Saturday April 5th, 2025
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Inside Dubai’s Listening Bars

In a city known for flash, Dubai’s listening bars are doing the opposite—curated vinyl, precision sound, and spaces where music isn’t the backdrop, it’s the whole point.

Ahmed Amin Mohamed

Inside Dubai’s Listening Bars

Dubai moves fast. But some corners of the city are slowing things down—on purpose. Enter the listening bar.

A concept that originated in post-war Japan, the listening bar is part record library, part sound sanctuary. It’s a space where the focus shifts from social buzz to sonic clarity—where music isn’t the backdrop, but the reason you’re there. Think high-spec analog systems, deep vinyl cuts, and an unspoken rule: listen first, talk later.

Once confined to Tokyo’s backstreets, the concept has travelled. First to San Francisco (where they’re called HiFi bars), then further out—eventually landing in Dubai, where a small but distinct crop of venues is reshaping the city’s late-night landscape. Here’s where to find them...

Honeycomb HiFi

Pullman Dubai Downtown, Business Bay

Located in Pullman Dubai Downtown, Honeycomb HiFi is the city’s original listening bar. The vibe leans intimate—warm wood, soft lighting, Tokyo-laced interiors. The playlist ranges, but the experience remains consistent: sit back, lean in. Whether you're on a date with a fellow music obsessive or simply listening solo, this is where the groove gets taken seriously.

Electric Pawn Shop

The H Dubai, Trade Centre

Owned by vinyl aficionado DJ Lobito Brigante, Electric Pawn Shop trades in high energy and eclecticism. The venue’s aesthetic skews neon and underground, while the sound tilts toward soul, funk, golden-era hip-hop, disco, and genre blends that live in the pocket. It’s not subdued, but the fidelity holds up. Expect a dancefloor, not a dinner party.

Cassette

The Courtyard, Al Quoz

Tucked inside The Courtyard, Cassette blends café culture with crate-digging cred. The selection is sharp—Little Dragon, Lauryn Hill, Jungle, The Fugees—and the space invites browsing as much as sitting still. Vinyl is both played and sold here, with the music folded into the rhythm of the café. Casual, but curated.

Analog Room

Q Underground, Al Barsha

More institution than venue, Analog Room has been a mainstay of the UAE’s underground since 2012. Founded by a collective of Iranian music heads, its original home in Q Underground gave local electronic culture a physical center. The venue may have closed, but the programming continues—pop-up sets, deep lineups, and a no-compromise sonic policy that outlives the location.

VNYL DXB

M Hotel Downtown, Business Bay

VNYL trades nostalgia for atmosphere—red velvet lighting, hanging disco balls, a sonic palette that leans toward 70s and 80s soul, funk, and rock. Think David Bowie, Fleetwood Mac, The Doors. It’s a little Vegas, a little Tokyo, and very much Dubai 2024. Records line the walls and are available for purchase. No velvet rope, just vibes.

Record Room Dubai

The Hills, Barsha Heights

Record Room doesn’t hide its intentions. Late hours (open until 3 AM), heavy analog visuals, and a strict 21+ entry policy signal that this isn’t your average lounge. Disco balls, vinyl stacks, and a laser focus on sound make it a space where the setlist is everything. It’s less about the hype, more about the atmosphere—exactly how it should be.

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