Jazz Sí Club sits on Carrer de Requesens, a narrow side street on the edge of El Raval, a short walk from Sant Antoni. The room is tiny and the booking is the point: this is the live stage of the Taller de Músics, the Raval music school that pioneered teaching jazz and flamenco in Catalonia.
Who would love it: a music lover who wants a real performance over a polished cocktail, every night of the week. Who might not: anyone after a spacious bar or a late club, because the room is small, the focus is the stage, and the night ends early by Barcelona standards.
The programming is what sets it apart. Concerts and jam sessions run daily across jazz, blues, pop, rock, flamenco and Cuban music, which makes it one of the few rooms in the city where you can catch live music seven nights a week. Lonely Planet calls it a venue with a deserved reputation as one of Barcelona's best small rooms.
The schedule has a rhythm worth knowing. Mondays lean to the great names of jazz, Tuesdays and Sundays turn to rock, pop and blues, Wednesdays host student jam sessions from the Taller, Thursdays bring Latin and Cuban music, and Fridays and Saturdays are flamenco nights. Tickets run around 10 euros and typically include a drink, which is rare value for live music in the center.
Priya Nair's read: this is a listening room first and a bar second, so come for the set, not the cocktail list. The drinks are simple and the seating is tight, but the trade is a front-row seat to working musicians and students for the price of a couple of beers elsewhere. Arrive early, because a small room with a daily crowd fills fast.
The crowd is a genuine Barcelona mix: Taller students and their friends, neighborhood regulars, and travelers who found their way off the tourist trail into El Raval. The flamenco nights draw the biggest rooms, so weekends feel fuller and warmer than a quiet Tuesday blues set.
The space itself is modest, low-key and built around the music rather than the decor. Drinks are kept basic and affordable, the bar is there to keep you watered through a set, and nobody is here for a long pour of anything fancy. The early close, generally before midnight, means it works best as the start of a night in the Raval and Sant Antoni area.
Best time to go: a Friday or Saturday flamenco session for the fullest room, or a Wednesday jam if you want to hear the next wave of Taller players for the price of a drink. Either way, treat the 10-euro ticket as the deal it is and plan to move on for a later drink nearby afterward.
What regulars consistently flag, across Time Out and Lonely Planet listings, is the value and the authenticity. The daily live music and the included drink draw constant praise, the talent runs from students to seasoned players, and the main caution is the obvious one for a small venue: it is cramped, sightlines vary, and the early finish surprises visitors expecting a late Barcelona night.
It earns its place among the city's music rooms by being honest, cheap and live every single night. See where it sits among the best live music bars in Barcelona, read our wider guide to the best live music in Barcelona, or browse the full Barcelona bar guide.
Pair this bar with
For a long-running Gothic Quarter jazz cellar, compare Harlem Jazz Club Barcelona. For a vaulted room with nightly sets and a late jam, try Jamboree Barcelona. And for live Latin grooves and dancing, Marula Café Barcelona makes the natural next stop.
Sources
Lonely Planet · Time Out Barcelona · Catalunya.com · Foursquare (accessed 2026-06)
Reviewed by Priya Nair, barsforKings. Published Nov 19, 2025. Last reviewed Jan 16, 2026 · How we pick bars