90 min walk
Deep Ellum is the birthplace of Texas blues and the crucible of Dallas's alternative scene. Within a few walkable blocks, the same streets that hosted Blind Lemon Jefferson and Robert Johnson in the 1920s later launched Nirvana, Nine Inch Nails, and Erykah Badu. This tour covers 9 stops spanning a century of American music history — from the recording studios and cultural institutions of the Jim Crow era to the legendary venues of the 1980s and 90s revival.
Flat sidewalks throughout. Most venues have accessible entrances. Limited shade — bring water in summer.

At Deep Ellum's western edge, where the neighborhood meets the city — and where early radio broadcasts carried the sound of these streets across Texas.

Opened in 1963, Adair's is the oldest continually operating bar in Deep Ellum — a hand-lettered, cash-only dive that has outlasted every trend the neighborhood has ever had.

A 1914 Ford Model T plant turned hat company warehouse turned loft apartments — a century of American industry compressed into one building.

Historical marker for Alex Moore — the Deep Ellum piano blues legend who said 'there was a piano in every shack and alley in Deep Ellum' in the 1920s.
Named after the anti-art movement, this intimate Elm Street room has been a cornerstone of Dallas's underground music scene since 1989.

The alley running parallel to Elm Street where musicians busked, barrel houses rattled, and the sound that became Texas blues was first heard.

The rotating gallery of large-scale murals on utility vaults and building walls that have made Deep Ellum one of the most photographed neighborhoods in Dallas.

Historical marker for Buster Smith — the Dallas alto saxophone master who co-wrote 'One O'Clock Jump' and mentored Charlie 'Bird' Parker.

Historical marker for Leadbelly — who met Blind Lemon Jefferson on these streets around 1912 and went on to become one of the most recorded folk and blues artists in American history.

Built in 1911, Dallas's oldest continuously operating ticketed music venue — a German fraternal lodge that became a crossroads of American folk, blues, and western swing.

A World War II munitions plant turned Dallas's largest live music venue — the industrial history of Deep Ellum made explicit in a name.

A complex of buildings constructed 1888–1914 that is one of the few intact late-19th-century industrial complexes remaining in Dallas — now lofts and creative space.

The 1916 Knights of Pythias Temple — once the social and professional center of Dallas's African American community — now a boutique hotel bearing the name of its architect.

The converted warehouse on Commerce Street that became one of the most important rooms in American alternative music during the nineties.
One of Dallas's most celebrated BBQ institutions, born in Deep Ellum. Brisket worth waiting in line for. Cash only for a reason — it's that good.
2702 Main St, Dallas, TX 75226
Craft brewery and kitchen right in the heart of Deep Ellum. Good beer, good food, and a patio that makes the post-walk debrief easy.
2625 Main St, Dallas, TX 75226
New York-style slices, open late, no pretension. A Deep Ellum institution that has fed musicians after gigs for years.
2807 Elm St, Dallas, TX 75226
Hand-pulled noodles and dumplings in a tiny Deep Ellum storefront.
Order: Dan dan noodles; dumplings
2933 Main St, Dallas, TX 75226
Southern and Cajun soul food with stiff cocktails and no-cover live music, right in the heart of Deep Ellum. The kind of warm, unpretentious room where the band plays late and nobody's in a hurry.
Order: Shrimp and grits, fried catfish, a moonshine cocktail
2912 Elm St, Dallas, TX 75226
Shareable pan-Asian street-food plates in a buzzy, colorful room on Deep Ellum's Main Street. Order a stack of small plates, pass them around, and graze your way across the continent.
Order: Roti canai, pork belly bao, drunken noodles
2800 Main St, Dallas, TX 75226
A graffiti-covered Deep Ellum dive that's been pouring cold beer and live country since the old days. Scrawl your name on the wall and order one of the best burgers in town.
Order: The Adair's burger, a cold longneck
2624 Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75226
Michoacán-style tacos and handmade tortillas on Deep Ellum's Elm Street, with a hidden tasting-menu room (Purepecha) in back. Serious, family-run Mexican cooking dressed up in cantina cool.
Order: Tacos de carnitas, cochinita pibil, the duck taco
2646 Elm St, Dallas, TX 75226
The Memphis hot-chicken legend planted at the edge of Deep Ellum, frying up crackly, spicy birds to order. No frills, just a tray of chicken, sides, and sweet tea.
Order: Fried chicken, baked beans, fried pickles
2904 Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75226
The Austin barbecue dynasty's big Deep Ellum smokehouse, with a cafeteria line, a full bar, and a patio. Grab a tray, watch them slice the brisket by the pound, and find a spot on the deck.
Order: Fatty brisket, beef ribs, jalapeño-cheese sausage
3025 Main St, Dallas, TX 75226