Beignets & Café au Lait at Café du Monde: Sit on the crowded patio gazing at the action on Decatur Street and Jackson Square. Gorge on hot French-style doughnuts liberally coated in powdered sugar (everyone will know what you've been doing from the sprinkles on your shirt)…
New Orleans Attractions
We’ve made no secret of our favorite New Orleans activities: walking, eating, ogling, listening to music, dancing, and eating again. But between those activities, there’s much to see, do, and experience. New Orleans is a vibrant, visual, utterly authentic city with a rich history and gobs of culture worthy of your time.
While the French Quarter certainly is a seductive place, going to New Orleans and never leaving the Quarter is like visiting Times Square and believing you’ve seen New York. Stroll the lush Garden District, marvel at the oaks in City Park, ride the streetcar on St. Charles Avenue and gape at the gorgeous homes, or go visit some gators on a swamp tour. Take a walk along Bayou St. John, tour the remarkable Tremé neighborhood, or ride a bike through the Bywater. We’ll guide you to some of the city’s amazing museums, diverse neighborhoods, and prettiest parks, with suggestions for action-lovers and armchair adventurers, history buffs, and party animals.
- Theme Park
Amusement Park and Children's Storyland
The under-8 set will be delighted with this playground (rated one of the 10 best in the country by Child magazine), where well-known children's stories and rhymes have inspired the charming decor. It offers plenty of characters to slide down and climb on and generally get juvenile… - Theme Park
Amusement Park and Children’s Storyland
The under-8 set will be delighted with this playground (rated one of the 10 best in the country by Child magazine), where well-known children’s stories and rhymes inspired the charming decor. It offers plenty of characters to slide down and climb on and generally get juvenile ya-yas… - Zoo/Aquarium
Audubon Aquarium of the Americas
Penguin evacuees made a star-studded post-Katrina return via a chartered FedEx flight here, waddling home down a (FedEx) purple carpet as news cameras rolled. Then, rescued sea turtles were rehabilitated here after the Gulf oil spill. These instances point up just how topical and… - Museum
Audubon Insectarium
This fascinating museum is dedicated to all things bug and arachnid, specifically 900,000 species of critters that creep, crawl, and flutter. Located in the old U.S. Customs House, it’s the largest free-standing museum in the world dedicated to its multilegged, winged subjects. The… - Park/Garden
Audubon Park
Across from Loyola and Tulane universities, Audubon Park and the adjacent Audubon Zoo sprawl over 340 acres, extending all the way from St. Charles Avenue to the Mississippi River. This tract once belonged to city founder Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne and later was part of the Etienne de… - Zoo/Aquarium
Audubon Zoo
This is a place of justifiable civic pride that delights even non-zoo fans—small enough to be manageable, but big enough to cover all the important zoo bases including elephant and orangutan exhibits with some bonuses, like the amazing white tiger and Malayan sun bears. Some 15,000… - Museum
Backstreet Cultural Museum
This small cultural gem in the heart of the Faubourg Tremé is dedicated to certain wholly unique New Orleans cultural traditions, mostly of the African-American community. The social aid and pleasure clubs, the second-line parades, brass bands, Mardi Gras Indians, and jazz funerals… - Natural Attraction
Bayou St. John, Esplanade & Lake Pontchartrain
Bayou St. John is one of the key reasons New Orleans exists. This body of water originally extended from the outskirts of New Orleans to Lake Pontchartrain. Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, was commissioned to establish a settlement in Louisiana that would both make money… - Historic Site
Beauregard-Keyes House
This “raised cottage,” with its Doric columns and handsome twin staircases, was built as a residence by a wealthy New Orleans auctioneer, Joseph LeCarpentier, in 1826. Confederate General P. G. T. Beauregard (of the recently deposed Confederate monument) lived here between 1865 and… - Sports Venue
Big Easy Rollergirls
Okay, it’s a total goof, but a hoot of a goof. By definition, roller derby is going to be a bit wild (though the athleticism can’t be denied). Mix in New Orleans and the resulting outcome is pure wack. The Big Easy babes play it up for all it’s worth, and the crowd action is equally… - Park/Garden
Big Lake Boating and Biking
Big Lake in City Park is a pretty spot for a boat ride, and the kids can scour the shoreline for turtles. There are pedal boats and rowboats for rent from Wheel Fun, which also rents bicycles, tandems, and surreys for use inside City Park. All that pedaling action can be a workout,… - Park/Garden
Chalmette Battlefield/Jean Lafitte National Historical Park & Preserve
These are the grounds where the bloody Battle of New Orleans was won on January 8, 1815. Ironically, it should never have been fought: A treaty signed 2 weeks before in Ghent, Belgium, had ended the War of 1812. But word had not yet reached Congress, the commander of the British… - Tour
Chris Rose Tours
Chris Rose saved the city’s soul, and it very nearly cost him his life. After Katrina, the now-former Times-Picayune columnist’s words, quite literally, kept people sane, safe, and connected – when their tenuous ties to their city and their dissolved realities were frayed to the… - Park/Garden
City Park
Once part of the Louis Allard plantation and named one of America’s “Coolest Parks,” City Park has seen it all—including that favorite pastime among 18th-century New Orleans gentry: dueling. At the entrance, note the empty marble platform, where a statue of General P. G. T.… - Cooking Class
City Park Pedal Boats
Big Lake in City Park is a pretty spot for a boat ride, and the kids might spot egrets and turtles. The pedaling action can be a workout, which means you can justify a visit to nearby Angelo Brocato's ice cream parlor afterward. Boats hold three to four people, at least one of whom… - Cooking Class
City Putt Miniature Golf
We’re par-tial (see what we did there) to the two 18-hole miniature golf courses opened in 2013, and impressed with the design: On one course, each hole is designed around a New Orleans neighborhood, with iconic statues and signage and stuff; the other course keys off of statewide… - Art Gallery
Contemporary Arts Center
The CAC’s three stories of airy galleries anchor the city’s thriving arts district. The center shows influential work by regional, national, and international artists in various mediums, and often presents theater, performance art, dance, or music concerts. It’s worth a walk-by to… - Park/Garden
Crescent Park
This newish, river-hugging green space paralleling the Marigny and Bywater neighborhoods is ideal for a picnic, run, or walk, or just to get a different perspective on New Orleans. That starts as you cross the enormous, rust-colored steel arc, aka the Piety Street Bridge (aka the… - Cemetery
Cypress Grove and Greenwood Cemeteries
Located across the street from one another, both were founded in the mid-1800s by the Firemen’s Charitable and Benevolent Association. Each has some highly original tombs; keep your eyes open for the ones made entirely of iron. These are an easy streetcar ride up Candal Street from… - Historic Site
Degas House
Legendary French Impressionist Edgar Degas had a tender spot in his heart for New Orleans. His mother and grandmother were born here, and he spent several months in 1872 and 1873 visiting his brother at this house. The trip resulted in a number of paintings, and this is the only… - Tour
French Quartour Kids Tour
Believe it or not, this is the only tour in New Orleans designed specifically for kids. And it’s super. The company’s founder and regular guide is a former schoolteacher and an excellent kid-wrangler. She conducts the tour in costume and manages to maintain the enthusiasm level going… - Tour
G L-f de Villiers Tours
Multi-degreed, dishy raconteur Glenn de Villiers is a local native who traces his family lineage directly to a key figure in the founding of New Orleans. The city’s history, then, is literally in his DNA. The tall, chapeaued bon vivant is worth following around the French Quarter for… - Historic
Gallier Hall
This impressive Greek Revival building was the inspiration of James Gallier, Sr. Now an events hall, it was erected between 1845 and 1853, served as City Hall for just over a century and has been the site of many important events in the city’s history—especially during the… - Museum
Gallier House Museum
James Gallier, Jr. (it’s pronounced Gaul-ee-er, by the way; he was Irish, not French) and his father were the leading architects in New Orleans in the mid-1800s. They designed the French Opera House, Municipality Hall (now Gallier Hall), and the Pontalba Buildings. This was Junior's… - Tour
Gray Line
This well-known, well-established (since 1926!) company runs coach and walking tours of the city, swamps, and plantations—in pretty much every combination (including tour/cruise combos with sister company Steamboat Natchez). They offer a few more unusual itineraries, like a nighttime… - Historic Site
Hermann-Grima House
This symmetrical Federal-style building (perhaps the first in the Quarter) is very different from its French-style neighbors. The house, which stretches from St. Louis Street to Conti Street, passed through two different families before becoming a boardinghouse for women in the… - Museum
Historic New Orleans Collection—Museum/Research Center
This complex of historic buildings in the middle of the French Quarter is secreted away with little fanfare. But it’s a true treasure and an excellent look at what once was. The main galleries at the recently expanded Royal Street campus are chock full of wonderful artworks, maps,… - Tour
Historic New Orleans Tours
This is one of our favorite midsize tour companies, mostly because their guides are consistently good. Quite often they have advanced degrees in history or other related disciplines, and they’re free to bring their own perspectives and interests to the tour, thereby keeping things… - Cemetery
Holt Cemetery
This one is for the more intrepid. It’s not so easy to reach or find, but it’s worth seeking out. Dating to the mid-1800s, this former burial ground for indigents is the rare New Orleans cemetery with nearly all in-ground graves. They are maintained by the families—or not maintained… - Landmark
Hurricane Katrina Memorial
On the former site of Charity Hospital’s paupers’ field, this ominous but oddly affecting circle of tombs holds the bodies of 85 unclaimed victims of the 2005 levee failures and the names of others who perished. It’s an unfussy place that’s easily missed, the better for contemplative… - Cemetery
Lafayette Cemetery No. 1
Right across the street from Commander’s Palace restaurant, this is the lush uptown cemetery. Once in horrible condition, it’s been mostly restored. This is a frequent setting in Anne Rice's work, especially as a roaming ground for Lestat and Claude in Interview with the Vampire and… - Hiking/Biking Route
Lafitte Greenway
This 2.6-mile walking trail and bikeway is a former railway and post-Katrina success story that now connects neighbors and neighborhoods: It starts just above the French Quarter and traverses the Tremé, Bayou St. John, and Mid-City. If you’re renting a bike, the greenway will… - Museum
Le Musee de fpc
Louisiana’s history of slavery is well-known. In this elegant 1859 Greek Revival house, the lesser-known chronicle of the free people of color (fpc) is told through a one-of-a-kind personal collection of artworks and documents. These educated, sophisticated, and industrious men and… - Park/Garden
Longue Vue House & Gardens
Longue Vue mansion is a little pocket of the unexpected. Just 20 minutes from the city center, near the more interesting end of suburban Metairie, is a unique expression of Greek Revival architecture set on an 8-acre estate, constructed from 1939 to 1942 and listed on the National… - Museum
Louisiana Children's Museum
This interactive museum is really a playground in disguise that will keep kids occupied for a good couple of hours. The museum’s hands-on, experiential exhibits furtively explore literacy, health, science, arts, and the environment—through fun. In summer 2019, it moves to a gorgeous… - Museum
Louisiana Children’s Museum
This interactive museum is really a playground in disguise that will keep kids occupied for a good couple of hours. Along with changing exhibits, the museum offers an art shop with regularly scheduled projects, a mini grocery store, a chance to “build” a New Orleans–style home, and… - Museum
Louisiana's Civil War Museum at Confederate Memorial Hall
Here is the Confederate flag, that hot-button epicenter of controversy, displayed with no glamour or judgment: It’s a history museum, after all, and a good one if you’re interested in the Civil War. Or architecture: The unusual, circa-1891 pressed-brick Romanesque building is a… - Museum
Lower Ninth Ward Living Museum
Situated in a former home in a residential section of the 9th ward, the scant few rooms of this modest museum hold a world of insight. The moving oral histories, exhibits, and videos (and often, the people here) tell the story of this area—not just of the levee failure and its…Ninth Ward - Historic Site
Madame John’s Legacy
This is the second-oldest building (well, parts of it) in the Mississippi Valley, after the Ursuline Convent, and a rare example of Creole architecture that miraculously survived the 1794 fire. Built around 1788 on the foundations of an earlier home that was destroyed in the fire of… - Landmark
Mardi Gras World
The Kerns are the first family of float-making, and this is their headquarters. The Kerns design and build some 75 percent of the floats used by the Mardi Gras krewes during Carnival Season, so you’ll see floats from previous years and those in the works for the next season.… - Cemetery
Metairie Cemetery
Don’t be fooled by the slightly more modern look—some of the most amazing tombs in New Orleans are here. Don’t miss the pyramid-and-sphinx Brunswig mausoleum, the “ruined castle” Egan family tomb, and the former resting place of Storyville madam Josie Arlington. Her mortified family… - Museum
Museum of Death
If you find vampire tours positively banal and need more death in your death, here’s all the gore you could ask for. It’s graphic, no-holds-barred gruesome, for the thick-skinned only (there are rocking chairs in the lobby for companions who opt out; those going through the… - Museum
National World War II Museum
This must-see, world-class facility boasts a collection of artifacts that is beyond abundant. The exhibits also include stellar videos and advanced digital techniques, but still manage to emphasize the personal side of war, highlighted by audio and video of civilians and soldiers… - Sports Venue
New Orleans Baby Cakes
A post-2016 season rebranding delivered a head-scrathing moniker for the Florida Marlins’ farm team, formerly known as the Zephyrs. But the experience is the same, and truly, there may be no better entertainment value in pro sports than AAA baseball. A few hours at the Shrine on… - Museum
New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum
This small museum is packed with dusty displays of Voodoo objects from around the world and right here in New Orleans, including some that allegedly belonged to the legendary Voodoo queen, Marie Laveau. While serious practitioners might scoff at the tourist orientation of this place,… - Museum
New Orleans Historical Pharmacy Museum
Leeches. LEEEEECHES. Yeah, they’re here. So are many other icky things, and fascinating potions, and instruments-of-torture-looking artifacts (antique surgical devices, in actuality). The first licensed pharmacist in the United States, Louis J. Dufilho, Jr., opened an apothecary shop… - Museum
New Orleans Jazz Museum at the Old US Mint
Dedicated to an original American art form, this still-evolving museum steps from Frenchmen Street features stellar collectibles like Louis Armstrong’s first cornet, Sidney Bechet’s soprano saxophone, and Edward “Kid” Ory’s trombone. The rotating exhibits come from an archive of… - Sports Venue
New Orleans Jesters
This minor-league soccer team with the big plans brings family-friendly action to City Park. Since changing hands in 2008, the team has amped up their profile and their play, making it good, clean fun for soccer fans. - Museum
New Orleans Museum of Art
The crown jewel of City Park, and of New Orleans art, NOMA houses a 40,000-piece collection of 16th- through 20th-century European paintings, drawings, sculptures, and prints; early American art; Asian art; pre-Columbian and Native American ethnographic art; a gallery entirely… - Sports Venue
New Orleans Pelicans
Playing in the renovated Smoothie King Center (next door to the Superdome), the Pelicans (formerly the Hornets) now command an exclusive area on the sidelines called “Hollywood” where seats can be had for some serious green. A few years ago that was not a possibility. Then Chris Paul… - Sports Venue
New Orleans Saints
Who dat won the Super Bowl? The Saints’ incredible Super Bowl XLIV victory in 2010 was the culmination of the city’s 43-year collective dream (to say nothing of the end of 43 years of frustration), in which the beloved [‘]Aints finally won the big one, becoming a metaphor for the… - Historic Site
Old Absinthe House
The Old Absinthe House was built in 1806 and now houses a bar and restaurant. The drink for which the building and bar were named was once outlawed in this country (certain chemical additives, not the actual wormwood used to flavor the drink, caused blindness and madness). Now you… - Religious Site
Old Ursuline Convent
Forget tales of America being founded by brawny, brave, tough guys in buckskin and beards. The real pioneers—at least, in Louisiana—were well-educated Frenchwomen clad in 40 pounds of black wool robes. That’s right; you don’t know tough until you know the Ursuline nuns, and this city… - Religious Site
Our Lady of Guadalupe Chapel—International Shrine of St. Jude
This “funeral chapel” was erected in 1826 conveniently near St. Louis Cemetery No. 1, specifically for funeral services, so as not to spread disease through the Quarter. We like it for three reasons: the catacomb-like devotional chapel with plaques thanking the Virgin Mary for favors… - Historic Site
Pitot House
Set along pretty Bayou St. John, the Pitot House is a typical West Indies–style plantation home, restored and furnished with early-19th-century Louisiana and American antiques. Dating from 1799, it originally stood where the nearby modern Catholic school now stands. In 1810 it became… - Performing Arts Venue
Preservation Hall
The historic, inimitable traditional jazz venue is open to all ages. The earliest show starts at 8pm nightly; get there early so the young ones can see (if they’re really young, sit by the door in case a boredom-induced quick exit becomes required).French Quarter - Arts
Sculpture for New Orleans
Not a museum you can visit, per se, but if you’re curious about the eye-popping outdoor sculptures along Poydras St., this is the organization responsible. Born in the wake of Hurricane Katrina to brighten a blighted landscape and spotlight the city’s visual artists, it's since…Central Business District - Museum
Southern Food & Beverage Museum & Museum of the American Cocktail
The South’s first food-and-beverage museum reopened in this mid-renaissance, off-the-tourist-beat part of town. The large room features clusters of alimental artifacts from each Southern state. It’s a jumbled but informative assemblage, showcasing farms, tables, and everything in… - Religious Site
St. Alphonsus Church
The interior of St. Alphonsus is probably the most stunning of any church in the city, right up there with some of the lusher Italian splendors. The Irish built St. Alphonsus Church in 1855 because they refused to worship at St. Mary’s with their German-speaking neighbors. The… - Religious Site
St. Augustine Church
One of the great cultural landmarks of New Orleans’s black history, St. Augustine has been a center of community life in the troubled but striving Tremé neighborhood since the mid-1800s. This church was founded by free people of color, who also purchased pews to be used exclusively… - Cathedral
St. Louis Cathedral
The St. Louis Cathedral prides itself on being the oldest continuously active cathedral in the United States. It’s not the prettiest, though— the outside is all right, but the rather staid interior wouldn’t give even a minor European church a run for its money. Still, history and… - Cemetery
St. Louis Cemetery No. 1
You can only see this one with a tour. It's the oldest extant cemetery (1789) and the most iconic. Here lie Marie Laveau, Bernard Marigny, and (eventually) Nicholas Cage, in the pryamid he had isncribed "Omnia Ab Uno" (Everything From One). It's also recognizable for the… - Cemetery
St. Louis Cemetery No. 2
Established in 1823, it's the city’s next-oldest cemetery. Although the neighborhood is much improved, its reputation as a rough one has kept most tours away. Caution is still advised, and Save Our Cemeteries (www.saveourcemeteries.org) does offer tours in combo with St. Louis No. 1.… - Cemetery
St. Louis Cemetery No. 3
Conveniently located next to the Fair Grounds racetrack (home of Jazz Fest), St. Louis No. 3 was built on top of a former graveyard for lepers. Storyville photographer E. J. Bellocq lies here. It’s a scenic cemetery and neighborhood near Bayou St. John, accessible via Esplanade… - Religious Site
St. Mary's Assumption
Built in 1860 by German Catholics, this is an even more baroque and grand church than its Irish neighbor across the street (St. Alphonsus Church), complete with dozens of life-size saints' statues. The two churches make an interesting contrast to one another. Also inside the church… - Religious Site
St. Mary’s Assumption
Built in 1860 by the German Catholics, this is an even more baroque and grand church than its Irish neighbor across the street (St. Alphonsus Church), complete with dozens of life-size saints’ statues. The two churches make an interesting contrast to one another. Also inside the… - Religious Site
St. Patrick's Church
The original St. Patrick's was a tiny wooden building founded to serve the spiritual needs of Irish Catholics—a far cry from this elaborate structure. Begun in 1838, it was built around the old one, which was then dismantled. The distinguished architect James Gallier, Sr., designed… - Religious Site
St. Patrick’s Church
The original St. Patrick’s was a tiny wooden building founded to serve the spiritual needs of Irish Catholics. The elaborate present building, begun in 1838, was constructed around the old one, which was then dismantled. The distinguished architect James Gallier, Sr., designed much… - Reglious Site
St. Roch and the Campo Santo
A local priest prayed to Saint Roch, patron saint of plague victims, to keep his flock safe during an epidemic in 1867. When everyone came through all right, the priest made good on his promise to build Saint Roch a chapel. The Gothic result is fine enough, but what is better yet is… Studio BE
The power of artist, activist, and educator Brandan “BMike” Odums’ astounding work is evident on first glimpse of the murals covering this 35,000-square-foot gallery/museum/warehouse/shop. But the large-format spray-painted and sculptural works inside, of iconic figures important to…French Quarter- Historic Site
The 1850 House
James Gallier, Sr., and his son designed the historic Pontalba Buildings for the Baroness Micaela Almonester de Pontalba, who had them built in 1849 in an effort to combat the deterioration of the older part of the city. The rows of townhouses on either side of Jackson Square were… - Museum
The Cabildo
One of two fine museums flanking St. Louis Cathedral in the heart of the French Quarter, the Cabildo houses the premier collection of New Orleans and Louisiana historical artifacts. It starts with the earliest explorers and covers slavery, post–Civil War reconstruction, and… - Market
The French Market
Legend has it that the site of the French Market was originally used by Native Americans as a bartering market. It grew into an official market in 1812. From around 1840 to 1870, it was part of Gallatin Street, a rough area full of bars, drunken sailors, and criminals. Today it’s a… - Sports Venue
The Mercedes-Benz Superdome
Completed in 1975, the Superdome is a landmark civic structure that took on a new worldwide image when it was used as shelter during Katrina. Intended only as an evacuation locale of last resort, the Superdome quickly turned into hell on earth when tens of thousands of refugees ended… - Attraction/Museum
The New Orleans Tattoo Museum
This off-the-beaten-path oddity houses a working tattoo studio, a 2,000-square-foot room museum, and Don “Doc” Lucas, historian, curator, collector, author, storyteller, artist, and the museum's most interesting exhibit. Doc’s work graces the skin of Aaron Neville and Anne Rice,… - Museum
The Ogden Museum of Southern Art
If NOMA is the crown jewel, this is the crown. It’s the premier collection of Southern art in the United States. The artists’ works are impressive, and the graphics are informative and even clever. We particularly like the permanent exhibit of self-taught and outsider art, including… - Historic Site
The Old U.S. Mint
Dedicated to an original American art form, this still-evolving museum steps from Frenchmen Street features stellar collectibles like Louis Armstrong’s first cornet, Sidney Bechet’s soprano saxophone, and Edward “Kid” Ory’s trombone. The rotating exhibits come from an archive of… - Museum
The Presbytère
The Presbytère, which flanks St. Louis Cathedral to the right, was originally built to house the clergy serving in the cathedral. That never came to pass, and the clergy’s loss is our gain. It’s now a museum with two excellent permanent exhibits. Upstairs, the Mardi Gras exhibit… - Tour
Tours of Isabelle
This well-established but smaller tour company schedules tours only when a minimum number of people sign up (if they don’t hit the minimum, you may have to switch to a different tour). The upside is you’ll get more personalized attention, and van tours are maxed out at 13 people.… - Religious Site
Trinity Episcopal Church
This is a very pretty church, outside and in. Outside, the Gothic Revival construction dates to 1853; inside, elaborate carved wood panels show off a 5,000-pipe organ. But the big attraction here is that it gets regular play. Weekly pipe organ concerts by the church's retired music… - Tour
Two Chicks Walking Tours
This newer tour company adds a dollop of sass to their tours, but they’re nonetheless informative and entertaining. In the Bordellos and Ladies of the Night tour, perky guide Christine, adorned in a rainbow tutu, knows her stuff and weaves plenty of standard history through this… - Park/Garden
Woldenberg Riverfront Park
This 20-acre park along the river serves as promenade and public art gallery, with numerous works by popular local and internationally known artists amid green lawns and hundreds of trees. Seek out the kinetic Holocaust memorial sculpture by noted Israeli sculptor Yaacov Agam, and…
More About New Orleans Attractions
New Orleans Shopping
Shopping in New Orleans is a highly evolved leisure activity, with a shop for every strategy and a fix for every shopaholic—at every budget. Think of the endless souvenir shops on Bourbon Street and swanky antiques stores on Royal Street as the bookends for all the shopping New Orleans has to offer. There’s a high-end mall, quaint boutiques filled with strange items gathered from all parts of the globe, a brand spanking new outlet mall, and shops featuring enticing hand-crafted objects produced by local, somewhat twisted, folk artists.
There are sweet deals to be had, or lavish riches to be spent, artworks to be admired, new outfits to wear home. But as all shoppers know, the fun is in the hunt. And New Orleans has some smashing hunting grounds.
- Gallery
A Gallery for Fine Photography
This incredibly well-stocked photography gallery emphasizes the historic and contemporary culture of New Orleans and the South, music, and black culture. The stunning investment images include Ernest Bellocq’s legendary Storyville photos; Herman Leonard’s jazz images; the haunting… - Gifts
Aidan Gill for Men
Long before the facial-hair frenzy begot the male grooming renaissance, Aidan Gill championed the art of gentlemanliness. Sharp-dressed men and those in need of gifts for same will find fine accessories and old-fashioned grooming implements brought thoroughly up to date: elegant… - Gallery
Angela King Gallery
Opened in 2007 in a show of much-needed post-Katrina solidarity, this is still one of the best contemporary art galleries in the city. King shows works by significant artists such as Peter Max, Andrew Baird, Richard Currier, Steve Taylor, Raymond Douillet, Patterson & Barnes, and… - Gallery
Antieau Gallery
We adore the supremely clever Chris Roberts-Antieau’s whimsical side (sewn works that riff on current events and social mores) and her dark side (macabre snow globes and a dollhouse re-creation of the In Cold Blood crime scene). It also has an Uptown location, at 4532 Magazine St.… - Bookstores
Arcadian Books
Bibliophiles will bask in these wondrous, dusty stacks, especially lovers of the classics (in English and Latin); the history (local and far beyond) inquisitive; and seekers of French, German, or Russian literatured in their native tongue. Proprietor Russell Desmond is ridiculously… Art Markets
If you’re in town on the last Saturday of any month, consider a trip to the Palmer Park Arts Market (S. Carrollton and S. Claiborne Aves., last stop on the St. Charles streetcar line; www.artscouncilofneworleans.org; [tel] 504/523-1465). From 10am to 4pm you’ll find paintings,…- Fashion
Art and Eyes
Eyeglass wearers who demand something above average: For a souvenir you’ll use daily, consider something from this extensive assortment of fabulous frames for discerning heads. Artisan-made, unusual materials, vintage, designer, imported…too much gorgeousness to pick just one. - Gallery
Arthur Roger Gallery
Arthur Roger pioneered the Warehouse District and fine-arts scene when he opened in New Orleans some 30 years ago, tying the local community to the New York art world. Still blazing trails with shows that range from strongly regional to far-flung, the gallery represents Francis X.… - Gallery
Ashley Longshore
Not for the faint of heart or wallet, Ashley’s clever, crass art riffs on pop culture and wealth-worship in bright hues and high-gloss. She slams (or glorifies?) materialism and winks at celebrity on pillows and paintings, but they’re flower-strewn and alit with butterflies, so hey,… - Bookstores
Beckham’s Bookshop
More than 50,000 volumes carefully collected by the store’s owners (and one cat) jam the two floors at beloved Beckham’s—a pillar of the Quarter’s thriving indie bookshop scene for nearly 50 years. It has used books for all interests (browse the glass cases for rare gems) and a fine… - Housewares
Bevolo
Even if you’re not planning to take home a handmade copper gaslight lantern as your vacation souvenir, you should check out Bevolo because a) the lanterns are a gorgeous local tradition; b) master craftsmen fabricate them right in front of you at the onsite workshop; and c) you might… - Food
Blue Frog Chocolates
Perhaps the finest chocolate and candy collection in the city. Just for starters, it carries Nancy’s truffles, Norman Love chocolates, Michel Cluizel fresh butter creams from France, and Jordan almonds (good ones are difficult to find). Hop on over. - Bookstores
Books a Million
Hand it to the chains that are still committed to bookselling, and this one stocks a good selection of local titles. If you’re passing through, this is a good place to pick up New Orleans–related books on your way to or from the city. Bottom of the Cup Tearoom
Open since 1929, it bills itself as the “oldest tearoom in the United States,” so a reading with Otis, its premier psychic, is a pretty classic experience. The tearoom psychics can read palms, tarot cards, tea leaves, and crystals, and your experience is guaranteed to be quirky.…Boutique du Vampyre
Of course the only brick-and-mortar vampire shop in America is in New Orleans. Proprietress Marita Jaeger showcases local artisans, custom-made fangs, coffin-shaped backpacks…and for the faint of heart, temporary bite tattoos- Antiques
Bush Antiques
There is serious stuff here, mostly of the European variety, and some not so serious. But the warren of rooms, some cunningly arranged according to theme, are giddy fun to browse whether or not you’re in the market for a 19th-century French Empire settee or an elaborately embroidered… - Malls & Shopping Centers
Canal Place
At the foot of Canal Street (365 Canal St.) near the Mississippi River, this sophisticated shopping mall holds more than 30 shops, many of them elegant retail chains like Brooks Brothers, Saks Fifth Avenue, Coach, Armani, and a sparkling new Tiffany & Co. There’s also a two-story… Carl Mack Presents
Mack, doyen of Mardi Gras entertainment, rents or creates ornate costumes for Fat Tuesday or any day. This is high-production-value stuff—no naughty nurses here.- Gallery
Carol Robinson Gallery
The grande dame of the local contemporary Southern arts scene, Robinson still shows accessible but surprisingly affordable works, including the stunning pastels of Sandra Burshell, Jere Allen’s mysterious figures wafting in white, James King’s haunting oils, and Christina Goodman’s… - Gallery
Christopher Porche-West
Porche-West’s stunning portrait photographs are themselves works of art, but when he sculpts and frames them within magnificent assemblages of architectural remnants, mechanical parts, natural materials, and found oddities, he creates highly collectible, singular statement pieces in… - Antiques
Cohen & Sons
Specializing in antique weapons, coins, and currency from points near and far, dating back to B.C. They’re not the friendliest folk (unless you’re a serious collector), but it’s well worth a look (and a locally minted antique coin or doubloon from actual sunken treasure make splendid… - Gallery
Cole Pratt Gallery
A showcase for Southern artists whose creations include abstract and realist paintings, sculptures, and ceramics. The art is of the highest quality, prices are surprisingly reasonable, and the staff is welcoming. Open Tuesday through Saturday 10am to 5pm. - Antiques
Collectible Antiques
One of our favorites of the dusty, jumbled, and eclectic antiques/junk stores on the Esplanade end of Decatur. Its stock runs from Art Deco to 1960s collectibles. - Bookstores
Crescent City Books
Rooms and shelves and more rooms and shelves cradle easily- browsable, serious literature for the seriously literate, with an emphasis on rare history, local interest, literary criticism, philosophy, and art. It’s also a general hub of info about literary events, and has a small but… - Souvenirs
DNO (Defend New Orleans)
Small shop with smart and stylish locally inspired goods, comfy shirts and hoodies, caps, home decor, plus some lesser-known NOLA-related books. We dig the "n.o.” caps and the T-shirts lettered with iconic corner grocery signage: “FRESH MEAT COLD BEER * WINE LIQUOR PO-BOYS.” - Arts & Crafts
Derby Pottery
One of Mark Derby’s hand-pressed tiles, glazed in gleaming single hues, makes for a lovely keepsake (particularly the New Orleans street-name tile reproductions). One hundred make for a stunning backsplash or fireplace surround. Ceramic mugs and water meter clocks make excellent,… - Souvenirs
Dirty Coast
Utterly witty, eye-catching, and original T-shirt designs (painted in the city), like the “Crawfish Pi,” with the Greek symbol composed of a tasty pile of mudbugs, and “504Ever.” Locations way uptown or in the French Quarter. - Fashion
Dollz & Dames
If the Frenchmen Street jitterbugging scene has released your inner pin-up gal, this is your store. The vintage-y frocks make for darling date-wear but we’d wear them any time. Tops cost $60 to $130, and dresses are under $200. Cute accessories, custom T-strap dance shoes, and… Domino Sound Record Shack
A one-room beats shop off the beaten track. Stellar ska, rock steady, and R&B collections; world music from countries you’ve never heard of; local weirdness; and pretty much everything Sun Ra ever put out. All vinyl except for about 37 cassettes. Bonus points for proximity to…- Arts & Crafts
Dr. Bob
He of the now-iconic “be nice or leave” folk-art signs. Euclid Records
If you love the smell of vinyl in the morning, or any time, Euclid will fire your pheromones. This younger-than-it-feels Bywater record store (sistah of the iconic St. Louis shop) stocks vintage platters from every era and gobs of local goods. Look for occasional in-store…- Bookstores
Faulkner House Books
That Nobel prize–winner William Faulkner lived here while writing his early works is but one literary morsel in this winning recipe for a perfect small bookshop. Shelf after high shelf is occupied by decidedly desirable titles, from stunning first editions to Southern authors and… Fifi Mahony’s
Wig wackiness, why not? Cutesy or crazy, have the hair you’ve always wanted (even if just for the day). Worth visiting just to see (or get) their outrageous custom pieces. Salon and makeup services, too.- Fashion
Fleur de Paris
The 1920s and 1930s elegance on display here is positively swoonworthy. The hand-blocked, stylishly trimmed hats are expensive, but these are works of art. They also have luscious stockings and scarves, an ever-changing collection of vintage gowns, and custom design services. - Souvenirs
Fleurty Girl
It’s hard to leave here without one (or more) of its pithy and near-perfect NOLA-centric T-shirts, even if some need a NOLA-to-English translation. Dig the cocktail-related tees, like “KEEP CALM AND CARRY A GO-CUP” and the Mardi Gras–inspired “EVERYWHERE ELSE IT’S JUST TUESDAY.” Also… - Gallery
Frank Relle Gallery
Sometimes spooky, sometimes serene, Relle’s nightscapes of the local swamps and architecture are undeniably stunning. - Bookstores
Garden District Book Shop
This sweet, medium-size shop is stocked with just about every New Orleans– or Louisiana-themed book you can think of, no matter what the focus: interiors, exteriors, food, Creoles, fiction, poetry, you name it—including many signed copies. Best-sellers, too. Currently catless. - Jewelry
GoGo
Designer GoGo’s own colorful silver cuffs, necklaces, and belt buckles in attention-getting designs like a cartoon-punchy “POW!” burst are just plain funwear. But her selection of other artist-made jewelry (and taxidermy and paint-by-number art) make a visit to this itty-bitty… - Antiques
Greg’s Antiques
A funky mixed bag of serious antiques, junky used furniture, salvaged windows and ironwork, and original local art on consignment—not necessarily pedigreed but at pretty decent prices—make this a personal favorite. Frequent shipments and sales mean goods move fast. Upcycle, Greg’s… - Gifts
Hazelnut
The housewares and gifts here are generally cute, with one dazzling standout: the line of toile items with a customized pattern of iconic New Orleans scenes—the St. Charles streetcar, a live oak tree, St. Louis Cathedral, and such. It’s desperately darling and we want it all—the… - Gallery
Hemmerling Gallery
Bill Hemmerling’s paintings of spirituals, jazz musicians, and his muse, “Sweet Olive,” have charmed collectors and curators alike with their dignified naiveté. His second career as a painter spanned just 7 years, following his retirement from Sears and until his death in 2009. The… - Perfume & Cosmetics
Hové
The oldest perfumery in the city, Hové features a fabulous selection of all-natural scents for men and women. Original creations (“Kiss in the Dark”) and Southern smells such as vetivert and tea olive, available in many forms, make lovely presents, even for you. Literature buffs will… - Malls & Shopping Centers
JaX Brewery
Just across from Jackson Square at 600–620 Decatur St., the old brewery building has been transformed into a jumble of shops and cafes (and good bathrooms). It’s a good stop for clothing and souvenirs, particularly the crawfish logo’d polo shirts and other preppie wear at Perlis.… - Gallery
Jonathan Ferrara Gallery
Since 1998, Ferrara has been showing emerging cross-media artists. Exhibitions are typically accessible yet thought-provoking, with an eye toward playfulness and irony. Skylar Fein’s pop pundit pieces are both hilarious and horrifying in their truth; the G.A.S. Caravaggio photobombs… - Malls & Shopping Centers
Julia Street
Many of the city’s best contemporary art galleries (many listed below under “Art Galleries”) line Julia Street from Camp Street to the river. The quality of local talent exhibited here—among both creators and curators—is quite astounding. - Food
Keife & Co
If you just can’t get out the door, Keife & Co. will deliver a basket with gourmet meats, cheeses, and wine to your Central Business District hotel room. If you can get out, stop in to grab a bottle on your way to the restaurant or to take home. Great selection; even better… - Antiques
Keil’s Antiques
Established in 1899 and currently run by the fourth generation of the founding family, Keil’s has a considerable collection of 18th- and 19th-century French and English furniture, chandeliers, jewelry, and decorative items spanning three crowded floors and most budgets. Try to talk… - Bookstores
Kitchen Witch
In a town of foodies, chefs, cooks, and eaters of all interests and proficiencies, this quirky used-cookbook store is the rainbow’s end. It’s chockablock with nearly 10,000 volumes, from the ultra-rare to the just-released—and if the delightful owners don’t have it, they’ll find it.… - Gallery
Kurt E. Schon, Ltd.
Behold the country’s largest inventory of 19th-century European paintings. The stunning collection, rivaling or exceeding that in many museums, includes French and British Impressionist and post-Impressionist paintings as well as art from the Royal Academy and the French Salon. - Food
Laura’s Candies
Charming Laura’s is said to be the city’s oldest candy store, established in 1913. The pralines are fabulous but the rich, delectable (if pricey) golf ball–size truffles are a personal favorite indulgence. Get your fix - Fashion
Lili Vintage
Lili is the utopian women’s vintage clothing boutique, because of Laura Hourguettes. Everything in this dollhouse—from crinolines to cardigans and Victoriana to Audreyana—is pristinely selected, beautifully merchandised, in good condition, and, OMG, well-priced (not thrift-store… Louisiana Music Factory
The place to get yourself informed about and stocked with New Orleans music, with helpful staff and a large selection of regional music—including Cajun, zydeco, R&B, jazz, blues, and gospel—plus books, posters, and T-shirts. Live performances most Saturdays. It's especially…- Fashion
Love It!
Charming owner Danna Lea’s restyled vintage clothes and exquisite, hand-crafted hats, purses, and accessories made from found leathers, feathers, and other adornments are worth the hunt and the splurge. A few well-selected new dresses at this jewel box of a shop, too. - Antiques
Lucullus
A wonderful collection of culinary antiques as well as 17th-through 19th-century furnishings to “complement the grand pursuits of cooking, dining, and imbibing.” You’ll find all manner of china, Art Deco silverware, oyster plates, and rare absinthe accoutrements. - Antiques
M.S. Rau
The sheer scale and absurdity of the inventory makes century-old Rau a must-see for everyone and a destination for serious buyers. Every opulent item that could possibly be crafted from fine metals, gems, crystal, wood, china, and marble, plus articles made by every name known to the… - Antiques
Magazine Antique Mall
Diggers will dig the superb browsing and many good deals found among the 50-plus variegated stalls here. - Malls & Shopping Centers
Magazine Street
The Garden District’s premier shopping drag, 6 miles of antiques, boutiques, galleries, and all manner of restaurants in 19th-century brick storefronts and quaint cottage-like buildings, from Washington Street to Audubon Park. Prime sections are, roughly, the 3700 to 4300 blocks… - Bookstores
Maple Street Book Shop
This beloved uptown destination just celebrated its 50th anniversary. Maple Street satisfies bookworms seeking new, used, or children’s books. - Souvenirs
Marie Laveau’s House of Voodoo
This is tourist Voodoo, to be sure, but the Voodoo dolls and gris-gris bags make great souvenirs for the right friends. - Jewelry
Marion Cage
Cage’s ultrafine, exquisitely wrought work is popular with collectors in Paris and New York, where she worked before opening this gallery in her native New Orleans. Clean lines of matte rose and yellow gold, rhodium, and hardwoods start around $95, like the slender initial pendants.… - Wines & Liquors
Martin Wine Cellar
Massive Martin carries an eye-popping selection of wines, beers, and spirits for the connoisseur, the casual imbiber, or the BYOer, many at surprisingly reasonable prices. A terrific, full-service deli and good selection of cheeses, cookies, and such make for a fine picnic, in your… - Gallery
Martine Chaisson Gallery
The stark, sweeping space screams for high-impact, highly saturated imagery, and so far Martine delivers, particularly with Herman Mhire’s manipulated portraiture, J. T. Blatty’s striking photography of nudes with fossils, and Norman Mooney’s frisson-inducing carbon-on-paper imagery. - Fashion
Meyer the Hatter
Family-owned for more than 100 years, this haberdashery has one of the largest selections of fine hats and caps in the South. Men will find distinguished international labels such as Bailey, Stetson, Kangol, Dobbs, and Biltmore (the women’s collection is smaller). Let them fuss over… - Jewelry
Mignon Faget, Ltd.
Faget, a New Orleans native, lends her signature style to New Orleans–specific designs in gold, silver, and bronze d’oré (and housewares)—all superb souvenirs or gifts. Monday to Saturday 10am to 7pm, Sunday noon to 6pm (Magazine St. open Mon–Sat 10am–6pm). - Gallery
Modernist Cuisine Gallery
Those familiar with the game-changing Modernist Cuisine cookbooks may recognize Nathan Myhrvold’s vibrant food photos. They look great on the page and online, but up close and personal, the large-format, resin-coated prints are even yummier. Bean sprouts were never more enticing. - Fashion
Muse
Gentlemen, should the city and the spirit induce an undeniable need for a metallic paisley, madras plaid, seersucker sport jacket, Muse will fix you right up (seasonally, and for only about $250). The Jackson Square boutique also dishes fab accessories and girly fashion. - China & Glassware
New Orleans School of GlassWorks & Printmaking Studio
The New Orleans School of GlassWorks & Printmaking Studio offers visitors two-hour hands-on classes in Venetian glassblowing, torchwork, welding, metal sculpture, printmaking, jewelry, stained glass, sugar blowing and copper enameling. Prominent New Orleans Artists collaborate… - Art
OMG!
New and reclaimed religious folk art, anchored by Jan Keels’ stirring gossamer, oil-on-wood angels and dancers and Jeff Passage's comely watercolor cemeteries. Fab Virgins Saints & Angels jewelry and hand-poured candles. - Bookstores
Octavia Books
For those who adore independent bookstores, this far-uptown beauty with its sweet, tiny patio (complete with waterfall but no cat) is worth the detour. There is much more to savor here, in the extensive, well-selected stock and in the frequent signings and readings. - Fashion
Oh!
Whether or not you need a cocktail dress or ball gown, Sandy Thigpen’s collection of vintage new and gently used finery is nonetheless an utter scream—from Halston disco pants to last year’s perfect Chanel suit to an authentic fringed flapper get-up to, well, you get the idea.… Peaches Records
Peaches’ first store (circa 1975) was a stop-off for R&B royalty (Stevie Wonder!) and helped launch local hip-hop artists like Juvenile and Lil Wayne. Still family-owned and a hip-hop hub, the spacious store stocks a broad swath of locally focused CDs, vinyl, books, DVDs, and one…- Gallery
Photo Works
Photographer Louis Sahuc’s family has been in New Orleans “since day one,” and his life’s work has been photodocumenting iconic New Orleans imagery, such as Jackson Square swathed in fog, or fragments of ironwork. Queork
All-cork merchandise seems a strange concept, till you spy that want-want-want $39 iPad cover. Then it’s a slippery slope to a cork belt and surprisingly durable cork-upholstered furniture and the shoes, oh, the shoes. It has a second location Uptown at 3005 Magazine St. (tel.…- Gallery
Red Truck Gallery
The mad, sharp sensibility here plays out in conceptual art that is sometimes bizarre, often brilliant, and utterly covetous. We’d take any of Dennis McNett's sly, carved portraits on wood; Bryan Cunningham’s whack folk assemblages; or Adam Wallacavage’s sea-creature chandeliers. - Malls & Shopping Centers
Riverbend, MAPLE & Oak Street
To reach these fetching Carrollton area shops, ride the St. Charles Avenue streetcar to stop no. 44, then walk a block down Maple Street. There, Maple Street Book Store, upscale boutique Angelique, and delectable po’ boy shop The Sammich inhabit several renovated old buildings. Four… - Gallery
Rodrigue Studio New Orleans
The late Cajun artist George Rodrigue's ubiquitous Blue Dog is the Zelig of New Orleans art: The cobalt kitsch canine appears in every imaginable pose and setting and invades your consciousness. Obnoxious? You be the judge. The gallery also displays Rodrigue’s considerable classical… - Fashion
Rubenstein’s
Many a proper young New Orleans man learned the art of attire here. For more than 90 years the hallowed haberdasher has outfitted gents in custom suits, fine menswear, and perfect prepwear. Their pros will dress you to the nines and fit you to a T. Quick-turnaround tailoring gets you… - Fashion
ShoeBeDO
As much a gallery as a shoe store, it’s worth a visit just to gawk at the outrageousness. More power to you if you can actually pull off this crazy glam footwear. - Art
Simon of New Orleans/Antiques on Jackson
Folk artist Simon, whose brightly painted signs are seen throughout New Orleans in homes and businesses, will paint-to-order your own personal sign and ship it to you. There’s also a particularly good collection of primitive furniture, antiques, and hodgepodgery. - Food
Southern Candymakers
Our top choice for pralines offers the usual suspects and some non-traditionals (coconut and sweet potato!), and all are just extra creamylicious (and made fresh right in front of you—if the display doesn’t reel you in, the aroma will). We swoon for the pecan-laden tortues; the boxed… Southern Costume Company
They rent, they design, they alter, they'll get you dressed. Enormous stock, reasonable prices, and helpful service.- Food
Sucré
The beautiful, high-end confections at these stylish cafes—sherbet-hued macarons, gold-dusted chocolates—are ideal for an afternoon indulgence or gifts (they’re as pretty as they are pricey, and not overly sweet, so opinions vary from bland to brilliant). But we’re partial to the… - Malls & Shopping Centers
THE OUTLET collection AT RIVERWALK
Brand spanking new in 2014, Neiman Marcus Last Call, Coach, and 75 other outlet stores fill the 3-story, $80 million mall. Bargains? That’s a bonus when you can walk from the French Quarter, shop with a daiquiri in hand, and enjoy the best view from a mall food court in existence at… - Fashion
Tchoup Industries
Stylish, sturdy messenger bags, backpacks, dop kits, and purses made on-site from sustainable, repurposed, and locally sourced or made materials. Think waxed canvas, sailcloth, burlap, alligator skins, nutria fur. Good for the environment and the community—and good-looking to boot. The French Market
These historic, open-air shops begin on Decatur Street across from Jackson Square; offerings include candy, housewares, fashion, crafts, toys, New Orleans memorabilia, and jewelry. Recent renovations added a stage for live music or cooking demos, and much-improved food booths include…- Jewelry
Thomas Mann Designs/Gallery I/O
Local jewelry designer Thomas Mann is known for his “techno-romantic” work with metal and found objects, creating curious pieces of highly original jewelry and housewares that straddle a line between classic and contemporary. - Fashion
Trashy Diva
There’s actually nothing trashy about the 1940s and [‘]50s vintage-inspired clothes here. The flirty, curve-flattering numbers in silks and velvets appeal to both Bettys and Goths, as do the similar-era shoes and va-va-voom corsets and lingerie. Check the sales racks for good… - Gallery
Tresor
New to the city, this outpost of a Florida gallery leans a little too heavily on pop surrealism tropes, but it’s positively worth a visit for Lisa Brawn’s celebrity portraits in woodcut and Dave Hind’s remarkable piecemealed metalwork amalgamations. - Fashion
UAL
This destination for local and visiting fashionistas offers incredible deals on discontinued and leftover designer goods (Chloe, McQueen, Stella McCartney, Jason Wu, Chanel). Markdowns and one-off stock can lead to fiercely competitive (but utterly satisfying) hit-or-miss guerilla… - Wines & Liquors
Vieux Carré Wine and Spirits
If you’re looking for Herbsaint, absinthe, or Sazerac rye, are a serious wine buyer, or just want a bottle for your hotel room or dinner, this densely packed French Quarter shop will fit the bill. - Fashion
Violet’s
This is a great temptation among French Quarter shops, given our adoration of romantic, Edwardian, and [‘]20s-inspired clothes in lush velvets and satins. The dazzling creations here come with appropriate accessories (jewelry, hats, scarves). Contemporary wear as well, with an… - Souvenirs
Voodoo Authentica
With two big rooms of Voodoo paraphernalia, it feels like a real retail establishment, and the merchandise feels authentic. The locally made Voodoo dolls, potions, spell candles, and daubs range from cheap to costly, and there are simple souvenirs as well as serious works of art. - Wines & Liquors
W.I.N.O.
Try before you buy with the Wine Institute of New Orleans’s enomatic system. Top up a debit card and set to dispensing 1-, 2-, or 3-ounce pours of some 120 wines, covering many regions and varietals. Cheese, charcuterie, and tapas plates round out the experience; then grab a bottle… - Fashion
odAOMO
Owner/designer Dr. Sophia Aomo Omoro designs dresses, bags, and accessories that are hand-crafted in Kenya by her own small team. The looks are breezy, exotic, fashion-forward and eminently wearable. The real standouts are the statement neckpieces, belts, and bags of leather,…
More About New Orleans Shopping
New Orleans Nightlife
New Orleans works her wily exotic charms most effectively after dark, when the jazz singers and cocktail slingers ply their magic. It is impossible to imagine this city without a soundtrack of jazz, brass bands, R&B, hip hop, Cajun, and zydeco. After all, this is the town that sends you to your grave with music and then dances back from the cemetery. It’s the city that lets the good times roll, and lets you take them to go (you can stroll the streets with a drink in hand, as long as it’s in a plastic “go cup”—or “geaux” to use the faux-French). Here, some of the world’s greatest musicians (no exaggeration) can be seen and heard with relative ease in remarkably intimate surroundings. And when the clubs get too full, no matter: The crowd spills into the street, where the talking, drinking, and dancing continue.
We’ll help you wend your way through all the awesomeness, but don’t forget that tomorrow beckons, with more of the city’s enchantments to explore. First, a few things to know:
* Club hopping is easy. The city is relatively compact, so most clubs are within easy walking or taxi distance from your hotel or dinner locale. Many are closely clustered so you can hop from one to another. Club clusters can be found on Bourbon Street in the Quarter; Frenchmen Street in the Marigny; Tchoupitoulas Street in the Warehouse District; and around Willow Street in the Riverbend.
* Showtimes vary. Posted start and end times range from strict to strictly a suggestion (and sometimes indicate door times, not show times). Call if your schedule depends on it.
* Yes, they card. Some clubs allow 18-year-olds, and a few allow kids to early shows when accompanied by a parent (Three Muses, Maison, Rock ‘n’ Bowl). Mostly, though, it’s 21+ and expect to be carded. Even you, grandpa. It's da law.
* No cover doesn’t mean free. It means buy drinks (bottled water counts) and tip the band (and/or buy their CDs, merch, whatever).
* Early shows rock. Shows starting anywhere from 4 to 7pm are often no or low cover, mellower music, and a great way to avoid the crowds and the crazy.
* Cover charges vary widely. During big events and for big acts, they can be much higher than cited here. Crowd sizes also vary accordingly.
* Music is everywhere. A blurry line separates “clubs” from bars, restaurants, hotel lounges, streets, parks, and front stoops. All can showcase music, so don’t overlook them.
* What’s going on: Check Offbeat.com and sign up for “Weekly Beats” e-mails or go to WWOZ.org/livewire (you can also tune in to 90.7; club lineups are announced at the top of every odd hour). Both have good apps, worthy of downloading for the duration of your visit (and after).
Can’t-Miss New Orleans Musical Experiences
- Kermit Ruffins, anywhere he and his rowdy trumpet show up (try Blue Nile, Little Gem, Bullets, or the iconic Mother-in-Law Lounge, which he now owns).
- The Soul Rebels brass band’s roof-raising Thursday sets at Les Bon Temps Roulé.
- The soul-wrenching, party-starting early set of the sublime John Boutté at d.b.a.
- Multi-instrumentalist (and mad musical mastermind) Aurora Nealand with her Royal Roses or in other forms. Try to keep your toes from tapping. Just. Try.
- The mellow tones and vivid lyrics of folk-leaning Paul Sanchez, Alexandra Scott, or troubadour Andrew Duhon.
- Piano wizards Tom McDermott, Josh Paxton, or Jon Cleary, solo or not.
- Swank hotel lounging. Try the Davenport Lounge at the Ritz-Carlton, the Monteleone’s Carousel Bar, or the Windsor Court’s Polo Club.
- Catching someone huge like Pearl Jam or Bonnie Raitt at Tipitina’s (give the Fess Head statue an extra rub for your good fortune).
- Brilliant singer-songwriter-guitarist and Death Valley dry wit Alex McMurray solo or in any of his many guises, like the Tin Men trio (or if you hit the jackpot, doing sea shanties with the Valparaiso Men’s Chorus).
- Rebirth Brass Band at the Maple Leaf on a Tuesday. Or anywhere, any day.
- Bounce queen Big Freedia live at the Republic. Or anywhere, any day, also.
- Bowling and dancing at Rock ‘n’ Bowl, especially on zydeco night.
- Excellent modern jazz in a quality room, like Snug Harbor, Little Gem, or the Jazz Playhouse.
- Seeing the Stooges, Hot 8, Soul Rebels, TBC, or Rebirth and finally getting what this brass band thing is all about—and never wanting it to stop.
- Dr. Michael White, whose dulcet clarinet snake-charms even diehard jazz cynics.
- DJ Soul Sister, whose rainbow flow jams the floor monthly at One Eyed Jacks.
- Don Vappie on banjo, perhaps the swingingest strumming you’ll ever see.
- The Wild Magnolias. Just. See. Them. Or any Mardi Gras Indians band.
- Corey Henry ripping the roof off of Vaughan’s in the storied Thursday-night slot.
- Catching King James & Special Men, Flow Tribe, or Brass-a-Holics before they get any huger. Later you can say you knew them when.
- A show at Preservation Hall, where the soul of traditional jazz oozes from the instruments as much as from the ancient-looking walls.
- Superstar Trombone Shorty if he happens to be back in town on his home turf.
- Bars & Pubs
21st Amendment
New in 2014 but harkening to the prohibition era, the former mob den (for reals) is a bit too spiffy for a proper speakeasy, with its copper-topped bar and, matching Tommy guns, and carefully hung gangster photos. But the small, tucked-away room and well-crafted hooch make for a… - Gay & Lesbian Bars
700 Club
No, not that 700 Club. Just a low-key, chandelier-lit bar you can wander into, get a decent drink and—as locals know—sample something from the surprisingly good Faubourg Bistro kitchen (food served noon–2am daily). The scene here is no scene. Sometimes that’s perfect. Apple Barrel
Time was, Frenchmen Street was a quiet little stretch where neighbors shopped, ate, and drank. They did the latter—and still do—right here, especially weeknights when they can fit into the dank shoebox of a room. Nowadays the Barrel is almost an afterthought, given the plethora of…- Pub
Avenue Pub
This is beer geek heaven, what with 40+ options on tap and many more in bottles. Proper glassware and weekly cask ales show they’re serious about their suds, but even the PBR crowd enjoys the upstairs balcony overlooking St. Charles Boulevard (and the currywurst and fries). - Bars & Pubs
BB King's
We tend to eschew chains. With so many wonderfully individualistic choices, why go cookie-cutter? But there’s comfort in familiarity, and if Frenchmen Street’s crowds and scruffiness seem intimidating or overwhelming, BB Kings won’t. The multi-level room is spacious and accessible;… - Bars & Pubs
BJ’s Lounge
All Bywater roads lead to junked-up corner bar BJ’s on Mondays, when the local denizens, pool shooters, and High Life drinkers all groove to the soul-searing blues and raucous rhythms of King James and the Special Men. Little Freddie King hits it occasionally, and some guy named… - Bar
Bakery Bar
There are two important reasons to recommend this comfy, oddly-located spot tucked in the shadows of the Pontchartrain Expressway: 1) It is a bar. 2) It is a bakery. Featuring the elusive, exceptional Debbie Does Doberge cakes: moist, multi-layered mouthgasms worth a taxi ride.… Bamboula’s
Built from scratch in ‘13 with no retro material left behind, the spacious wood-copper-tin-tile-brick–laden Bamboula does a decent job of fitting in with the street’s much-older vibe, but still needs to find its footing. The food bears little mention and the music acts playing the…- Bars & Pubs
Bar Tonique
If we lived in this Quarter’s-edge neighborhood, this would be our bar. Except we wouldn’t be anti-hip service industry locals, and we’d chat up the tourists more. Mostly we’d glow in the candlelight bouncing off the original brick walls, or cozy up with our honey in the smoochy… - Bar
Barrel Proof
As the name implies, whiskey is the leading man at this shadowy, wood and tin-walled room in the Lower Garden District. And beer, for the beer-and-a-shot specials. If you know and love your brown liquor, the substantive selection, primarily American, Japanese, and Scottish, will blow… - Beer Gardens
Bayou Beer Garden and Bayou Wine Garden
For visitors looking for the “real” New Orleans, here’s a taste. Two, actually. Bayou Beer Garden is a neighborhood bar with a big, covered backyard deck, big screens, and a big beer list. The sister wine bar, connected by a walkway, has a slightly upper-scaler atmosphere and food… - Bar
Black Penny
Red alert, beer aficionados: Here on the Quarter’s upper edge lies mellow ambience and a killer selection of 75-plus canned craft and local brews. Also, some well-made cocktails. If you’re not an aforementioned B.A., you might become one, thanks to the infinitely patient, helpful… Blue Nile
This chill, midsize club has a killer sound system and pretty much zero attitude, making it a fun hang for the local, reggae, and jam bands they book. Late-night DJs upstairs.- Bar
Buffa's
“Hey, let’s throw some diner-style tables and chairs in our nondescript back room, book some top, local, jazz-leaning musicians, and create a friendly, laid-back scene.” Okay, we’re in. The burgers are juicy, the beer cold, and kids are welcome. Bonus worth bookmarking: bar and… - Bar
Bullet's Sports Bar
Situated on a residential street named for the civil rights attorney credited with fighting local Jim Crow laws, this gritty 7th Ward bar comes alive with a bullet on Fridays when the all-female Pinettes brass band plays, and on Thursdays when trumpeter Kermit Ruffins holds sway. The…7th Ward - Gay & Lesbian Bars
Café Lafitte in Exile
One of the oldest gay bars in the U.S., this was established in 1933 and claims Tennessee Williams as a patron. It's got a theme-night cruise bar downstairs (not so much for teeny-boppers or twinks) and a friendly, publike atmosphere upstairs. We don’t really get the famous… - Bars & Pubs
Candlelight Lounge
The big event at one of the last operating clubs in the Faubourg Tremé happens Wednesdays around 10pm when the incomparable Tremé Brass Band takes the small stage. Think free red beans and rice, cheap fast-flowing beer, super-friendly staff, and communal tables (some far from the… - Bars & Pubs
Cane & Table
C&T’s “sophisticated faded” decor is marked by distressed plaster and brick walls, sparkly chandeliers, a gleaming white-marble bar top, and a slim, sexy patio. But rum (that’s the cane) is the star, mixed with housemade ingredients and squeezed-to-order juice by some of New… - Bars & Pubs
Carousel Bar at the Monteleone Hotel
No, you’re not drunk (or maybe you are). The bar is spinning (one drink per rotation is the purported ratio—don’t worry, it's slo-o-o-w). There's plenty of soignee sofa seating and fine piano-based entertainment, but the classic experience requires a coveted seat at one of the 25… - Bars & Pubs
Cat’s Meow
The drinks and drink specials flow aplenty—the better to loosen the larynx at this foremost karaoke mecca. Whether or not you take the mic, the scene is entertaining and the crowds get thick. Then they get drunk. The action starts at 4pm Monday through Thursday, and 2pm Friday… - Bar
Cavan
Well-crafted classic and modern drinks are served in pretty glassware at the upstairs and downstairs bars, or on the fetching patio of this exquisitely converted Victorian mansion. Although it’s a full service restaurant, we enjoyed the bars and the drinking experience better than… - Bar
Cellardoor
This supermodel—a near-hidden, converted brothel—is one of the most stunning, sexy bars in the city, so it has some airs about it. It's still approachable and worth it for the look, the drinks made with care, and good bar snacks. Dressed-up date-nighters and young professionals mix… Chickie Wah-Wah
We’re ever so fond of this Mid-City club, where the best of the local roots, rock, blues, and singer-songwriter acts draw reverent crowds. Cool old tin signs lend ambience to the clean, midsize, shotgun-style room, and food occasionally pops up inside or at food trucks. It’s off the…Mid-City- Bars & Pubs
Circle Bar
It's hard to believe this club was totally renovated a few years ago. The 1883 building maintained the quirky, elegant decay suitable to the laid-back, Marlboro-loving clientele in this tiny dive. The jukebox feeds the idiosyncratic vibe with mood-enhancing selections from the Velvet… - The Performing Arts
Civic Theatre
Before 2013 there was nothing in here but the exquisite Deco chandelier and a flock of pigeons. Little was spared in restoring the original 1906 architecture and plasterwork in this triple-tiered, midsize theater. The lineup has stretched from John Prine to Slayer to Belle and… - Gay & Lesbian Bars
Country Club
We still miss the days when this bar, pool, restaurant, club was an anything-goes, clothing-optional, locals retreat. But we’ll admit that the new and much-improved version is quite delightful (and tastier, with the former Commander’s Palace chef now handling kitchen duties). The… - Bars & Pubs
Crescent City Brewhouse
When it was opened by a world-renowned master brewer in 1991, CCB was the first new brewery in New Orleans in more than 70 years. Its German-style beers still hold up in the current microbrewery heyday, and come with a full menu, excellent balcony view, and live jazz. - Bars & Pubs
Cure
This mixologist mecca helped instigate the resurgence of both craft cocktails in New Orleans and now-booming Freret Street. It's an oasis of sleek, boasting great small plates and some of the most knowledgeable bar chefs in town, who blend exceptional ingredients with personable… - Pub
Erin Rose
Triple threat: friendly, unassuming Irish pub, craft cocktail bar, and Killer Po’ Boys in the back room. That’s the name and the bold-but-accurate description of the enterprise. Try the rum-marinated pork-belly po’ boy with citrus lime slaw. Killer, indeed (so good they opened… - Bars & Pubs
French 75 Bar at Arnaud’s
A beautiful, intimate bar space in one of the Quarter’s most venerable restaurants, French 75 won a 2017 James Beard award for Outstanding Bar Program. It feels like drinking in New Orleans should: classic and classy. Acclaimed bartender Chris Hannah and others are equally adept at… Fritzel’s European Jazz Pub
From the open street front, this 1831 building looks sketchy, overlookable even. The pushy door folk will aggressively attempt to hustle you to a seat at the cramped picnic tables and rush to take your drink order. Let them: Some of the best traditional jazz is played on the teensy…Funky Pirate
The XXL attraction here is bluesman “Big” Al Carson, who holds court Tuesday through Saturday. It’s popular, sometimes packed, always pirate-y. Note: If “Drink slime green liquid from a plastic weapon” is on your bucket list, get the horrid, famously potent Hand Grenade next door at…Gasa Gasa
Filling the eclectic, indie-rock niche in a single room, Gasa draws a Tulane-to-20-something crowd to the single room. Occasional readings, arts exhibits, the hopping Freret Street scene, and the mind-blowing exterior mural by Berlin-based street artist MTO add to the allure.- Gay & Lesbian Bars
Good Friends Bar & Queens Head Pub
This truly is a friendly spot, drawing mixed genders, types, and ages. We like that the decor and music aren’t generically techno’ed out—it at least tries to maintain some NOLA feel—and that the straight-welcoming local denizens will gladly chat you up. The upstairs Queens Head Pub… - Bar
Hot Tin
Leading the pack among the explosion of rooftop bars (Alto at the Ace Hotel; Monkey Board at the Troubadour), the Tin Roof has the vintage feel of a 1940s writer’s studio, and the cocktails are just fine. But the main draw is THE VIEW. Probably the best in the city, day or night. Be… House of Blues
You can find this chain club elsewhere and you can find authentic (vs. ersatz) folk-art-laden roadhouses within a few miles (hello, Tipitina’s). It’s lost its domineering booking muscle to other venues but when there is something worthy (Gaga and Gary Clark, Jr., have played here…Kermit’s Tremé Mother-in-Law Lounge
All aboard! Trumpeter and unofficial NOLA mayor Kermit Ruffins took over this brightly muraled, historic spot from dearly beloved Ernie K-Doe (the decor no longer features his illustrious manikin, sadly). It mostly draws 7th Ward locals; entertainment is irregular and consists mostly…- Pub
Kerry Irish Pub
This pub has darts, pool, a proper pint of Guinness, and Beth Patterson, who mashes traditional Celtic folk, honeyed originals, metal-to-acoustic conversions, and hilariously filthy knockoffs. The Kerry specializes in very-late-night drinking. Nightcap, anyone? - Bars & Pubs
Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop
Even if it wasn’t the oldest bar (and maybe building) in the Quarter or a legendary pirate’s lair, Lafitte’s would merit a visit. It’s ancient and ultra-atmospheric, so even amid the crowd chatter and blaring jukebox, sipping an ale in the crumbling, cavern-like, candlelit interior… - Bars & Pubs
Le Bon Temps Roulé
Another way-uptown, rundown shack with a smoky, cramped bar and decent beer list. So? So schedule your visit to be in town on a Thursday, when the Soul Rebels brass band blows this here roof off. The archetypal local characters are quite welcoming the other 6 nights of the week, too. - The Performing Arts
Le Petit Théâtre du Vieux Carré
One of the oldest community theaters in the U.S., Le Petit has occupied this building since 1923—save for a scary 2011 shutdown. Fortunately, the opening of restaurant Tableau in the shared building enabled the 350-seat Le Petit to reopen, and patrons to enjoy a dinner-and-a-play… - Late Night Dining
Little Gem Saloon
This is jazz-history hallowed ground. The record books may be sketchy, but most agree that jazz began on this block, and perhaps in this very building. The first greats, including Buddy Bolden and Jelly Roll Morton, played the 1906 Little Gem. They’d love this beautifully restored… - The Performing Arts
Mahalia Jackson Theater for the Performing Arts
This cultural hub (located in Armstrong Park bordering the French Quarter) has been home to the local Philharmonic, opera, and ballet companies. The handsome midcentury theater is spacious but not big, so every seat is decent. It also hosts theater, dance troupes, rock concerts, and… Maison Bourbon
Despite its location and the dedicated to the preservation of jazz sign (an attempt to confuse tourists into thinking this is Preservation Hall?), Maison Bourbon isn’t a tourist trap. The music is authentic, often superb Dixieland and traditional jazz, and the brick-lined room is a…- Bars & Pubs
Mannings
Pretty much every bar and club in town, no matter how unsporty, becomes a sports bar on Saints game days. So if you're looking for a place to watch the game, try anywhere. We’ll single out Mannings for its wall-size screen and fully reclining leather lounge chairs—eserve them well in… - Bar
Manolito
This teensy divot just off Decatur Street, helmed by some of the city’s shiniest bar luminaries, will likely be populated by cocktail nerds geeking out on the Cuban-inspired craft cocktails. Nerd or not, join them. These are serious, good, seriously good drinks. And get the tortilla… - Bars & Pubs
Maple Leaf Bar
This classic New Orleans club is a locals bar by day, a poetry hub on Sundays (3pm readings), and a medium-size, tin-ceilinged, twinkle-light-strung club at night. Personal space can become a wistful memory when the crowds pack in (usually be 11), and the drunk frat crowd can be… - Bars & Pubs
Molly’s at the Market
The hangout for bohos and literary locals, who chew over the state of their world and their city in this casual, comfortable, East Village–feeling bar. A kind of platonic-ideal local's bar, it’s perpetually popular. Junction does a pop-up here, ably tending to the puckish with… - The Performing Arts
Music Box Village
We haven’t been everywhere, but we’re pretty sure there’s nothing like the Music Box Village anywhere else. It’s an enchanted collection of artisan-fabricated structures. Each is at once an edifice, an artwork, and a musical instrument—the love child of Burning Man and the London… - Bars & Pubs
Napoleon House
Set in a landmark building, the cave-dark barroom and romantically faded courtyard seem almost too perfectly aged. No plastic surgery here (when it sold in 2015 after 101 years in the same family, new owners swore not to change a thing). Even locals come for the toasty muffuletta and… - Bars & Pubs
One Eyed Jacks
With its bordello-flavored decor (swag curtains and red-flocked wallpaper), Jack’s strikes a funky/retro/hip balance. A busy front bar leads to a tiered main-room floor that wraps around another crowded bar. The cool room full of cool people is booked with cool, alternative-leaning… - Performing Arts Venue
Orpheum
It took $15 million and a lot of elbow grease to restore this drop-dead-stunning, 1,500-seat Beaux Arts theater to its original 1908 glory, after it languished in post-Katrina ruin. Finally reopened in late 2015, it now hosts the Louisiana Philharmonic and all manner of comedy,… - Late Night Dining
Oxalis
Oh, Oxalis, you’re our gastropub boyfriend…smart and well-dressed; eclectic but not weird; and yeeeah, you’ve got that bad boy thing going on, with your mysterious warren of rooms and pumped-up shelves of whiskey. In your main room with the dark wood and long picnic table, you’re in… - Gay & Lesbian Bars
Oz
This world-renowned, bass-heavy dance club might be overrated, but it still has an incredible light show, go-go boys atop the bar (usually), and drag on Wednesdays. It’s a see-and-be-seen spot for a mostly young crowd including plenty of straights. The dance-floor view from the… - Bars & Pubs
Palm Court Jazz Cafe
This stylish dinner club is a reliable, mature, comfortable venue for topnotch classic and traditional jazz Wednesday through Sunday. Table seating (make reservations), with a small back bar for non-diners. - Bars & Pubs
Patrick’s Bar Vin
Half a block and a million miles from Bourbon Street, Patrick Van Voorhees, one of the city’s premier sommeliers, serves conviviality and an excellent selection of wines by the glass (and other spirits). The bar feels like your great uncle’s decorous but restful library; the sweet… - Bars & Pubs
Pirate's Alley Café and Absinthe House
Its tucked-away locale behind St. Louis Cathedral has European-style outdoor alleyway tables. Purists will balk at its absinthe service, but it’s fun for others—flaming sugar cube and all. The food’s handy but nothing more. - Bars & Pubs
Polo Club Lounge
Upstairs in the Windsor Court Hotel, the Sazerac-and-cigar crowd lounges on velvet sofas and leather armchairs to a cool piano combo, as big money deals and serious romances discreetly work themselves out. In the columned lobby’s Cocktail Bar, local professionals who prefer a refined… - Jazz
Preservation Hall
The decaying, ancient-looking building lends just the right air of consecration to this, an essential spot for traditional jazz fans and, well, everyone (Robert Plant and U2’s Edge have sat in here). With little air, so-so sightlines, no bathrooms (you are warned), and constant… - Performing Arts Venue
Republic
The converted produce warehouse dates to 1852 but features DJs that date to last week. Maybe the week before. It’s our choice for dance music since, even with all the lighting, it still manages to feel like NOLA rather than SoBe. Frequent appearances by local bounce stars (Big… - Dance Clubs
Rock ‘n’ Bowl
Bowling. Bands. Beer. If you can’t have fun here, we give up. There’s swing most Wednesdays, zydeco on Thursdays, and local blues, rockabilly, rock, who cares on other nights. It’s an utter hoot and an unbeatable experience that draws all ages and types to the lanes and spacious,… - The Performing Arts
Saenger Theatre
Following an extensive, gajillion-dollar, post-Katrina renovation, this magnificent 1927 stunner from the glory movie-house days is now technologically state of the art. The Saenger hosts concerts, comedy shows, Broadway shows, and more. - Bars & Pubs
Sazerac Bar at the Roosevelt
If the New Orleans bar scene were a monarchy, the historic Sazerac Bar in the glamorous Roosevelt Hotel might be queen. The sinuous wood walls and Deco-era murals here have borne witness to movie stars, political scandals, and we don’t want to know what (check the bullet hole in the… - Bar
Sidney's Saloon
All 7thWard roads lead to recently slicked-up corner bar Sidney’s on Mondays, when local denizens and unlocal drinkers groove to the soul-searing blues and raucous rhythms of King James & the Special Men. Other things happen on other nights, but it’s Monday you want. $5 beer and… - The Performing Arts
Snug Harbor
This sit-down, concert-style club and early Frenchmen Street settler is the city’s premier showcase for contemporary jazz. Two levels provide mostly good viewing (beware the pillars upstairs—try to sit along the rail) for the attentive aud. The adjoining restaurant has great burgers… - Late Night Dining
SoBou
At a self-service gastropub, do you self-tip? The fun here includes tables with beer taps, wine-dispensing machines (think soda fountains, but grapier), and pitcher-sized flasks. It’s less kitschy and more full-service than this sounds—it’s by the Commander’s Palace folks, after all.… - The Performing Arts
Southern Repertory Theatre
Focusing (mostly) on Southern playwrights and themes, Southern Rep’s productions are consistently high quality, if not always high budget. Anything written by or starring the hyper-talented Ricky Graham is worth catching. - Bars & Pubs
Swizzle Stick Bar
Lu Brow, high goddess and doyenne of New Orleans’s craft cocktail revival, started it here. There are cooler bars now, but for those who like some sass with their class, this art-filled spot still serves inventive, finely honed beverages and pre-Prohibition classics (and stellar bar… - Bars & Pubs
The Bombay Club
This grownup, wood-paneled bar/restaurant/British library is an oasis of civility just off Bourbon Street. We can’t help but order something with gin from the long martini list, and a boudin Scotch egg from the $4 happy-hour menu (the food is quite good). We’re supremely fond of the… - Gay & Lesbian Bars
The Bourbon Pub—Parade Disco
Of the two hyper-popular bars, the downstairs pub is a bit calmer for most of its 24 hours. Upstairs, Parade Disco’s high-tech dance setup comes alive on weekends. Sunday eve is also big, with glam drag at 10:30 for $15, which includes a cocktail. The Famous Door
Open since 1934, this is the oldest music club on Bourbon Street. Many luminaries have played here (including 13-year-old Harry Connick, Jr.). Great historic value, cheap drinks, no cover (usually), loud but solid cover bands. Drunken dancing might happen.The Howlin’ Wolf
The big (10,000-sq.-ft.), not-at-all-bad Wolf brings in leading local and occasional midlevel national acts focusing on rock, funk, and jam (Leftover Salmon, of Montreal; local faves like Galactic, Anders Osborne, and Dumpstaphunk). Good sound, good sightlines, good times—especially…Warehouse DistrictThe Jazz Playhouse
The Bourbon Street retreat of the über-talented, ethically-challenegd trumpeter-bandleader is the go-to spot for ambitious, established, and on-the-rise local jazz artists. Mondays with Gerald French; Wednesdays featuring the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra; and the excellent Friday…The Jazz Playhouse
This Bourbon Street retreat is the go-to spot for ambitious, established, and on-the-rise local jazz artists. Talented regular performers include Gerald French, Joe Krown, and Germaine Bazzle. The excellent Friday midnight burlesque show is always a sassy good time. The draperied,…The Maison
A brick-walled Frenchmen mainstay with always solid local musicians—there’s jazz early, but later on the scene gets funkier, danceable, and well . . . it just gets down. The second-level wraparound balcony is a good hang when the main floor gets too packed. Drinks are average, food…- Production Shows
The NOLA Project
This excellent ensemble presents boldly conceived and staged productions in a variety of places and settings (think “Alice in Wonderland” in NOMA’s Sculpture Garden). The Spotted Cat Music Club
Our aesthetic leans toward cramped rooms, little amplification, and scrappy bands with a fresh take on big-band, gypsy, hot—well, any type of swinging—jazz. So we adore the oft-crowded Cat. The scarce seats are hardly comfy, but the 100% reliably fine music is the real deal, as…- Bars & Pubs
Three Muses
Sophisticated modern lounge meets classic 1920s saloon, and we likey. It serves up beautifully balanced, new-timey cocktails and mouthwatering (quite) small plates to old-timey tunes, with no cover (but the food and drinks can add up; feta fries are best for value and sharing). The… - Late Night Dining
Tiki Tolteca
Welcome (back) to Bali Ha’i, circa 1961. At this tiki temple, there’s bamboo, flaming bowls of booze, and occasionally, a DJ spinning Esquivel and Martin Denny. But it’s a sincere homage, and these are not your mother’s rum sugarbombs: They’re deftly made cocktails from original… Tipitina’s
Dedicated to the late piano master Professor Longhair (that’s him in bronze just inside the entrance; rub his head for luck), Tip’s is, if not the New Orleans club, a major musical touchstone and a reliable place for top local and out-of-town roots, brass, jam, and rock bands from…- Bars & Pubs
Tujague's
The attraction here is the centuries-old bar with the wall-size mirror, which was hand-carried—whole—from France to New Orleans (a boat was involved). The bartenders tell the tale while pouring a grasshopper (invented here) or one of the better Sazeracs in town. There are few seats… - Bar
Vaughan's Lounge
Most Thursdays, the massive grooves of trombonist Corey Henry’s Tremé Funktet pump this rambling, shambling Bywater dive into the best kind of loud, hot, roadhouse mess. Most other nights it’s just your classic, friendly bar. - Bars & Pubs
d.b.a.
A favorite bar/nightclub for its superb beer and spirits selections, laid-back vibe, and fine bookings. Shows (usually) start on time and feature an occasional, on-the-cusp national or Louisiana act and a wide variety of excellent local acts like magnificent crooner John Boutté, the…
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*Best All-Around Dining Experience You Can Have in New Orleans: No surprises here, they’re world-famous for good reason: Commander’s Palace, hands down. At the other end of the spectrum, Café du Monde. Somewhere in the middle: Brigtsen’s and Lilette. *Best Classic New Orleans…
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This is a little like deciding on a scoop of ice cream—so many tasty options to choose from, and different people like different flavors. We’ve tried to narrow down the selections based on specific criteria.Best Moderately Priced Lodging: In general, you’ll get the biggest bang in…

