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Arts & Entertainment

How to pair your next SoCal museum outing with free live music

A scene of a garden with orange flowers and grass and large trees and a pianist playing an electronic keyboard under the tree. Onlookers sit on the grass and stand behind the orange flowers, many wearing straw sun hats.
Pianist Yi-Ju Lai, faculty member at the Pasadena Conservatory of Music, at The Huntington on April 20, 2026.
(
Monica Bushman / LAist
)

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Music in the Rose Garden series starts at The Huntington
The Huntington, the museum, library and gardens in San Marino, has just started its spring “Music in the Rose Garden” series.

The jacaranda trees are blooming (a little early); the three-acre rose garden at The Huntington is in full bloom too; and Jazz at LACMA is about to start …

It's springtime in Southern California!

That also means it’s time to do a little planning for your next Southern California museum visit — so you can not only see some art, but also enjoy a free live music performance.

Music in the Rose Garden at The Huntington

Yellow and pink flowers in a green garden with a white pillar structure in the background.
The Huntington Rose Garden
(
The Huntington
/
Flickr
)

The Huntington’s Music in the Rose Garden live music performance series is already underway. The series is in partnership with the Pasadena Conservatory of Music, and now is a great time to go and see the more than 1,300 varieties of roses in full bloom in the San Marino garden that dates back to 1908.

On Monday afternoons from 1 to 3 p.m. (through June 8) a different Pasadena Conservatory performer or duo plays instruments including piano, violin, accordion, cello and guitar.

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Music in the Rose Garden performances are free, with paid admission to The Huntington or an annual membership. The series also returns in the fall.

An insider tip, especially for those visiting with kids (who get free admission if they’re under 4-years-old): keep an eye out for the rose garden’s fairy door.

Jazz at LACMA

Band.jpg
Jazz at LACMA
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Photo courtesy of LACMA
/
via Facebook
)

The 35th season of Jazz at LACMA kicks off on Friday, May 1 and runs through October. The first performance this year is by vocalist and composer Michelle Coltrane, the daughter of jazz legends John and Alice Coltrane, as part of a celebration of the 100th anniversary of her father’s birth.

The live performances take place from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Smidt Welcome Plaza, next to the Instagram-famous “Urban Light” installation of 200+ antique street lamps.

The free jazz nights at LACMA don’t require admission to the museum, but if you do also want to visit the museum, admission is free for L.A. County residents from 3 to 6 p.m. on weekdays (including Friday).

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If you’re looking to check out LACMA’s newly unveiled David Geffen museum galleries, you’ll need to be a member to enter on May 1. The next Friday opportunity for non-members is May 8.

Off the 405 concerts at The Getty

Musicians on an outdoor stage with a metal scaffolding frame around them, a stone wall lit red in the background, and a crowd in darkness, surrounding the stage on three sides.
Off the 405 Concert: Woods
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Photo by Cassia Davis. © 2024 J. Paul Getty Trust
)

The Getty Center’s nighttime Off the 405 summer concert series kicks off on Saturday, May 30 with a performance by blues poet, vocalist and composer aja monet. Other artists in the series include South Korean pop band and electronic musician Laurel Halo.

The “Off the 405” performance series is free, but does require an online reservation. Reservations for the aja monet performance will be available beginning May 7 and about three weeks ahead of each of the following performances (which run through August 22).

Also, admission to the Getty Center is free, but there is a fee ($15-25) for parking before 6 p.m. on Saturdays.

Golden Hour: Music in the Garden at the Norton Simon Museum

A photograph of several groups of people relaxing on the lawn of the sculpture garden of Norton Simon Museum. The ground is covered with grass and plants with fronds. On the right side photo there is a pine tree, and in front of it is a large gray statute of a nude human figure reclining. People sit around the lawn in different groups talking, eating food, and sketching on paper.
Norton Simon Museum’s annual Garden Party
(
Norton Simon Museum
)
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The Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena offers free live music in its newly renovated sculpture garden on select Fridays from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m., beginning this year May 26 and running through August.

The performances are programmed by bassist and composer Masatoshi Sato and feature a range of musical styles. They’re free with admission to the Norton Simon Museum, which is $20 for adults and free for students and people 18 and under. Admission is free for all on the first Friday of every month from 4 to 7 p.m.

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