Music & Festival Heritage
Catskills Music Venues Worth the Drive
The Catskills hold more small-room live-music programming than most visitors realize. A guide to the rooms that keep earning the drive.

Photo by Sephina Cornwall on Pexels
In this piece ↓
- Where Live Music Happens
- Colony (Woodstock)
- Bearsville Theater (Woodstock)
- Avalon Lounge (Catskill town)
- Bridge Street Theatre (Catskill town)
- Tusten Theatre (Narrowsburg)
- Forestburgh Playhouse (Forestburgh)
- The Orpheum and Doctorow Center (Tannersville)
- The Lineage
- The Cannabis Framing
- The Weekend Template
- Compliance, Quickly
- Where to Go Next
Where Live Music Happens
Outside the Bethel Woods Pavilion (covered in the Bethel Woods season guide) and Maverick Concerts (the Maverick deep dive), the Catskills run a working small-room live-music scene that most visitors miss unless they know to look. The venues below are the ones with serious booking standards, regular calendars, and a track record of keeping their doors open.
All are private venues; cannabis consumption happens off-site. The rooms listed run on alcohol, coffee, and ticket revenue; none are consumption-friendly spaces.
Colony (Woodstock)
A 1929 Catskills-style boarding-house converted into a working live-music room. Colony sits on Rock City Road a block from the Woodstock village green and runs a steady indie-and-singer-songwriter calendar with occasional bigger names on the way between Albany and New York City. The lobby bar is warm; the listening room is small (capacity ~200) and sightlines are strong.
Good fit for: indie acts, small-room listening. See Woodstock anchor guide.
Bearsville Theater (Woodstock)
At the western end of Tinker Street past the Bearsville recording-studio complex. Bearsville Theater was built by Albert Grossman in the late 1960s and has run as a live-music room on and off since, with periods of closure and revival. The current operation runs a year-round calendar of mid-tier touring acts and programs the larger room (capacity ~350) that complements Colony's smaller footprint.
Good fit for: bigger touring indie and rock acts than Colony handles.
Avalon Lounge (Catskill town)
Main Street, Catskill. Capacity around 150, carefully-booked mid-tier indie programming, and the best small-room sound in the eastern Greene County area. Avalon has been the room that signaled Catskill's creative-class revival; see the Catskill town anchor guide.
Good fit for: indie and experimental acts, a Saturday night out as part of a Catskill-town weekend.
Bridge Street Theatre (Catskill town)
A short walk from Avalon, Bridge Street is a regional-theater room that occasionally programs music, cabaret, and concert-adjacent events. Smaller and more theater-focused than Avalon; worth checking for shoulder-season programming.
Tusten Theatre (Narrowsburg)
The Delaware Valley Arts Alliance's home venue on the western Sullivan edge. Small (capacity ~100), carefully-programmed, year-round calendar of film, music, and visual-art-adjacent programming. Ticket prices are low for the quality of what ends up on stage. See the Narrowsburg DVAA anchor guide.
Good fit for: quiet listening, indie folk, chamber-adjacent programming.
Forestburgh Playhouse (Forestburgh)
A summer-stock theater in Sullivan County that has run since 1947. Not strictly music; the Playhouse programs a full summer of musical theater, cabaret, and occasional concerts. The venue is seasonal (June-August) and the bills draw Broadway-adjacent performers in shortened production runs. The Forestburgh tavern on the property is the pre- and post-show gathering spot.
Good fit for: musical-theater season, Sullivan County summer weekends.
The Orpheum and Doctorow Center (Tannersville)
Both run under the Catskill Mountain Foundation. The Orpheum programs a mix of classical music, film, and occasional concert events; the Doctorow Center handles more of the cinema side. Year-round, non-summer programming is stronger than most mountain-town venues. See the Tannersville anchor guide.
The Lineage
These venues connect in layers. The Woodstock pair (Colony, Bearsville) traces to the 1960s-1970s arrival of Grossman and the Bearsville recording scene. Catskill's Avalon and Bridge Street are the 2010s-2020s creative-class revival. Tusten in Narrowsburg and Forestburgh Playhouse are older civic-theater operations. Tannersville's Catskill Mountain Foundation is the year-round eastern-escarpment anchor.
Together the set represents the whole geographic and temporal spread of Catskills live music: a far wider scene than the "Bethel Woods plus Maverick" reduction that most national coverage of the region runs with.
The Cannabis Framing
Consumption happens off-site. At the cabin or the rental before or after the show. None of the venues listed allow cannabis on-property; most are small enough that discretion would not work anyway. The consumer-cannabis frame is: dispensary stop on the drive in, show in the evening, cabin afterward for the slow-evening side of things.
The Weekend Template
For a music-focused Catskills weekend:
- Woodstock base — HERbal on Tinker, Colony or Bearsville at night, Maverick Saturday afternoon in season.
- Catskill town base — Budd's on West Bridge, Avalon or Bridge Street at night, Main Street in the afternoon.
- Sullivan County base — Amber Jane (White Lake) or Liberty's dispensaries, Tusten in Narrowsburg or Forestburgh Playhouse in season, Bethel Woods as the Saturday big show.
- Eastern escarpment base — Wintergreen in Tannersville, Doctorow or Orpheum for a Friday or Saturday film-and-music night.
Compliance, Quickly
- 21+ only, licensed shops only. Verify via OCM QR code at cannabis.ny.gov.
- No consumption at any of the listed venues — all private, all with their own rules.
- No consumption in cars, driver or passenger.
- Start low, go slow on edibles, at the cabin after the show.
Where to Go Next
- From Woodstock to Bethel Woods, Catskills music heritage
- Bethel Woods 2026 season visitor guide
- Maverick Concerts — the oldest continuous summer chamber-music festival in America
- Catskill — Main Street, Avalon, and the Hudson gateway
- Woodstock — artist-colony weekend
This is editorial, not legal advice.