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Modern Izakaya With Vinyl Experience

Google: 4.1 · 452 reviews

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New York City, United States

Tokyo Record Bar

CuisineJapanese
Executive ChefZach Fabian & Josh Resnick
Price≈$75
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityIntimate
Opinionated About Dining

A Greenwich Village record bar serving Japanese small plates and natural wine to a soundtrack curated from vinyl, Tokyo Record Bar has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining recognition since 2023, climbing to #164 in North America's Casual category by 2025. The format sits at the intersection of izakaya informality and deliberate curation, where the music selection carries as much editorial weight as the food.

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Tokyo Record Bar restaurant in New York City, United States
About

Where the Izakaya Tradition Meets the Listening Bar

The listening bar, a format that took root in postwar Japan as a space for serious, attentive engagement with recorded music, has found an unlikely but logical home in Greenwich Village. At 127 MacDougal St, Tokyo Record Bar applies that same principle of deliberate curation to both sides of the evening: the vinyl and the food. This is not a restaurant that plays background music, nor a bar that happens to serve snacks. It is a format built on the premise that both experiences deserve full attention.

Japan's izakaya tradition has always operated in that productive space between the formal and the casual, where small plates arrive without ceremony but are made with precision, and where the occasion is the company and the atmosphere rather than the performance of a tasting menu. Greenwich Village, historically a neighborhood comfortable with the unconventional, is a fitting address for this kind of transplant. MacDougal Street has housed jazz clubs, folk venues, and experimental dining rooms across different decades. Tokyo Record Bar continues that pattern under a different register.

The Kaiseki Sensibility in a Casual Register

The kaiseki tradition, which structures multi-course Japanese meals around seasonal produce, careful sequencing, and the aesthetic principle of ma (the meaningful use of space and pause), does not require white tablecloths to operate as a philosophy. What it requires is attention to proportion, timing, and the relationship between individual elements. Tokyo Record Bar's format, pairing Japanese small plates with curated vinyl, applies something close to that logic. The music selection and the food selection are both editorial acts, and neither is incidental to the other.

This approach places Tokyo Record Bar in a distinct tier within New York's Japanese dining ecosystem. The city has a well-developed hierarchy of Japanese formats: ultra-premium omakase counters at the level of Masa, mid-market izakayas running through neighborhoods from the East Village to Midtown, and a smaller cohort of concept-driven spaces that prioritize atmosphere and specificity over scale. Tokyo Record Bar operates in that last group, alongside places like Tsukimi and Chikarashi, where the dining proposition is defined as much by format as by cuisine category.

Compare that to the kaiseki-rooted precision of odo or Noda, where the seasonal sequencing is explicit and the room functions around a formal tasting structure, and the distinction becomes clear. Tokyo Record Bar works the same aesthetic principles at a lower pitch, more izakaya than kaiseki in execution, but with the same underlying commitment to curation. The music is not decoration. It is the ma between courses.

Recognition and Competitive Positioning

Opinionated About Dining, the independent dining guide that weights its rankings heavily toward critical consistency and repeat evaluation, has recognized Tokyo Record Bar in its North America Casual category every year since 2023. The venue moved from a Highly Recommended designation in 2023 to #183 in 2024 and #164 in 2025, a trajectory that reflects sustained quality rather than a single strong cycle. In a guide where casual rankings across North America run into the hundreds, holding a top-200 position across three consecutive years carries real weight.

A Google rating of 4.1 across 410 reviews is consistent with a venue that draws a knowing audience rather than a casual one. Concept-driven spaces in New York regularly polarize reviewers, particularly when the format requires a degree of buy-in, and a 4.1 average across that volume suggests the proposition lands reliably for the audience it is designed for.

Within the broader pattern of high-concept casual dining in New York, Tokyo Record Bar occupies a space that Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya approaches from the other direction: where Blue Ribbon trades on scale and late-night accessibility, Tokyo Record Bar operates on intentional smallness. The listening bar format, by definition, does not accommodate noise or volume beyond what the room is built for. That constraint is also a feature.

The Format in the Context of American Experiential Dining

Across American dining, the past decade has produced a sustained interest in experience formats that layer a non-food element alongside the meal: the theatrical service model of Alinea in Chicago, the farm-to-table immersion of Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, the progression-led ceremony of The French Laundry in Napa, or the narrative structure of Lazy Bear in San Francisco. Most of these operate at the premium end of the market, where the ticket price covers the concept as much as the food.

Tokyo Record Bar arrives at the experiential proposition from a different direction, through the casual register and the listening bar format rather than the tasting menu. In that sense it is closer to the izakaya model documented in Tokyo venues like Myojaku or the kaiseki tradition visible in places like Azabu Kadowaki, transposed into a New York neighborhood context. The reference points are Japanese, but the execution is distinctly local.

For readers who track how these formats travel across cities, places like Providence in Los Angeles or Emeril's in New Orleans represent the American fine dining template. Tokyo Record Bar represents something different: a Japanese format finding its footing in a specific New York neighborhood, with the OAD track record to confirm it is working.

Planning Your Visit

Tokyo Record Bar opens Tuesday through Thursday from 5:30 pm to midnight, with extended hours until 2 am on Friday and Saturday. The room is closed on Sundays and Mondays. Given the intimate format inherent to a listening bar, advance planning is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings when the extended hours draw a later crowd. The Greenwich Village address on MacDougal Street puts it within walking distance of multiple subway lines serving the West Village and SoHo corridor.

For a broader picture of where Tokyo Record Bar sits within New York's dining and nightlife options, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.

Quick reference: 127 MacDougal St, New York, NY 10012. Open Tue–Thu 5:30 pm–midnight; Fri–Sat 5:30 pm–2 am. Closed Sunday and Monday.

Signature Dishes
homemade_pizzakaluga_osetra_caviar_sushi
Frequently asked questions

Category Peers

Comparable options at a glance, pulled from our tracked venues.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Intimate
  • Trendy
  • Lively
  • Cozy
  • Energetic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
Experience
  • Live Music
Drink Program
  • Sake Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Dark basement with low ceilings adorned in cherry blossoms and artistic murals, high-energy vibe from guest-curated vinyl music on an audiophile system.

Signature Dishes
homemade_pizzakaluga_osetra_caviar_sushi