P.M. Sounds is a basement music bar in Kyoto’s Kiyamachi-Sanjo area, built around the owner’s long relationship with audio, records, and late-night listening. It is not trying to be mysterious. The room says exactly what it is: good records, good volume, craft beer, Japanese whisky, and a serious system doing the work.
The official equipment list is unusually useful. JBL Project K2 S9500 speakers sit at the centre, fed by two Garrard Model 301 turntables, an EMT 931 CD player, a Mark Levinson 26L preamp, and three Quad 405 II power amplifiers. That is not background-music hardware. It is a system chosen by someone who has spent decades caring about how Louis Armstrong and Chet Baker should feel in a small room.
The music policy is broad enough to keep the room from becoming a museum. P.M. Sounds says it moves from golden-age jazz records to J-pop, with vinyl, CD, and high-resolution playback all in use. Best for a slow final stop in Kyoto: a drink, a seat near the system, and enough volume to listen without being pushed out of conversation.