Hoedown on Avenue A

Manhattan model Karen Rempel outside Lucinda's Bar on Avenue A

The East Village just got a double dose of country twang and redneck fun at Lucinda’s Bar at 169 Avenue A. Lucinda’s is a honky-tonk juke joint and cocktail lounge, featuring live music, line dancing, karaoke, and happy hour specials, all with a true Southern vibe.

In case you’ve been a Sleeping Beauty for the past few decades and missed it, the multi-Grammy-award-winning Lucinda Williams has been infusing America with wrenching, sweet, brilliant music in her distinctive, catchy country-folk-pop-rock style since her first LP came out in 1979. Now she’s graced us with her Southern country aesthetic at her Christmas-light bedecked, kitschy eponymous bar.

Christmas lights and drink specials at Lucinda's juke joint and honky tonk
Christmas lights and drink specials. Photo: Karen Rempel

I’ve dropped in a couple times. I’m getting my song ready for the live Country Karaoke on Friday nights! (It would be too “on the nose” to sing Lucinda, so my photographer, Phil Maier, suggests “Crazy” by Patsy Cline.) I love the vibe Lucinda’s giving—all cryin’ on the jukebox—with vintage posters, beer-and-whiskey-chasers, and stained-glass chandeliers. Pearl the bartender served me a righteous “Rig Rocker” tequila-based cocktail, and I’m definitely going back for more!

Ms. Williams’ breakthrough album came in 1998, with “Car Wheels on a Gravel Road and this is when I first got in her lonesome car and hit the open highway. Time magazine named her “America’s best songwriter” in 2002, and she was on Rolling Stone magazine’s 2015 list of greatest songwriters of all time. Many more honors have followed, with “Car Wheels” ranked in the top 100 of Rolling Stone’s 2020 list of greatest albums of all time. The following year, she was inducted into the Austin City Limits Hall of Fame.

Chalk board sign up for country karaoke at 8 PM
Get your country lament ready! Photo: Karen Rempel

How lucky we are to have this luminary in our humble East Village! Ms. Williams was on hand to deliver a so-regretful-I-missed-it performance at Lucinda’s opening night in July. You might catch her in the saloon soon, as she just finished a tour on the West Coast. She’ll be heading to the UK in January 2026, and returning to America on Feb 15 to tour the South on a double bill with rock’n’roll icons Heart, featuring Ann and Nancy Wilson on their “Royal Flush” tour. That’s a reason to leave on a midnight train to Georgia!

Ms. Williams is a true inspiration, continuing to record and tour at age 71, after experiencing a stroke in 2020. She’s my hero!

Lu's Jukebox
Lu’s jukebox. Photo: Karen Rempel

Never one to rest on a laurel or be idle for long, even after a stroke (!), Ms. Williams began a series called Lu’s Jukebox during the pandemic. She conceived this series to help independent music venues when there were no live performances. The six-episode series of themed sets of cover songs was curated by Williams and streamed for a fee with proceeds going to designated venues. The first offering was “Runnin’ Down A Dream (A Tribute to Tom Petty).” Tom Petty passed away, heartbreakingly, in 2017. Each Lu’s Jukebox performance has been released on vinyl, CD, and via streaming services.

The most recent offering in the Lu’s Jukebox series takes the concept even further: “Lucinda Williams Sings The Beatles From Abbey Road! Recorded at The Beatles’ legendary studio in London (short aside to illustrate my famous zebra crossing moment), the new collection serves as Volume 7 of her celebrated series. Kudos to Lucinda!

Manhattan Model Karen Rempel in front of Lucinda's Juke Joint and Honky Tonk on Avenue A in the East Village
Pointing the way to Lucinda’s. This and top photo: Philip Maier

What’s so cool about this is that Ms. Williams is the first major artist to actually record Beatles’ songs at Abbey Road Studios aside from the Fab Four themselves. The covers are pretty faithful to the originals, but they have a new rock arrangement and Ms. Williams distinctive voice and interpretation as a singer-songwriter from Lake Charles, Louisiana. Doug Pettibone plays guitar, accompanied by a Hammond organ. My fave track is “Something.” I could swear I thought it was George Harrison singing, and then Ms. William’s voice bent and unmelded and became pure Lucinda. I invite you to support the artist by buying the record at Lucinda Williams Music.

And definitely pay a visit to Lucinda’s. Drink a shot, play a song on the jukebox, and maybe you’ll even get to greet Lucinda herself. Cowboy hats are optional.

This story first appeared in Chelsea News and other papers in the Straus News group.

Style Notes

I’m vibing country casual for a Saturday afternoon at the bar—flared jeans, a strappy yoga top, boots, belt, and cowboy hat.

  • Black yoga top with crisscrossed straps at back. Athleta, 126 Fifth Avenue.
  • High-waisted blue jeans with split flare. Silver Jeans Company. Macy’s Herald Square, 151 W. 34th Street.
  • Jesse Jeans brown leather belt with rectangular brass buckle. Crossroads Trading, 47 W. 13th Street.
  • Charles by Charles David Varick black leather boots with silver studs. DSW, 40 E. 14th St.
  • Brown suede cowboy hatReminiscence, 74 Fifth Avenue.

8 thoughts on “Hoedown on Avenue A

  1. Love this! So full of gems and ideas for having FUN! I am sure the karaoke there is just de-lulu!!!

  2. Thanks for your columns–which keep me up to speed on the city’s “goings-on”! Must check out Lucinda Williams! Have fun on Karaoke night! I’m sure you’ll be great!

  3. This inspired me to take a look at Lucinda’s memoir, published in 2023. It’s “Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You: A Memoir,” and so far really interesting (I am reading the Kindle sample).

    I really like Lucinda’s song Jackson.

  4. Loved your brief biography of Lucinda. You rock the cowboy vibe well. I see you are now packin’ your own “guns”.

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