You step through a narrow door on Carrer dels Apuntadors, and the first impression hits you physically: candlelight on century-old stonework, cocktail glasses half-hidden in the dim light, and just a few metres ahead, a saxophonist whose notes drift into every corner of this tiny room. This is not a club in the usual sense — it is an encounter.

Concept
Since 2006, Jazz Voyeur Club has occupied a 16th-century Palacete in the heart of Palma's old town, in the La Llotja neighbourhood near the harbour and Paseo. Its founder, Gerardo Cañellas Engel, is a Mallorcan who spent two decades travelling through the small jazz clubs of Europe and South America, studying what made them work — and then created his own. The blueprint was specific: the old coffee bars of Brussels and Barcelona, where music and space fuse into a single feeling. The result is a fusion of live performance, photographic staging, and a deliberate commitment to intimacy. The same concept, the same name, exists as a sister club in Buenos Aires — the voyeur principle knows no borders.

Atmosphere
Small. Almost always full. Candlelit. Those are the three coordinates in which your evening unfolds. The walls carry photographs — the founder's eye is permanently present in the room, as a design element, not decoration. Dark wood, warm pools of light, not a centimetre wasted. Tourists and locals sit shoulder to shoulder, united by the same interest. Dozens of TripAdvisor reviewers call it a "cult club" — anyone who has been inside understands that instantly. Palma has two major year-round jazz institutions; Jazz Voyeur Club is one of them.
Programme & Music
The programme moves between jazz, soul and blues — and occasionally beyond. Phil Wolff on saxophone, the Marc Ayza Group, big band evenings, acts like the Black Cats: the booking reflects the ambitions of a serious music venue. That said, if you arrive expecting strictly classical standards, come with an open mind — several guests report evenings featuring African rhythms, soul-funk, or international guests steering things in unexpected directions, and most were delighted regardless. Live music on almost every evening of the week, Mondays excepted, year-round.
The really big names — Herbie Hancock, Diana Krall, Chick Corea, Ron Carter, Chucho Valdés — perform not in the club itself but as part of the **Jazz Voyeur Festival**, which shares the same brand but plays larger venues: Trui Teatre, Conservatori de Palma, Es Gremi, Palma Auditorium. The festival takes place each autumn and winter; current dates and the programme are in the events calendar below.
Who it's for & when to go
An evening here works as a starting point for a night in La Llotja, as a deliberate alternative to the big club scene, or as a cultural anchor for any Mallorca stay that reaches beyond beach and sangria. The crowd defies easy categorisation: locals, jazz travellers from around the world, couples, groups of friends — everyone who prefers real live music to a playlist. For a birthday, a first date, or an evening among people who genuinely care about music, Carrer dels Apuntadors 5 is a near-unbeatable address — as long as you arrive early enough.
Insider Tip
Come early. The room holds few guests, and evenings regularly sell out. Anyone who wants to be sure of a spot should reserve in advance. And: "jazz" here is a promise with some latitude. Arrive open to the unexpected and you will experience evenings that genuinely surprise. Those seeking strict standards purism might miss the point — the voyeur moment when music, candlelight and photography fuse into a single image for a few hours.




