, when the amps come up and the Village crowd settles in.

Barbès

Barbès in Park Slope has booked live music in its back room seven nights a week for more than 20 years, named for the North African quarter of Paris. The bill runs Balkan brass, Afrobeat, jazz and chanson, with a bucket passed for the band. The front bar pours well and gets loud. Best for a weeknight set you could not have planned, then a drink with the musicians after.

Jalopy Theatre and School of Music

Jalopy is a Red Hook theater, music school and instrument shop in one, opened in 2006 on the edge of Carroll Gardens. The roots booking spans bluegrass, old-time, Irish, blues and folk from around the world, with the tavern next door for a pint between sets. The wooden room is all warmth and no pretense. Best for an early-evening old-time bill with a cider in hand.

Minton's Playhouse

Minton's Playhouse on West 118th is where bebop was born in the 1940s, now open again on the ground floor of the old Cecil Hotel under owners set on keeping the legacy alive. The room pairs Southern cooking with live jazz and a dress code that suits the history. Reserve and expect a cover. Best for a sit-down dinner-and-jazz night in Harlem rather than a casual drop-in.

Shrine World Music Venue

Shrine on Adam Clayton Powell Boulevard is Harlem's free-music workhorse, founded in 2007 and open from 4 PM to 4 AM seven days a week. It books only independent acts, rotating jazz, funk, reggae, rock and Afrobeat across a small stage hung with old record covers. No cover, so the risk is low. Best for a long night of back-to-back bands where you stumble onto something you will chase down later.

Django at the Roxy Hotel

The Django sits in the brick-vaulted cellar of Tribeca's Roxy Hotel, modeled on a Paris jazz boite and running live sets seven nights a week. Two performances a night pair a serious house program with cocktails from a respected bar team. It dresses up nicely without tipping into stiff. Reserve a table near the stage, and book the second show after 10 PM for the better room.

How we picked

How we picked

New York's live music bar scene rewards prioritisation. Smalls is the essential Village stop for serious late sets, while Terra Blues on Bleecker keeps the blues alive a few blocks away. Barbès is the single best music bar in Brooklyn and one of the best in the city. Minton's is worth the cover charge and the reservation.

For Harlem, Shrine is the no-cost option that outperforms most paid venues, and Minton's brings the history with dinner. Take a cab to Harlem rather than the subway if it is after midnight, since the neighborhood is fine but the walk to the 2/3 at that hour is longer than it looks on the map.

Priya Nair covers live music bars and rooftops from Bangkok to Buenos Aires for barsforKings, with a travel writer's eye for cultural context over cocktail tourism.

Last reviewed 2026-06-13 · The editors recheck hours and closures against current local coverage.

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.