The Hollywood Palladium just added something unusual to the concert experience: a lounge where the music actually matters.
Vinyl Room is a new space inside the iconic LA venue that pulls from 1970s Japanese listening rooms, those rare spots where people gathered just to hear records on pristine sound systems. But this isn’t some nostalgic gimmick. It’s a carefully designed environment built around the Palladium’s eight decades of history, from Frank Sinatra and Lawrence Welk to The Ramones, Nirvana, and Adele.
Blueprint Studio designed the space with music at its core. The walls are lined with vinyl from artists who’ve played the venue. Tabletops mimic records. MasterSounds Clarity-M speakers sit center stage at the bar, not hidden in corners. There’s a built-in DJ booth that feels like a main attraction, not an afterthought.
One standout feature is the wheatpaste poster wall, a layered installation that recreates LA’s street-level concert promotion culture. It’s stacked with decades of Palladium show posters, The Who, Grateful Dead, U2, The Clash, Sonic Youth, No Doubt, and more, weathered and overlapping just like they would be plastered across the city before a gig.
The memorabilia runs deep. A 1991 co-bill poster from Red Hot Chili Peppers and Beastie Boys. A postcard signed by Lawrence Welk from the 1940s. Vintage gear like a 1970s Sony reel-to-reel and a Lafayette dynamic mic. It’s the kind of space where you notice something new every time you visit.
This isn’t just decor. It’s Live Nation betting that fans want more than a bar to kill time before doors open. They want context, atmosphere, a reason to show up early and stay later. Vinyl Room treats the venue itself as part of the show, not just a container for it.
More info at vinylroomhollywood.com.