In a live-music ecosystem thinned out by the pandemic and corporate takeovers, small venues are the backbone of Toronto’s local music scene. These important, trendsetting spots are where you can catch the next big thing.
LessFrom 2002 to 2020, the Little Italy venue was known as the Mod Club, named after its popular ’60s dance nights. But its concert calendar was future focused: Back when The Weeknd and Daniel Caesar were still online enigmas, they booked their first-ever shows here. After relaunching as the Axis Club, the psychedelic murals, industrial vibe, and primo balcony views remained—ideal for watching viral phenoms like Shygirl and Yeule transform into IRL stars.
In lieu of a road trip to Nashville a good 750 miles away, you can head downstairs to the Dakota. Though it’s on the trendy Ossington Avenue strip, this basement bar is old-school, with wood-paneled walls and string lights that channel a Tennessee juke joint and make it the unofficial clubhouse for Toronto’s roots music scene. It’s also where big-name locals like Barenaked Ladies and Broken Social Scene have been known to workshop new material on the low.
The Dundas West club is named for a creek that once ran through the city’s west end but was buried by 19th-century development. Since opening in 2009, it too has become an underground tributary, with a 300-capacity back room that serves as a platform for indie, punk, metal, and noise acts (Deafheaven, PUP, and Yard Act among them) who’ve outgrown the DIY circuit. There’s a separate front bar where you can grab a preshow beer or escape the onstage squall.
Like the name suggests, this tiny club is the little-sister venue to fellow Dundas West institution the Garrison a few blocks to the east. But as the spray-painted sign on the awning suggests, the Baby G is proud to be the scrappier of the two, its tight 145-person capacity making it an active incubator for weirdo local acts and a popular pit stop for visiting DIY phenoms like Horse Lords, Blackwinterwells, or Water From Your Eyes.
Rock ’n’ roll and residential blocks don’t often mix well, but with a limited capacity of 120, the Monarch manages to make the concepts peacefully coexist. Tucked on a quiet side street a block south of College Street’s restaurant row, it’s a quaint neighborhood corner pub that also happens to book the bands you just discovered on Pitchfork. If you show up hungry, duck out and grab a slice at Bitondo’s, a family pizzeria that runs out of a house across the street.
Some of the world’s biggest folk singers lived in Toronto, and most of them have played Hugh’s Room (Joni Mitchell and Gordon Lightfoot among them). Since opening in 2001, the small venue has proven that roots music reflects the will of the people: After a 2020 rent hike at its original Dundas West location, patron donations enabled the 2023 purchase of an East Chinatown church space, where aspiring and veteran troubadours perform on the altar turned stage.
Toronto’s Latin and Caribbean diasporas have made their home at this Dundas West club-staurant since 2002. Lula is the city’s portal into island nightlife: colorful murals, tropical cantina decor, and a velvet-curtained stage showcasing live Latin jazz, samba, and reggae. At their weekend dinner-and-dance nights, salsa bands and reggaetón DJs follow a prix fixe meal; the next morning, Sunday drag brunch keeps the party going.
The Queen Street West club’s pitch-black interior is a reminder of its former life as Toronto’s goth stomping grounds in the ’90s and 2000s. The Velvet’s focus has diversified since local promoters Embrace Presents took over the 350-capacity space in 2015. Now it’s the place to catch buzzing bands like Militarie Gun and Bar Italia, local electronic outfit Keys N Krates, or your favorite rapper’s favorite rapper (Boldy James, Sematary).
House and techno heads used to head to King West grotto Footwork for a condensed version of a warehouse rave. In 2014, the owners moved the party to CODA, a second-story club with thoughtfully curated electronic lineups. Follow the glowing neon staircase and dance ’til dawn to sets from beloved locals like BAMBII, house legends like Green Velvet, and the occasional superstar DJ (Diplo, Jamie xx) on a break from the festival circuit.