
The music that UNT seeded spilled off campus long ago. By the late 2000s Denton's scene had a national reputation — its own festival on and around the square, a dense club circuit, and a stream of bands that drew comparisons to Austin in its scruffier days; in 2008 Paste magazine named it the best music scene in the United States. The Denton Arts & Jazz Festival fills the park with hundreds of thousands of people each spring, and on an ordinary weekend you can hear a One O'Clock-caliber big band, an experimental act, and a singer-songwriter within a few blocks of the courthouse. For a town this size, the range is the whole point; more than two dozen venues sit within walking distance of the square.
The heart of Denton is the Courthouse-on-the-Square, a grand Romanesque-Revival pile of pink granite and limestone finished in 1896, set squarely in the middle of a classic Texas town square. It is the picture on every postcard: the clock tower, the lawn, and the ring of two- and three-story brick storefronts around it, today full of restaurants, bars, record shops, and live-music rooms. The county long ago outgrew it and built a newer courthouse, but the old one stayed on as the Courthouse-on-the-Square Museum — and the square around it stayed the center of town, just as it was laid out in 1857.
Why People Visit Denton
Denton offers the energy of a music town and the ease of a small Texas city — a beautiful courthouse square, a deep live-music calendar, two universities, and a creative streak that earned it the nickname “Little Austin.” It's walkable, friendly, and unmistakably North Texas.