Midtown Manhattan’s jazz history comes alive on Jazz in Times Square, a three‑hour guided walk that threads Birdland, the Iridium, Reisenweber’s Café sites and the hallowed stage of Carnegie Hall. Meet at Carnegie Hall, 154 W 57th St, and set off into the Theater District where neon, limestone facades and subway grates hum with the aftertaste of brass and brushes. Your guide — a bilingual Franco‑American musician — stitches archival anecdotes to street-level detail, tracing how jazz expanded from smoky back rooms into major stages near Broadway and Times Square. Key features on the route include the storied Birdland address, the modern Iridium Jazz Club, and the historic footprint of Reisenweber’s Café; the walk pauses at Carnegie Hall’s museum to highlight the building’s acoustics and cultural weight. The urban geology—late 19th‑ and early 20th‑century brownstone and limestone construction—creates the narrow sound corridors that helped New York’s clubs bloom. Expect a mix of historical narrative and sensory moments: closing your eyes to imagine Duke Ellington conducting a crowd, hearing a snatch of Count Basie’s swing near a theater marquee, or recognizing a modern echo in Wynton Marsalis’s trumpet. The tour often offers an optional live jazz show or a swing dance lesson for an extra layer of immersion, transforming archival history into a present‑day night out. This walk stands out because it maps music onto the city’s physical grid, making locations legible. Rather than a museum exhibit, it’s a living history: musicians, club owners, and audiences appear in the stories, and the route demonstrates how architecture, immigration, and commerce shaped musical forms. For visitors, the tour is both primer and headphone alternative—ideal for travelers who want context before booking an evening at a club. Practical details matter: the route moves through busy Midtown streets and uses a mix of sidewalks and short staircases; it covers roughly one to two miles over three hours and suits most adults comfortable standing and walking. Children are welcome from age five. Small group sizes keep the experience conversational. Bring comfortable shoes, an appetite for late‑afternoon energy and a readiness to listen: this is an urban soundwalk where the city itself is part of the ensemble. Whether you’re a first‑time visitor to New York or a repeat Broadwaygoer, Jazz in Times Square turns familiar streets into a playlist of moments that shaped American music. Guides provide neighborhood context, pointing out plaques, building dates, and lesser-known anecdotes that connect songs to specific addresses. Bring a portable umbrella for sudden showers and local transit card for quick departures. If you plan to attend an optional performance afterward, book early: club capacity is limited and midtown evenings can sell out quickly, especially on weekends and during theater season. Expect local surprises.