TheCatskillsCannabis Club

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.

By Jay — Editorial Team··4 min read

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

This is editorial, not legal advice.

Where to stay

Catskills lodging

Cabins, inns, and weekend rentals across the Catskills.

See lodging options →

Affiliate link · disclosure

More in Music & Festival Heritage

Related reading

All in Music & Festival Heritage