Jazz in the night
Jules Bistro at 65 St. Marks Place in Manhattan serves a full menu late into the night. (Dennis W. Ho)
New York's jazz scene is still hopping -- but don't let commercialized venues and high entrance fees get you down. These unique jazz joints offer live music without the cover:
Louis 649 Hamsa, a friendly pit bull, sometimes steals the show at this intimate, off-the-beaten-path jazz bar near Avenue C. In addition to high quality, free live jazz performances several nights a week (call for details), there are over 20 single malt scotches available (complete with tasting notes) as well as classic cocktails on the list -- making it a perfect spot to impress a first date.(649 E. 9th St, 212-673-1190)
Cleopatra's Needle This casual UWS bar and Mediterranean restaurant plays host to both established artists and up-and-coming musicians nearly every night of the week. Admission is free, though there is a $10 drink minimum per person, which is well spent on the bar's strong martinis. (2185 Broadway, 212-769-6969)
Jules Bistro Owned by restaurateur Georges Forgeois, this charming Parisian-style bar and restaurant in the East Village harkens back to another time -- and offers a full menu of French classics, like bouillabaisse and moules frites, as well as nightly jazz shows. There's no cover for performances, though a one-drink minimum is recommended at the bar. A jazz brunch is also available on weekends. (65 St. Mark's Place, 212-477-5560)
Arthur's Tavern A Village institution since 1937, this one-of-a-kind bar -- decorated year-round with an assortment of colorful lights and festive Christmas ornaments -- offers free live jazz and blues every night, as well as a light menu and happy-hour drink specials. Don't miss the Grove Street Stompers, a raucous Dixieland-style jazz band that has been playing at Arthur's every Monday night for 35 years. Call for a performance schedule. (57 Grove St, 212-675-6879)
Parlor Entertainment Every Sunday afternoon, rain or shine, Marjorie Eliot hosts this free, intimate jazz concert in a private apartment in Sugar Hill -- a historic building that also famously housed Count Basie. Initiated as a way to remember her son Philip, a musician who passed away in 1992, these weekly shows have become a Harlem institution (arrive early for a seat). Though there is no entrance fee, donations are gladly accepted. (555 Edgecombe Ave, Studio 3F, 212-781-6595)
Copyright © 2008, AM New York
Video
Search Classifieds
| JOBS | SHOP | CARS | HOMES | |||||||||
Listings, directories and deals
|
||||||||||||
Popular stories
- 'Rent' brings down the curtain on Broadway run
- Powerful Hurricane Ike slams into Cuba, nears Fla.'s Key West, Gulf Coast may be next
- Rebuilding a dream after 9/11
- DAY 3: Celebrating Fashion Week with DKNY, DVF, Tracy Reese and more
- Wallace Matthews: Mets' investment in Santana paying off now
Recent Multimedia
Celebrities at Fashion Week
John McCain: Early years
NFL Kickoff Show in NYC
Tennis hotties
Hangin' in the Hamptons
Guess the celeb from the high school photo
Sarah Palin: The early years
Sarah Palin, north star
Tiger Woods, Elin and baby Sam
Venus and Serena Williams through the years and at the U.S. Open
Michael Phelps hangs out, swims in New York
U.S. Open celebrities and tennis stars around New York
Sarah Palin and her family
Annual Tomatina food fight in Spain
Michael Jackson through the years
Olympian Shawn Johnson, Jennifer Hudson, other celebrities at Democratic convention
Barack Obama through the years
At the DNC: Day 3
American Idol judges Kara DioGuardi, Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson in New York
Olympic goddesses








