
A Refuge for Rock'n'Roll
Some places you simply know about — and some you have to earn. Club Mutante belongs firmly in the second category. Step inside for the first time and it is immediately clear that nothing here has been optimised for the casual majority. The concept is explicitly anti-conventional: a concert hall and a club night in one, committed to culture and allergic to conformism. Since its founding, Mutante has become the most important home for original-music bands in Palma — a room where having your own repertoire is the only criterion that matters.

Santa Catalina as Stage
The address at Carrer de la Indústria 8 is not accidental. Santa Catalina is Palma's most alive neighbourhood — a former 19th-century fishing quarter built around the Mercat de Santa Catalina (open since 1920), which has evolved into a bohemian, cosmopolitan district packed with wine bars, cocktail spots, restaurants and live-music venues. Carrer de Sant Magí with its terrace bars, the social hub of Plaça del Vapor, the smell of tapas drifting through warm Mediterranean evenings — this is the curtain that rises before you walk into Mutante. On Carrer de la Indústria itself, an authentic micro-cluster of alternative Palma is forming: a few doors down sits the techno club Es Moli. It is no coincidence that the Mutante team chose exactly this street for their new chapter.
The History of a Mutation
The first incarnation of Club Mutante occupied Carrer Joan Miró — a building that was already legendary in the 1990s as Virus, and had most recently gathered a generation of Palma music lovers as La Sifonería. When the building was earmarked for hotel conversion, Mutante said goodbye with an unforgettable farewell party. The mutation was not a defeat — it was programmatic. Founder David Valle, who also runs the Palma venue Maraca, transplanted the concept to a better location: Indústria 8 in Santa Catalina.
Sound, Space, Atmosphere
Mutante is a room built around music. The aesthetic is industrial and dark, the stage close to the audience — there are no bad spots here, no glassy mid-distance between band and crowd. The sound system is described as audiophile-quality, which is far from a given in Palma's often compromised live spaces. Capacity stays in the low three figures; on sold-out nights this creates the physical proximity to the performance that large halls structurally cannot replicate.
The audience is not a random mix — it is a community. Regulars recognise each other; the average guest brings decades of record shelves and genuine curiosity. The atmosphere is wonderfully relaxed, focused on the music, without the self-congratulation that haunts some self-styled underground venues.
La Tarde Indie — Palma's Most Indie Format
Mutante's real mythology has been built on Saturday afternoons. "La Tarde Indie" is the house's self-declared *caballo ganador* (winning horse): an afternoon tardeo in the indie and alternative-rock universe that starts early and flows seamlessly into a late-night Indie Rock Club session. Residents including Clandestino DJ, Rique Spun and the Supersonidos crew spin anthems from Viva Suecia, Arde Bogotá, The Strokes and Arcade Fire — a setlist you know from your gut, not from the radio. Entry before the cut-off point is free; those who arrive after know exactly what they are paying for.
Concert Programme and Scene Network
The heartbeat of Mutante is on the stage. The venue runs its own concert series — including the weekly Thursday format "Esos Juernes" (one band per Thursday), born from the mobile Rock/Punk/Garage collective Gabba Gabba Hey Club. The house's own "Festival Mutante" has established itself as a reliable fixture in Palma's cultural calendar. Booked artists span the full genre range: from Brighton 64 and Go Cactus to Guadalupe Plata, Camellos, Hombre Lobo Internacional and Grande Amore. For larger touring acts — which the Mutante team also promotes — the bigger Sala Es Gremi is used: Mutante itself has deliberately remained the intimate room.
Genre spectrum: indie, indie-rock, alternative, punk rock, garage rock, power pop, rock'n'roll — and on club nights, electronic and synth-driven sets. What unites every programme: original repertoire is mandatory. No cover bands, no commercial compromises.
Why Mutante Matters
In a city where live music is often a sidekick to the restaurant industry, Club Mutante does something rarer: it puts the music itself at the centre. That makes it the most important anchor for Palma's alternative scene — and one of the most genuinely unusual nights the island has to offer.




