48 HOURS IN HAMILTON: A MUSIC LOVER’S CURATED WEEKEND
Whether you’re a frequent visitor or taking in Hamilton for the first time during JUNO Week, musician and music writer Dylan Hudecki offers suggestions for spending a music-focused weekend in the city.
Welcome to the Hammer, JUNO Awards people!
We’ve made it easy for you to find the best bites, sights, and sounds to soak up while you’re here. Follow this local’s guide and you’ll experience Hamilton the way musicians, culture junkies, crate-diggers, and night owls do.
You’ve landed in one of Canada’s most influential music cities. Gritty, creative, colourful, and deeply community driven. Hamilton is a place where punk legends, indie lifers, jazz heads, folk songwriters, hiphop MCs, metal bands, and pop producers all cross paths, sometimes at the same bar!
To make it easy, we’ve mapped out the perfect 48 hours of eating, digging, walking, and listening. From breakfast to last call, consider this your local-approved curated two-day itinerary of the city.
DAY ONE: Downtown crate-digging & late-night sounds
Saturday morning: James Street North
Start your weekend on James Street North, the cultural artery of Hamilton, and home of Supercrawl, Hamilton‘s biggest and most respected street festival held every September. Grab a coffee from Mulberry Coffeehouse, SYNONYM, or Saint James, then take a slow walk along a strip that rewards the wandering folks. There’s so much to see and do. Duck into Pretty Grit for Canadian-made gifts and interior design housewares, VintageSoulGeek and Snafu Studios for your vintage thrift store fix, and then Hamilton Artists Inc., a community-driven gallery and
shop that captures the city’s creative spirit.
Late morning: Record store royalty
Head to Dr. Disc, one of the most iconic record stores in the city. It’s just steps off James Street North on Wilson Street. This isn’t just a shop, it’s two floors of Hamilton music history! Vinyl, CDs, tapes, record players, and more fill
every corner, and the staff know their stuff. Around the corner, Into the Abyss caters to all tastes, specializing in indie, vintage, metal, punk, hardcore, and underground releases and even has regular record store shows, one
you might catch by happenstance.
Lunch + neighbourhood hop
After your downtown dig, choose your own adventure. Ottawa Street North offers vintage shops, fabric stores, restaurants, cafés, and more. Speaking of, The Hamilton Antique Mall is a must see. It has four floors filled with over 200 vendors selling antiques, vintage items, art, furniture, records, and collectibles, making it the largest antique mall in the Hamilton area. It’s impossible to leave without finding something kitschy and perfect! Don’t miss stopping in at one of the city’s best record stores: Revolution Records, a crate-digger’s dream with deep catalogues and fair prices. Fuel up with a coffee from The Cannon Coffee or Crown & Press, grab a fresh bowl from Poke Co, or the #HamOnt burger at Hambrgr before continuing your wander.
Or head west to Locke Street, one of Hamilton’s most charming and walkable neighbourhoods. This stretch is packed with independent businesses and creative energy. Stop into Epic Books, a beautifully curated indie bookstore with a strong arts and music section. Browse local shops, grab lunch, maybe at Bardō, the West Town, or the new buzzed-about restaurant The Avro, and soak in a neighbourhood that feels lived-in, relaxed, and proudly independent.

Afternoon: Nature with a soundtrack
Hamilton is the Waterfall Capital of Canada, but it’s also one of the few cities where wilderness and skyline exist side by side. Pop in your earbuds (check out the #HamOnt music Spotify playlist by the Hamilton Music Office) and head to Bayfront Park, then continue along the connected pier system (Piers 4 through 8) for waterfront paths and 360-degree views.
If you want forest over pavement, explore Royal Botanical Gardens’ many locations for a hike, or a nearby section of the Bruce Trail. For the best panorama of pretty much the entire lower city, visit Sam Lawrence Park, minutes from downtown, where the escarpment opens up into a postcard view. Feeling ambitious? Walk up the Dundurn Stairs and earn that escarpment view the hard way. It’s a local rite of passage.

Dinner: King William “Restaurant Row”
As evening sets in, make your way to King William Street, often called Hamilton’s “restaurant row.” This compact strip is packed with 10-plus excellent dining options, perfect for pre-show fuel. Whether you’re craving elevated comfort food (The French), modern Italian (Parma), tacos with a twist (The Mule), craveable ramen (Mystic Ramen), you’ll find something worth lingering over before the night kicks off.

Night One: Bars, beers & live music
From King William, head north or west depending on your vibe. On James Street North, stop into The Brain (owned by Junior Boys’ own Jeremy Greenspan), jazz and blues bar and restaurant Henry’s on James, or Farside for drinks and fun “standing on the pulse” energy. Don’t miss Academica Hall. Yes, there’s a real airplane suspended inside
the bar (another selfie spot). It’s weird, wonderful, and very Hamilton. For beer lovers, Merit Brewing is a must-stop. Known for its house-made beers and cozy taproom, it’s a great place to bookmark for later.
Over on Barton Street, the nightlife leans gritty and fun. Grab drinks at Wildcat Tavern or Nanny & Bull’s, then fully commit to the tropical chaos at Maipai, a fully immersive tiki bar serving Detroit-style pizza and top-tier
cocktails. Get your dance on in the coolest, darkest, vibiest basement dance club this side of NYC at Andthenyou.
For live music, Hamilton delivers. Check out Mills Hardware, The Bright Room, Ridiculous, Bridgeworks, The Capitol Bar, and other venues that regularly host touring acts, local legends, weirdos and, of course, JUNO Week events.
DAY TWO: Brunch, murals & one last spin
Sunday morning: Brunch + punk history
Good morning! Feeling sleep deprived? Grab brunch at Undefined or Electric Diner and then head over to Gore Park to check out an art installation featuring lyrics from well- known local musicians. Prefer pastries and green space? Head to Cafe Baffico for coffee, a slice, and a donut, then, if the weather is spring beautiful, stroll through Gage Park, the crown jewel of Hamilton parks. If it’s cold and wet, the Gage Park Greenhouse is a tropical oasis.
Afternoon: Art, culture & exploration
Spend your final afternoon at the Art Gallery of Hamilton (AGH), one of Canada’s best mid-sized galleries, or return to James North for final shopping, gallery hopping, some fun and games at The Bard and Bear Games Café, and one more beer at Merit. Before you leave, visit Last Supper Books and check out the vinyl. Grab a new or used book, and whatever you do, don’t leave Hamilton with just one record!

Night Two: Lights, camera, awards
There are fantastic events leading up to the big awards night, including the JUNO Kickoff Concert at The Music Hall and the JUNO Songwriters Circle at FirstOntario Concert Hall. And check out JUNOfest, two nights of shows at local venues, including The Corktown, The Underground, and Ooey Gooey’s.
It’s all capped off by the big awards night! Experience Canada’s Biggest Night in Music with electrifying live performances, surprise collaborations, and emotional acceptance speeches. See your favourite musicians walk
the JUNOS Skip Orange Carpet, celebrate emerging and legendary artists, and feel national pride as all the genres collide. With the new-car smell of our fab new TD Coliseum (reopened in November), expect glamour, authenticity, and unforgettable moments that showcase Canada’s diverse, world-class music scene. From fans to industry insiders, it’s the energy that will connect everyone in one place.






