Tymm sits in Haebangchon rather than central Seoul proper, and the room feels closer to a small neighbourhood cafe-wine-bar than a formal audiophile salon. Coffee, wine, beer, whisky, small plates, and records share the same compact frame. Music is not staged as a lecture. It is simply part of how the room works.
The setup is best understood through behaviour rather than hardware. Records sit close to the daily identity of the place, and the format shifts naturally from daytime coffee to evening drinks without losing the music-first thread. It is not a silent listening room, but it is also not a normal bar with a playlist drifting above the tables.
Guests can request music, but the final choice stays with the room. That is a useful social contract. Tymm works best when treated as a quiet, record-aware stop for coffee or a drink, with the music in the foreground and the volume of the evening kept human.