Best Jazz Bar in Jeju: You Call It Love (유콜잇러브)

Some bars want you to drink. Some bars want you to eat. You Call It Love (유콜잇러브) wants you to listen. Tucked into a quiet Jeju side street, it is one of the most fully-realized listening bars on the island — a small room built around a serious analog audio system (JBL speakers, McIntosh amplification, twin Pioneer turntables), an obsessive jazz LP collection, and an owner who chooses every track that plays. You will not be making a request. You will be sitting down, ordering a single malt or a cocktail, and letting someone else’s ears decide the next forty minutes of your evening.

Full vinyl-bar setup: JBL speakers, LP wall, turntable, amp
Korean name유콜잇러브 (You Call It Love)
NeighborhoodJeju residential side street — easy to miss from the road. ~1-hour flight from Seoul Gimpo to Jeju Intl. Airport, then taxi via 1100-ro highway.
VibeListening bar — vinyl-only, no requests, low volume conversation
Price range₩₩₩ — single malts ₩15,000–25,000 ($10–$17 USD), cocktails ₩18,000–22,000 ($12–$15 USD)
Audio rigJBL speakers + McIntosh amplification + twin Pioneer turntables
English menuLimited — drinks menu in Korean, but the host speaks enough English for orders
Foreign cardsVisa/Mastercard accepted
HoursEvening only — typical listening bar hours. Check Naver Map.
ReservationsWalk-in. Small room, can fill up on weekends.
MapGoogle Maps · Naver Map
⚡ THE QUICK TAKE
  1. Jeju side-street listening bar — JBL + McIntosh + twin turntables, no requests allowed.
  2. Order: single malt or a cocktail, sit, listen. The owner picks every record.
  3. Modern reincarnation of 1970s Korean 음악감상실 (music appreciation room) — luxury vinyl + whisky version.

My uncle’s generation called this kind of place 음악감상실 (eumak-gamsangsil, ‘music appreciation room’) — they were small Jongno cafes in the 1970s where students paid the cost of a coffee to sit silently in front of a single audiophile speaker rig and listen to records they could not afford to buy. Most of them disappeared by the 1990s as Korea got rich enough that everyone could afford their own stereo. You Call It Love is the modern reincarnation of that idea — same discipline, better whisky, vinyl as luxury rather than necessity. It is one of the most distinctly Korean ways to spend a Jeju evening.

The Name — “I Call It Jazz, You Call It Love”

The doormat at the entrance does the introduction:

Entrance doormat: I CALL IT JAZZ, YOU CALL IT LOVE

I CALL IT JAZZ — YOU CALL IT LOVE.” It’s a quiet poem about why people end up at a bar like this. The owner calls what he plays jazz. The room calls it something else. Walk in for the first time and you understand which side of that equation you fall on by the second drink.

YOU CALL IT LOVE wall signage

The Spot — Side-Street Jeju, Easy to Miss

From the road, the building is unassuming — a residential-block exterior in a Jeju side street with a small lit window punching out an inviting orange glow. Walk past once and you might miss it.

Exterior at night - Jeju side street building
The interior framed through a single window from outside

That window is the giveaway. Lean in and you can see straight to the bar — bartender at work, lantern light, LPs on the wall behind. It’s a clean cinematic frame and an honest preview of what’s inside.

Address: Jeju-si, Jeju-do, South Korea — residential side street near 1100-ro (see map pin for the exact location).

📍 유콜잇러브 on Google Maps

The Sound — JBL + McIntosh, Bartender as Curator

Listening bars live or die by their audio. You Call It Love runs a serious setup: vintage JBL speakers on each side of the bar, McIntosh amplification driving them, and a row of Pioneer turntables with a DJ mixer for seamless changeovers. Walk up and you can see most of the gear from the bar seat — the equipment isn’t hidden because the equipment is the point.

John Coltrane LP, JBL speaker, McIntosh receiver, Pioneer turntable

The selection comes off the shelves behind the bar — physical-media-only, mostly mid-century jazz, mostly originals. Coltrane the night we visited. The owner chooses every record. Song requests are politely declined. This is not a bar that hands you the aux cord. The point is that someone with thousands of hours of listening is choosing what plays next, and you are along for that ride. After the first drink, you stop wanting to choose anyway.

Pioneer turntable with a purple-vinyl LP spinning, mixer alongside
Rows of analog records in the bar's LP collection

The Bar — Single Malts and Considered Cocktails

The other half of the room is the drink program. The whiskey shelf leans heavily into single malts with a healthy spread of bourbons and a small but smart wine list (the owner’s recommendation: try the single malts first). Cocktails are well-made and unfussy — clean highballs with a dehydrated citrus garnish, a few signature builds, and the kind of attention to ice and dilution that you don’t see at a typical late-night spot.

Bartender at the bar, JBL speakers and LP wall behind

And — quietly correct for a listening bar — the snacks are simple. A small bag of Pringles minis arrives as company. You’re here for the music; the bar isn’t pretending to be a restaurant.

Highball with dehydrated orange, 7-inch record, snacks on the bar

How to Use the Room

  • Sit at the bar if you want to watch the records get changed and the cocktails get built. This is the best seat in the house.
  • Sit at a table if you’re a couple or a small group and want to talk over the music — the volume is calibrated to allow conversation.
  • Don’t request songs. The owner will graciously refuse and you’ll feel slightly worse for asking. Just listen.
  • Solo dining is encouraged here — this is the kind of bar built for a quiet hour with yourself.

Practical Notes for Visitors

  • Cards? Yes, accepted.
  • English? Owner and staff speak basic English — communication is easy.
  • Reservations? Walk-in friendly, but the room is small. Earlier in the evening is calmer.
  • Pair with: dinner at Sukseongdo or Dodu Haenyeo’s House, then come here for the back half of the night. Afternoon coffee at Cafe Jinjeongseong Jongjeom sets up the same kind of analog-listening day.

The Verdict

You Call It Love does what a great listening bar is supposed to do — it makes you forget you ever wanted to be the one choosing the music. The audio chain is genuine, the LP collection is serious, the cocktails are competent, and the owner’s no-requests rule turns out to be a kindness rather than a constraint. If you’re building a Jeju trip that includes a slow evening — and especially if you like jazz and analog audio — this is the room.

— THE FOODIESEOUL VERDICT —
★★★★½
4.5 / 5
“Walk in. Order one drink. Let someone else’s ears decide your evening.”

🍽️ Food
5.0
💰 Value
4.0
🌏 Foreigner-friendly
4.0
📍 Access
3.5

Best forSolo Jeju evenings, music nerds, couples who can be quiet, post-dinner decompression
Skip ifYou came to chat loudly, you want to make song requests, you do not drink whisky or cocktails
Order thisSingle malt (Talisker / Yamazaki) or a vinyl-themed cocktail
Visited2026 – 1 visit

Go. Find the side street. Lean toward the lit window. Walk in. Order a single malt — a Talisker or a Yamazaki, depending on what side of the volcano you want your evening to land on. Don’t ask for a song. Don’t check your phone for the first record side. Let someone else’s ears decide the next forty minutes.

P.S. Second visit is when you start memorizing which sleeves are on the wall — and you stop being surprised when the owner pulls out exactly the album you were silently hoping for.

Been to You Call It Love? Tell me what record was playing — drop a comment below.

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