Mapping the Myth: The Definitive Los Angeles Rock n' Roll Landmarks
Los Angeles exists as a living archive of music history, where legendary sounds took shape across sun-drenched hillsides, hidden studios, and iconic streets. From the bohemian retreats of Laurel Canyon to the grit and glamour of historic music venues along the Sunset Strip, these locations formed the vivid backdrop to the soundtrack of our lives. They are the spaces where masterpieces were written, performed, and captured on timeless album covers—leaving behind a map of cultural landmarks you can still stand in front of today. This guide explores the most important rock and roll landmarks in Los Angeles, supported by links, videos, songs, and maps to help you navigate the city’s musical past.
But where did it happen, and where can you still see it? This guide explores the rock and roll landmarks of Los Angeles you can visit today, supported by links, videos, songs and maps to help you navigate the city’s musical past. We recommend saving these locations to Google Maps before exploring Los Angeles, as many of the most important rock landmarks are spread across the city.
Historic Rock n' Roll Hotels and Neighborhoods of LA
Not every rock star lived permanently in Los Angeles. Some passed through for recording sessions or tours, while others, including John Mayall, Graham Nash, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, made the city their home. Few addresses are more closely associated with this period than Laurel Canyon.
Laurel Canyon
No place captures the spirit of the Sixties and Seventies LA scene quite like Laurel Canyon. Nestled in the Hollywood Hills, this quiet neighbourhood once housed the likes of Joni Mitchell, Jim Morrison, Frank Zappa, and the members of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. It is where Joni met Graham Nash who met David Crosby and Stephen Stills. It is where Nash would later write “Our House” about his time living with Joni at her house on 8217 Lookout Mountain. It is also where one of the most famous pictures of Joni was taken by friend and Canyon neighbour Henry Diltz.
You might know some of the other addresses in Laurel Canyon, like Blue Jay Way where not one, but two classic songs were written. Two classic songs, both recorded in the same house on Blue Jay Way in LA's Laurel Canyon.
John Mayall visited the Canyon in 1968 and ended up staying, living at 8353 Grandview Drive. He wrote a full album about the place, Blues from Laurel Canyon (1968), which includes song titles like “Walking on Sunset” and “Laurel Canyon Home”.
And how about another song from the Canyon? This time from another resident, Jim Morrison. “Love Street” was written about the street behind the Canyon Country Store about half way down Laurel Canyon Boulevard. The store is also a cool place to check out. It was the go-to place for the Canyon-dwelling rock stars and still has a distinct feel to it today. Pop in for some snacks and check out the pictures on the walls. Who can you spot?
There are too many stories and stars from Laurel Canyon to mention here but we do recommend following this great Instagram account for more tales like this one.
Topanga Canyon: Eagles and Young in the Hills
Head west from Los Angeles and you’ll eventually reach Topanga Canyon, a winding road that cuts up from Pacific Coast Highway at Malibu through the rugged Santa Monica Mountains. Unlike Laurel Canyon—minutes from Sunset Boulevard and the Hollywood Strip—Topanga always felt a little further out, a little wilder.
In the late sixties and early seventies, this remoteness made it a magnet for musicians, poets, and artists chasing a freer way of life. Rustic cabins, dirt roads, and an anything-goes atmosphere gave Topanga a different character to its more famous neighbour.
For the Eagles, it was an early base. Glenn Frey and Don Henley both spent time here during the band’s formative years, part of a scene that also included Neil Young and members of Crosby, Stills & Nash. This location inspired much of Young’s After the Gold Rush (1970) period. There is a story that David Crosby was inspired by the view from Young’s Topanga Canyon home to write the classic “Wooden Ships” with Paul Kantner from Jefferson Airplane. There seems to be a few differing stories on the writing location so take that with a pinch of salt.
That mix of rural seclusion and West Coast cool seeped into the Eagles’ first records. The canyon’s wide-open feel can be heard in songs like “Take It Easy”, while the band’s harmonies were sharpened in the same hillside cabins that echoed with so much music of the era. What looked like a peaceful, easy feeling was anything but.
Drive Topanga today and you’ll still catch glimpses of that spirit—weathered shacks, hand-painted signs, and sudden views out to the Pacific. It remains one of LA’s most evocative rock landmarks: a canyon where the Eagles quietly found their wings.
Venice Beach
Venice Beach deserves a mention as the spiritual birthplace of The Doors. It was here that Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek first shared the idea of starting a band, their conversations drifting between poetry and possibility. They took their name from The Doors of Perception by Aldous Huxley—itself a nod to opening the mind.
Head to Speedway & 18th Place Venice, CA 90291 to see this huge mural to Jim Morrison. A few years back the mural was updated, changing the colour from blue to red but it still looks cool!
Chateau Marmont
A true rock and roll refuge. Possibly no greater rock n' roll landmark exists in Los Angeles. As Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures once said, "If you must get into trouble, do it at the Chateau Marmont." This West Hollywood hideout has seen it all—Jim Morrison dangling from windows, John Belushi’s final days, and countless band breakups, makeups, and misadventures. Michael Hutchence was a regular guest.
It was also the home for Daisy Jones for a while. If you haven’t seen it yet, Daisy Jones & The Six delivers a brilliant story, great songs and plenty of LA landmarks on screen! The Chateau is a blank canvas for rock stars to make their own, but you can stay there too. Headed note paper for guests of the Chateau is a timeless touch.
The Riot House (Andaz West Hollywood)
Keith Richards threw a TV out the window here whilst Led Zeppelin allegedly rode motorbikes through the corridors. It's rock mythology mapped to a single, historic West Hollywood zip code. While the balconies have been enclosed and the wildness tamed, the echoes still linger. Today, you can stay here and look out toward the Whisky, the Rainbow, and the Roxy just across Sunset. This is where Robert Plant proclaimed, “I am a Golden God!” This was the ultimate snapshot of rock at its dangerous peak.
The Beverly Hills Hotel
Immortalised on the cover of Hotel California (1976), the Beverly Hills Hotel is more than just a pink stucco landmark—it’s a symbol of LA’s seductive promise. While the Eagles used it as a metaphor for excess and illusion, the hotel itself has long been a real-life playground for the rich and recognisable. These days you’re more likely to spot Hollywood royalty beneath the palms, but the aura of stardom remains. For Eagles fans, standing beneath the palm-lined portico offers a surreal sense of déjà vu—like stepping inside the album jacket.
Where Rock History Was Photographed: Iconic LA Album Cover Locations
Album covers have played a quiet but important role in turning parts of Los Angeles into rock and roll landmarks. From the doorway used for The Doors’ Morrison Hotel (1970) to the twilight shot of the Beverly Hills Hotel for the Eagles’ Hotel California, these images fixed specific locations in the collective memory, transforming ordinary buildings into places fans still seek out today.
Crosby, Stills & Nash – Crosby, Stills & Nash (1969)
Location: 815 Palm Avenue, West Hollywood
The Story: The sofa, the shack, the photo mix-up. Photographed by Henry Diltz, this now-legendary cover was taken in West Hollywood. The building was torn down the day after the shoot, leaving us with a beautiful, unrepeatable fragment of time.
The Eagles – Hotel California (1976)
Location: The Beverly Hills Hotel, Sunset Boulevard
The Story: Shot at twilight using a cherry picker to capture the hotel’s domes in golden light. It’s one of rock’s most iconic images—mysterious, alluring, and loaded with meaning. The real hotel still stands on Sunset Boulevard, palm trees and all.
The Doors – Morrison Hotel (1970)
Location: 1246 S Hope Street, Downtown LA
The Story: Another Henry Diltz classic. The band slipped into the lobby for a quick, guerrilla-style shoot that captured them framed behind the motel’s gritty window. The hotel is long gone, but the image—and the album—are pure LA. This wasn’t the only album cover they shot in LA; the cover of Waiting for the Sun (1968) was taken up on Laurel Canyon.
The Byrds – Untitled (1970)
Location: Griffith Observatory, Hollywood Hills
The Story: Shot on the stairway up to the Griffith Observatory, with the Hollywood Hills swapped for a desert vista in post-production. The cover shows the band at a transitional moment—somewhere between past glories and a new sound.
Pink Floyd – Wish You Were Here (1975)
Location: 3400 Warner Blvd, Burbank
The Story: The classic “burning man” cover was shot on the backlot of Warner Brothers Studios just over the way in Burbank. The album designers Hipgnosis (Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell) hired two stuntmen to perform the handshake for real whilst Po took as many photos as possible.
The Legendary Rock and Roll Venues of the Sunset Strip and Beyond
Live music venues have been central to Los Angeles’ rock and roll story, often serving as testing grounds where careers were shaped in front of small, local audiences. From Sunset Strip institutions like the Whisky a Go Go and the Troubadour to large-scale venues such as the Hollywood Bowl, these places remain some of the most tangible rock and roll landmarks in the city, many of them still hosting live music today.
The Roxy: Owned by Lou Adler and briefly David Geffen, it hosted everyone from Neil Young to Genesis. Frank Zappa recorded his live album Roxy & Elsewhere (1974) here in 1973, capturing the club's gritty, energetic atmosphere.
The Troubadour: Perhaps the most important singer-songwriter venue in LA. This is where Elton John played his first US performance in 1970—an electric night that earned him instant acclaim. The club also nurtured the careers of Linda Ronstadt, Jackson Browne, the Eagles, and Joni Mitchell.
The Rainbow Bar & Grill: A short walk from the Whisky and just across the street from The Viper Room, the Rainbow has always been more than a bar. It was Lemmy's second home, John Belushi’s last supper, and the backdrop for countless rock stories. From its walls of memorabilia to the heavy metal heyday of the 1980s, the Rainbow remains a living landmark. From here, look up to see The London West Hollywood Hotel—a modern vantage point with a view across rock history. (Read more about our stay at The London West Hollywood).
Hollywood Bowl: Not far from the Strip, this open-air amphitheatre has hosted everyone from The Beatles to The Rolling Stones, Monty Python and more recently David Gilmour’s Luck and Strange Tour. It’s a bucket-list venue for performers and fans alike—and worth a detour if you’re in town for a show.
Legendary Los Angeles Recording Studios
Recording studios are often hidden from view, but in Los Angeles some have become landmarks in their own right. These are places where albums were recorded, ideas took shape and careers were defined. No studio better represents that legacy than Capitol Records, whose distinctive tower on Vine Street remains one of the most recognisable recording studios in the world, rivalled only, perhaps, by Abbey Road.
Inside the Capitol Records Tower, the acoustics are flawless, the ghosts of sessions past hang in the air, and the house band was none other than the Wrecking Crew—an elite group of session musicians who quietly played on countless hits from the ’60s and ’70s. Artists came for the sound, but they stayed for the myth. From The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds (1966) to Prince's Purple Rain (1984), so much of LA’s musical soul was laid down in these rooms.
Sunset Sound: Where The Doors laid down their first two albums, The Doors (1967) and Strange Days (1967). The Rolling Stones also completed tracking for Exile on Main Street (1972) here. Prince, Zappa, and the Beach Boys all followed.
The Record Plant: The legendary birthplace where classics like Hotel California (1976), Fleetwood Mac's Rumours (1977), and Guns N' Roses' Appetite for Destruction (1987) were tracked.
EastWest Studios: From The Mamas & the Papas' “California Dreaming” to Michael Jackson's Thriller (1982), the walls of this place have heard it all.
Street-Level Music Landmarks and Visual History
Not every rock and roll landmark in Los Angeles is a studio or a stage. Some of the city’s most memorable music moments happened in ordinary places—rooftops, street corners and intersections that became landmarks through a single performance, photograph or filmed moment.
Republic Liquor – U2
On March 27, 1987, U2 took to the rooftop of a downtown liquor store at 7th and Main to film a live video for “Where the Streets Have No Name.” The impromptu performance stopped traffic, drew a crowd, and paid homage to The Beatles’ rooftop farewell. Today, the building houses Margarita’s Place, but for any music lover standing on the pavement at 7th and Main, you are looking up at the exact spot where a single performance halted a city.
Heart Attack & Vine – Tom Waits
A rough, poetic corner of Hollywood, immortalised in song by Tom Waits. The phrase—a twist on the intersection of Hollywood and Vine—became the title of the track “Heartattack and Vine” from the album Heartattack and Vine (1980), later covered by Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and used in a Levi’s ad. More than a location, it’s a mood: all neon buzz and late-night regret.
Griffith Observatory
This iconic LA landmark has deep musical connections. Beyond the silver screen, it serves as a serene spot for reflection. There is a bust of James Dean and a tree planted in honour of George Harrison. Sadly the original tree was killed by beetles and had to be replaced in 2014. The Mt. Hollywood Tunnel up to the top is also the entrance to Toontown, but that’s another story.
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Los Angeles is a city layered with stories, and this barely scratches the surface. From doorways and street corners to studios and stages, many of these places are still standing, quietly carrying the weight of what happened there. For anyone travelling with music in mind, Los Angeles remains a city best explored through its locations. If there’s a landmark we’ve missed, let us know.