Live Music : From Jazz & Blues to Bluegrass, and everything in between, except Rock.
Beer and Wine
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Armando's
Houston Jones are the brainchild of Louisiana native Travis Jones and multi-instrumentalist Glenn Houston, two strong grassroots musicians who became fast friends at the 2001 Strawberry Music Fest...
Armando's is a unique venue offering many genres of music. One evening of music and its audience is likely to be very different from the following evening. It is hard to categorize this place, which I am sure is by design. The ambiance is casual, and the setting is...creative. Everywhere you look inside the room has an artistic expression. Even all the tables and chairs are a literal piece of art, not to mention the walls. The oddly shaped stage makes home to some of the East Bay's (and beyond) best musical talents, both known and unknown. Armando's is not open everyday. It is ONLY open when there is live music to share which usually happens Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. This is not a bar. It is an eclectic music house that happens to sell beer and wine. The people that come are here to listen, kick back, and be impressed by the performers. The sound system is professionally operated and sounds great and the people, staff, and owner are friendly and inviting. This is a gem.
| 9/8 | 6:30p | Blues Jam |
| 9/11 | 8:00p | Rockinghorse |
| 9/12 | 8:00p | The Willie Mays Blues Band |
| 9/13 | 8:00p | LE JAZZ HOT |
| 9/17 | 7:00p | Nick Alen |
| 9/18 | 8:00p | Solo Bass Show with Randy Marshall |
| 9/19 | 8:00p | The Blue Sky Band |
| 9/20 | 8:00p | The Houston Jones Band |
| 9/25 | 7:00p | Tonette Jeanine with Johnny & the Be Goods |
| 7:00p | Songbird Sings at Armando's Thur 9/25 | |
| 9/26 | 8:00p | Tamsen Donner Band |
| 9/27 | 8:00p | The Alhambra Valley Band |
| 9/28 | 3:00p | The Fog City Stompers |
| 10/2 | 8:00p | Open Mic |
| 10/3 | 8:00p | The Gary King Trio |






WHEN I WAS a wee college graduate living in San Diego, I interviewed a cool cat named Chuck Perrin. The goateed musician had recently opened a jazz space in a dim 1913 warehouse in the city's developing east downtown. He dubbed it Dizzy's, an ode to Gillespie and a promise to fans of live music: Nothing but the concrete floors, brick walls and a few flickering candles would ever distract from a performance. It was a clubhouse for musicians, Perrin would say, that happened to be open to the public. I think that's what Roy Jeans is trying to do with Armando's, his jazz club in downtown Martinez. But there's slightly more visual stimuli at Armando's: half a dozen curtains with pie-shop flavor, bright, paint-splattered chairs, band posters and a small disco ball in an oddly-placed corner. (Full review)