Mumbai’s music calendar currently feels split between intimate live experiences and increasingly ambitious festival culture. One night you are sitting inside a small Andheri venue listening to acoustic covers with strangers quietly singing along. Another has rooftop jazz sessions unfolding above the city skyline. And somewhere in the background, a three-day festival at Jio World Convention Centre is already preparing for 2026 at full scale.
The city’s nightlife ecosystem works because it allows all these moods to exist simultaneously.
Mumbai rarely asks people to pick one version of themselves for the evening.
Here is everything worth knowing.
26/6 – 28/6 | 12 pm
AYC | All You Can Fest | 2026
Jio World Convention Centre hosts All You Can Fest next June — a multi-day event already positioning itself as one of Mumbai’s larger entertainment gatherings heading into 2026.
The format appears built around immersive festival culture: live performances, multiple experiences under one roof, crowd-heavy programming, food, music, and large-scale event production designed for full-day attendance rather than quick appearances. Mumbai’s appetite for these hybrid entertainment festivals continues growing rapidly, especially among younger crowds looking for experiences that feel bigger than traditional concerts.
Also, any event titled “All You Can Fest” immediately suggests ambition bordering on exhaustion.
Which, honestly, is exactly what successful festivals usually look like by day two.
Where: Jio World Convention Centre, Mumbai | Tickets: ₹1099 onwards
30/5 | 8.30 pm
Rythm & Heat Saturdays ft. The Shreya Collective
Jazz@38 by Asilo continues its strong run of intimate live-music programming with Rythm & Heat Saturdays featuring The Shreya Collective.
The rooftop venue naturally suits performances built around live instrumentation, jazz-inspired arrangements, softer crowd energy, and evenings that prioritise atmosphere over spectacle. Expect lounge-style pacing, skyline views, and music designed less for dancing and more for settling gradually into the night.
Mumbai’s rooftop music culture thrives because the city becomes strangely calmer from above.
There is also something deeply cinematic about live jazz while traffic noise disappears somewhere beneath the skyline.
Where: Jazz@38 by Asilo, Mumbai | Tickets: ₹1000
24/5 | 9 pm
Skip the Playlist — Anupam Live at TAP Andheri
TAP Andheri hosts Anupam live this week with an event title that perfectly captures the current fatigue people feel toward algorithm-driven music culture.
Skip the Playlist leans into live performance energy — familiar songs, acoustic-style interaction, crowd singalongs, and the unpredictability that only comes from live music inside compact venues. TAP’s atmosphere especially works well for this kind of evening: casual, social, slightly loud, and built for people who arrived intending to stay “for a little while” before accidentally spending the entire night there.
Also, Mumbai audiences remain aggressively willing to sing along even when nobody asked them to.
Sometimes especially when nobody asked them to.
Where: TAP, Andheri Lokhandwala, Andheri West, Mumbai | Tickets: ₹499 onwards
31/5 | 7.30 pm
Jamming Night
Yellow Door Studios hosts another open-format Jamming Night this May — one of those events where the line between performer and audience disappears surprisingly quickly.
These evenings thrive on spontaneity. Someone brings a guitar. Someone unexpectedly knows percussion. One person quietly dominates vocals. Another contributes emotional support through extremely committed humming. The result usually lands somewhere between organised music session and beautifully chaotic group therapy.
Mumbai’s creative crowd tends to love spaces like this because they remove pressure entirely. Nobody expects perfection. Participation matters more.
At ₹499, it is also one of the city’s more interactive live-music experiences currently available.
And honestly, some of the best nights begin with absolutely no fixed plan.
Where: Yellow Door Studios, Mumbai | Tickets: ₹499
All event details are as provided by organisers and are subject to change. Readers are advised to confirm timings and ticket availability directly with venues before attending.