Melody, the Virgil Village bungalow that continuously thrummed with diners who settled into its open-air lounge and patio to strive burgeoning meals pop-ups, swill pure wine and jam to proprietor Eric Tucker’s genre-spanning DJ units, is ready to shut completely on July 12. Open for practically a decade, Tucker desires Melody to be remembered not for its standing as a classy bar, however for its inclusive atmosphere that thrived on the curiosity of its diners.
“We were that cultural [and] gender safe space where you could be whoever you wanted to be,” Tucker mentioned, “exposing people to foods that they maybe never had before and giving chefs those chances to shine.”
In keeping with Tucker, Melody started to see a decline in enterprise through the Hollywood strikes in 2023. Mixed with the compounding results of the January wildfires, a tense political local weather and L.A.’s excessive price of dwelling, the bar-restaurant “just couldn’t do it anymore.”
“I don’t see how places survive anymore,” Tucker mentioned. “I’ve never done this before, closing a business. But I think one of the most special things for me is, how do I get out of this thing without losing it all?”
Previous to Melody, Tucker ran an Italian restaurant and bar in New York Metropolis. He opened Melody along with his ex-wife Paloma Rabinov in 2017, and at first, the wine bar adopted a typical dinner service format with a California- and French-inspired menu. However lower than a 12 months later, Melody’s monetary struggles prompted him and Rabinov to shift to a rotating pop-up format. They started internet hosting completely different cooks for days and weeks at a time — Mexican-Jewish pop-up Malli even earned a two-year residency — with a brief home menu providing cheese, charcuterie and different bar snacks.
Malli cooks Elizabeth Heitner and Nestor Silva had an prolonged pop-up residency at Melody, serving pastrami tacos and different objects that blended Jewish and Mexican culinary traditions.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Instances)
Inside the first few years of opening, Tucker started rising Melody’s wine checklist, which consists totally of pure, low-intervention wines sourced from all around the world, with bottles obtainable for retail buy and lots of priced underneath $80. Tucker described that point as Melody’s “golden years.” Clients drank bottles of wine within the parking zone whereas ready for hours to get in, the place it was a “party every night.” The aim was to supply diners one thing new, and to offer rising cooks, lots of whom had but to open their very own eating places, an area to experiment — all complemented, after all, by nice wine.
“We weren’t a restaurant. We weren’t a bar,“ read Melody’s Instagram post announcing the closure. “Thanks to each of you who entered our little bungalow … a unique experience-experiment that was always a best kept secret.”
Tucker hopes to protect Melody’s carefree, communal spirit when he briefly reopens the area on July 16 whereas awaiting a purchaser for the bungalow.
“Each night is essentially a ‘rent party,’” a Monday Instagram publish from Melody learn. “Very few rules with cheap prices may encourage you to stick with me 6 nights a week.”
The eating room at Melody welcomed clients right into a bungalow house.
(Eric Tucker)
Together with “maybe only one” different worker, Tucker would be the sole workers at Melody when it reopens. He will likely be making and serving pizzas as his pop-up alter ego Ugly Pie, which has made earlier appearances at Melody — although some clients weren’t conscious that the pop-up was run by Tucker himself. He mentioned that he’s ready to function the restaurant this manner — making the meals himself with few to no different workers — “if I have to,” whether or not it lasts for 2 weeks or two years.
“Melody was a really formative place for me to get my feet wet in terms of tasting a bunch of different wines, “ said Princie Kim, a longtime Melody customer who also works in the local wine industry. “There’s no air of pretension in there … Most nights of the week, I want to feel taken care of, but in a very relaxed and very human, raw way — and Melody gives me that in all ways.”
For its closing days of normal service, Melody will serve Ugly Pie on Wednesday and Thursday, adopted by burgers and fried rooster pop-up Little Piggy on Friday and Hancock Park butcher store Standing’s Butchery on Saturday. Whereas Tucker is uncertain how lengthy Melody’s non permanent reopening will final, he plans to depart Los Angeles afterwards and presumably return to New York.
“It was always really rewarding to look across the room and just see all different types of people in here together,” Tucker mentioned. “We weren’t perfect, but it wasn’t supposed to be.”