After sunset, Treverete becomes a small wine room with occasional live music. The lineup changes — the most reliable place to find the current week’s schedule is their Instagram. Below is what to expect when there’s a set on.
Treverete’s recurring music night is Friday from 6:30 pm. The official Instagram repeatedly posts “Viernes de vino, jamones, quesitos y música en vivo” — literally “Friday of wine, hams, cheeses, and live music.” If you walk in on a Friday evening, you’ll find this.
From the venue’s Instagram posts and tagged collaborations, the recurring performers include:
A regular collaborator. His sets blend jazz, bossa nova, blues, and rock classics — from the Instagram billing: “buen rato de jazz, bossa nova y clásicos del rock.” A versatile solo performer who fits a small wine room well.
Also a returning act — tagged on Instagram as @delorean_hit_machine. Their Friday-night sets have been repeatedly featured. Closer to a vocal-band setup based on what they tag and post.
A solo performer who has appeared on Friday nights with the same wine-jamón-music format. Mentioned by name in Treverete’s Instagram captions.
The lineup rotates. The most reliable place to find the current week’s performer is their Instagram, where they post each week’s Friday set with the artist’s name and tag.
Acoustic-leaning. Solo singer-guitarists, duos, occasionally a small ensemble. The volume is set low enough to talk over — this is a wine-and-conversation space, not a club. Treverete is small (Local 10 in the Bacatá ground floor, maybe a dozen tables), so when music is on, the room is intimate by default. You’re close to whoever is playing. Wine pours go around. Light food — jamones, quesos, the signature Treverete platter — appears on tables. The pace is slow.
The Friday set starts around 6:30 pm. Sometimes 6:00 pm depending on the artist. Sessions typically run 90 minutes to two hours.
The most current source is their Instagram account, where they post upcoming musicians, days, and start times. There’s no separate event calendar, no Facebook page actively updated, and no schedule posted on Google Maps. If you want to know who’s playing this week, that’s the place.
The café is small enough that on a music night it can fill up. There’s no formal reservation system that I’ve found online; in practice, walk-ins work, but earlier in the evening is safer if you want a table close to the musician. Asking via Instagram DM whether seats are available has worked in my experience.
Wine by the glass is the default. They’ll tell you what they have. A glass of something Colombian or Argentine is a safe ask. If you don’t want wine, the coffee program is still running — a cappuccino works fine in the evening.
Light food may be available depending on the night. Ask the server. (Yes, still no posted menu — see The No-Menu for why and how.)
Whatever you wore to dinner. This is not a dress-code situation. The room is unpretentious in the right way.
Performers tend to be working musicians in the Bogotá circuit — many of whom you can find on YouTube or Spotify if you like what you hear. Asking the performer for their name and their handle after the set is standard and welcomed. Tip in cash if you can.
Treverete is still worth a visit. The wine is still poured, the latte is still excellent, the room is still quiet. Some evenings are simply a wine bar without performers — which is its own thing.
Treverete is a café by day and a small wine-and-music room by night. Check Instagram for who’s playing. Show up earlier rather than later. Order the wine. Listen.