London Calling: A Guide to London’s Music Landmarks
"Winding your way down on Baker Street, light in your head and dead on your feet"...
London has always been one of the world’s great music cities. Bands were formed here, classic albums were recorded here, and some of the most famous album covers in history were shot on these streets. As a local music fan, I have spent years walking these London music landmarks, always looking for the stories behind the studios, pubs and corners that appear in songs and on sleeves.
This guide is for anyone looking for historic music locations in London or navigating the capital's rich musical past. We map the exact coordinates of Beatles landmarks, Pink Floyd locations, David Bowie’s London, and Led Zeppelin sites, providing the precise geographic details to help you find each historic space yourself.
1. Soho: The Historic Engine Room
Soho remains the undeniable engine room of London's musical legacy, with historic venues and recording studios woven into the fabric of almost every corner.
Historic Streets: Denmark Street (Tin Pan Alley)
Throughout the twentieth century, this narrow strip housed a dense ecosystem of songwriters, instrument shops, music publishers, and visionary designers. It was here, in a local publisher's office, that a young Elton John first met lyricist Bernie Taupin.
The street’s musical output spanned all genres; a young Paul Simon once walked these pavement blocks trying to pitch his early acoustic material, only to be rejected as "uncommercial." Undeterred, he later returned with Art Garfunkel to track songs at Regent Sounds Studio at No. 4.
one of the few guitar shops left on Denmark Street
Album Cover Design: Hipgnosis (No. 6 Denmark Street)
Just down the street at No. 6, designers Aubrey Powell and Storm Thorgerson established their legendary studio, Hipgnosis. It was within these walls that they conceptualised iconic album art for Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon (1973) and Animals (1977), alongside seminal covers for Led Zeppelin.
Historic Venues: Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club (Frith Street)
Turning down Frith Street reveals Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club, an institution that has anchored London’s late-night jazz and avant-garde scenes since 1959 (moving to its current location at No. 47 in 1969). The basement room has welcomed global icons including Miles Davis, Nina Simone, Ella Fitzgerald, Prince, and Charlie Watts.
Recording Studios: MPL Communications (No. 1 Soho Square)
Just a short walk away lies Soho Square, the tranquil green space that serves as the administrative heart of Paul McCartney’s publishing empire, MPL Communications, located at No. 1. The private townhouse features an occasional apartment at the top and a recording studio in the basement where tracks for Back to the Egg (1979) were laid down.
Cultural Landmarks: Bar Italia (22 Frith Street)
Further down at 22 Frith Street, Bar Italia has been serving authentic coffee to Soho’s midnight crowd since 1949, drawing artists, musicians, and subcultural figures through its doors.
Pulp’s track “Bar Italia” captures the raw atmosphere of a post-rave comedown, while the café appears in the video for Sade’s “Smooth Operator”. Sade herself belonged to the earlier Blitz scene, a subcultural incubator that heavily shaped the style and electronic sound of the capital during the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Recording Studios: Trident Studios (St Anne’s Court)
Tucked away in St Anne’s Court sits the former site of Trident Studios. This subterranean room was a crucible for groundbreaking records, acting as the physical birthplace for The Beatles’ “Hey Jude”, David Bowie’s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972), Carly Simon’s No Secrets (1972), Elton John's Tumbleweed Connection (1970), and Lou Reed’s Transformer (1972).
Historic Venues: The Marquee Club (Wardour Street)
On nearby Wardour Street, the legendary Marquee Club (now converted into apartments) evolved from its early jazz and skiffle roots into the ultimate launchpad for emerging talent. The Rolling Stones performed their first gig here, and many of the emerging blues bands of the sixties would play here including Alexis Korner, Long John Baldry, and the Yardbirds. In subsequent eras, Mark Knopfler and Dire Straits, U2, REM, and Guns N’ Roses would grace the stage.
Album Cover Locations: Berwick Street
Finally, no visual documentation of Soho is complete without a look down Berwick Street. This vibrant market street was chosen by Oasis as the exact setting for the iconic album cover photography of What’s the Story Morning Glory (1995).
2. Mayfair & the West End: Glamour, Tragedy, and Rooftop Concerts
Album Cover Locations: Heddon Street & Piccadilly Circus
Piccadilly Circus sits as one of the capital's most visible transit landmarks, famously serving as the backdrop for early, surreal promotional photographs of Pink Floyd in 1967. A five-minute walk from the neon screens leads into the quiet cul-de-sac of Heddon Street, a site of global musical pilgrimage.
This is the exact alleyway where photographer Brian Ward captured David Bowie in the rain for the front cover of The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Visitors today can still spot the architectural lines of the street and look for the location of the famous "K. West" sign that hung above the doorway.
Heddon Street for Bowie fans
After capturing your photographs, stop for a drink at theStarman pub, which pays tribute to Bowie's chameleonic career with beautifully curated artwork and memorabilia.
Historic Residences: The Jimi Hendrix Flat (23 Brook Street)
At 23 Brook Street in the heart of Mayfair, Jimi Hendrix lived for a brilliant, highly creative spell between 1968 and 1969, in the flat that now forms a core part of Handel Hendrix House. The address holds a unique historical novelty: the German baroque composer George Frideric Handel lived and composed next door at No. 25 over two centuries earlier. For music lovers, the Hendrix flat offers a rare, intimate look at the guitarist away from the glare of concert amplifiers—a domestic space where he wrote new material, entertained fellow musicians, and conducted legendary press interviews.
The neighbourhood holds another deeply poignant Hendrix connection near Marble Arch. The guitarist was a regular resident at The Cumberland Hotel, and it was from his room here that he granted his final interview to Keith Altham of the NME on September 11, 1970, just days before his tragic passing. Today, the hotel honours this profound connection with a dedicated Hendrix-themed suite and its vibrant Sound Cafe, keeping his stylistic legacy alive opposite theMoco Museum.
Historic Venues: Savile Row & The Apple Corps Rooftop
While Savile Row is universally renowned as the global home of bespoke tailoring—frequently dressing style icons like Charlie Watts—it also hosted one of the most significant moments in pop culture history.
The elegant townhouse at 3 Savile Row served as the headquarters for Apple Corps, The Beatles’ eclectic multimedia company and record label. If you had stood on this pavement on a freezing January day in 1969, you would have looked up to hear an unannounced live performance echoing across the rooftops. This was, of course, The Beatles’ legendary final public concert, beautifully documented during the Let It Be (1970) sessions. Looking forward, the building’s musical lineage is set to be permanently preserved, with plans underway to transform the site into a dedicated Beatles museum by 2027.
Historic Venues: Old Marylebone Town Hall & The London Palladium
For more Beatles landmarks, head further north to Marylebone, where the Old Marylebone Town Hall (Registry Office) stands as a quietly iconic site for Beatles folklore, having hosted the weddings of John and Yoko, Paul and Linda, and later Ringo and Barbara Bach. Just around the corner sits 34 Montagu Square, a basement flat leased by Ringo Starr that briefly served as a creative sanctuary for John and Yoko in 1968, marked today by a blue plaque.
To see where the madness truly spilled into the public eye, head toward Oxford Circus to find The London Palladium—the historic theatre where the band’s legendary 1963 appearance on Sunday Night at the London Palladium caused such massive crowds that the British press coined the term “Beatlemania” as a national front-page headline.
Cultural Landmarks: The Hard Rock Café London on Park Lane
While a modern iteration of the Hard Rock Café sits near Piccadilly Circus, the global music-themed chain actually traces its entire lineage back to the opposite end of the boulevard. The original Hard Rock Café at 150 Old Park Lane is where the global phenomenon truly began. Beyond dropping in for a meal, visitors can request a guided descent into "The Vault" located in the basement. This highly secure room protects a museum-grade collection of music history, including foundational instruments, iconic stage props, and original, handwritten contracts signed by The Beatles.
The original Hard Rock cafe in London
Cultural Landmarks: Carnaby Street (RS No.9)
Renowned globally as the epicentre of cutting-edge fashion shops in the 1960s, Carnaby Street shares a history inextricably tied to the emergence of British rhythm and blues. Today, that connection is permanently anchored at No. 9 Carnaby Street by RS No.9, the official flagship retail and exhibition space for The Rolling Stones. Regularly updated with exclusive album promotions, art installations, and new apparel lines, the storefront features an unmistakable tongue sculpture in the window.
RS9 the Rolling Stones shop on Carnaby Street
3. St John’s Wood: The Path to Abbey Road
Album Cover Locations: Abbey Road Studios & Crossing
Arguably the most universally recognised location in global music history, the Abbey Road zebra crossing in St John’s Wood remains a primary site of pilgrimage. Featured on the cover artwork for The Beatles' penultimate studio album, Abbey Road (1969), the crossing draws thousands of fans looking to step into the footsteps of the Fab Four. How to find Abbey Road
The iconic Abbey Road crossing
4. Battersea & Islington: Pink Floyd’s Industrial Canvas
Album Cover Locations: Battersea Power Station
Second only to Abbey Road in its visual recognition, Battersea Power Station stands as an industrial masterpiece immortalised on the front cover of Pink Floyd’s 1977 album, Animals. The image of the rogue, inflatable flying pig drifting between the towering art deco chimneys permanently stamped the building into rock iconography.
Following a massive architectural restoration, the old power station has been entirely reborn as a premium shopping, dining, and entertainment destination. Inside the cavernous turbine halls, among modern cafes and boutiques, a small historical plaque recalls the structure's profound place in global music folklore.
Battersea Power Station lit up for Pink Floyd’s Animals Redux launch
Recording Studios: Ramport Studios (115 Thessaly Road)
Just a short distance from the towering art deco chimneys, Battersea's industrial streets held another heavy studio legacy. In 1973, The Who converted an old church hall on Thessaly Road into Ramport Studios specifically to record their landmark rock opera Quadrophenia (1973) This custom quadraphonic space quickly became a legendary tracking base, going on to host sessions for Thin Lizzy's Jailbreak (1976) and Supertramp's Crime of the Century (1974).
Recording Studios: Britannia Row Studios
While Battersea represents the visual identity of Animals, the band took full control of their physical production by building Britannia Row Studios in Islington. Constructed immediately after the release of Wish You Were Here (1975), this private recording base is where the band tracked the entirety of Animals and laid down foundational elements for their magnum opus, The Wall (1979). Sadly there isn’t much to see there today.
5. Camden Town: Counter-Culture & Indie Heritage
Historic Venues: The Dublin Castle & The Hawley Arms
Camden has long maintained a reputation as London's premier counter-culture music hotspot. The historic Dublin Castle pub continues to serve as an active launchpad for rising alternative acts, while The Hawley Arms remains forever linked to Amy Winehouse.
The singer spent countless hours at the pub, and the interior walls still display intimate personal polaroids alongside memorabilia from resident alternative musicians. Directly around the back of the building, a towering painted mural pays tribute to her legacy, mirrored by a bronze statue dedicated to her memory inside the nearby Camden Market.
Amy Winehouse Mural on the back of the Hawley Arms pub in Camden
6. Brixton: South London’s Home-Grown Soul
Cultural Landmarks: The David Bowie Mural (Brixton Road)
In South London, the vibrant neighbourhood of Brixton traces deep links to visionary home-grown talent. On Brixton Road, directly opposite the singer's childhood home, the famous David Bowie Mural stands as a magnificent artistic landmark.
David Bowie mural in Brixton
Following his passing in 2016, the glass-fronted depiction of Bowie's Aladdin Sane (1973) persona instantly transformed into a worldwide, spontaneous memorial space.
Lyrical Landmarks: Electric Avenue
While exploring the neighbourhood, a short walk down Electric Avenue—the historic first market street in London to receive electric street lighting—connects visitors to the message behind Eddy Grant’s foundational 1980s reggae-pop track.
Historic Venues: O2 Academy Brixton
Closer to the station, the O2 Academy Brixton has reigned as a definitive concert hall since 1983. Featuring a unique, gently sloping floor structured like a shallow indoor amphitheatre, the space offers an unparalleled live viewing experience. The stage holds a poignant place in alternative history as the exact venue where The Smiths delivered their final live public performance.
7. Kensington, Chelsea & Hammersmith: Folk Cellars & Grand Arenas
Historic Venues: The Royal Albert Hall
For a grander concert experience we look to the Royal Albert Hall in Kensington. An iconic entertainment venue, it recently played host to a sell-out week from David Gilmour. This beautiful building first opened in 1871 and has remained a popular venue ever since. Eric Clapton is the artist with the most concerts at this one location, headlining over 180 concerts across his career.
The Royal Albert Hall lit up at night
Historic Venues: The Hammersmith Odeon (Eventim Apollo)
The legendary Hammersmith Odeon (now operating as theEventim Apollo) ranks as one of the capital's largest and most atmospheric concert venues. The room acts as a sacred space for David Bowie devotees, serving as the setting for the final, shocking Ziggy Stardust performance in July 1973, where Bowie announced the permanent retirement of his chameleonic stage persona.
In 2014, the art deco venue hosted Kate Bush for her historic Before the Dawn residency, marking her return to the live stage for 22 consecutive nights after a twenty-year absence. The building's beautiful exterior and classic marquee sign are also immortalised on the sleeve photographs of The Who's landmark rock opera, Quadrophenia (1973).
The iconic marquee promoting the Kate Bush concerts
Historic Venues: The Troubadour Club (Old Brompton Road)
London's musical history is so dense that crucial landmarks frequently hide in plain view across diverse residential boroughs. In West London, the historic Troubadour Club on Old Brompton Road has hosted intimate acoustic and rock sets since 1954. It anchored the sixties folk boom, welcoming performances from John Martyn, Joni Mitchell, Led Zeppelin, and a young Bob Dylan performing under the pseudonym “Blind Boy Grunt” in 1962. The room was so influential that a visiting promoter from Los Angeles was incredibly impressed by the club, taking the name back to California to establish his own iconic West Hollywood venue.
Historic Residences: 102 Edith Grove (Chelsea)
To understand the grit that fuelled the early British rhythm and blues movement, a trip south of the river to 102 Edith Grove in Chelsea reveals the infamous, squalid flat shared by Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Brian Jones in 1962. While there is little to see from the pavement today, this flat serves as the undisputed birthplace of the band's identity.
Recording Studios: Sound Techniques (Chelsea Manor Street)
Chelsea holds even stranger chapters of pastoral music history just off the main drag; up until the mid-twentieth century, cows were still kept at the old Wright’s Dairy on Chelsea Manor Street to supply fresh milk to the King's Road. That very same dairy building was later transformed into the legendary Sound Techniques Recording Studio.
Bypassing the more clinical commercial spaces of the era, the studio's warm acoustic rooms became a sanctuary for acoustic innovators and underground legends, capturing the fragile, timeless recordings of Nick Drake, early Pink Floyd, and Vashti Bunyan. You can read the full, fascinating history of thecows of King's Road and Sound Techniques over on The Vinyl Historian.
8. Chinatown & The Thames: Lyrical Landscapes
Lyrical Landmarks: Lee Ho Fook (Chinatown)
The city's geography even shapes the literary and lyrical landscape. Fans of classic track references can track down the former location of the Lee Ho Fook restaurant in Chinatown—immortalised by Warren Zevon in the track “Werewolves of London” as the place where a werewolf was spotted with a Chinese menu in his hand. The site now operates as Dumplings Legend, located directly across the street from the original Ronnie Scott's jazz club plaque.
Lyrical Landmarks: Trader Vic's (Park Lane)
Similarly, the basement of the Hilton Hotel on Park Lane once housed the original Trader Vic's, where the chameleonic characters of Zevon's lyrics were spotted sipping piña coladas with their hair perfectly in place.
Lyrical Landmarks: Waterloo Bridge
To bring a music tour of the capital to a perfect close, wait until the daylight starts to fade and walk out across the concrete span of Waterloo Bridge. As the sun dips below the Westminster skyline, you can look down upon the Thames, gaze on a Waterloo sunset, and experience the exact, timeless atmosphere captured in The Kinks' masterpiece.