Ready For Our Close Up

6.06-6.13.07
Ready For Our Close-Up

In this week’s issue:
* Party WOW! Cool University Circle Party Drops Wed 6/27
* Interview Art House’s Sheryl Hoffman
* Interview Eric Lutzo, President/Co-Founder of Plexus
* Kids Where To Take Those Animal Lovin’ Kids
* Kids Comment For the Love of Fender Strats
* Interview Get to Know Guitar Hero Patrick Sweany
* Sounds New Oeuvres from Cletus Black and Jesse Hernandez
* Previews CYO’s Kashmir and a Red Moment
* Straight Outta Mansfield Enough Talk, Now Some Real Solutions
* RoldoLINK The Greed Behind the Cleveland Press Flatline
* Cool Cleveland Kids podcast click here, CC podcast click here, Brewed Fresh Daily here

Watch our profile rise up as hundreds of international media swarm NEO for the NBA finals. Isn’t it fortuitous that Cleveland’s boosters have the new Cleveland+ campaign in place to showcase our region for tourism, conventions and business relocation? Personally, I can’t wait until the media throngs descend with their expense accounts and cynical attitudes, only to be hit by Cleveland’s overflowing cornucopia of cool stuff: Sparx In The City Street Beats, Parade the Circle, a concert by the guy who wrote Cleveland Rocks, an encyclopedia of animal stuff for kids, a riff on our obsession with oversized Fender Strats, a symphonic Kashmir Zeppelin, even an homage to the departed Cleveland Press. And finally, just for us NEOers, Cool Cleveland announces tickets are on sale for a wild Wade Oval Wednesday on 6/27, with beer and food and Cats On Holiday. I’ll bet the media wishes they could be here for that one… —Thomas Mulready

WOW! Cool University Circle Party – Wed 6/27
Super low price until Midnight Thu 6/7 here!

Get Jiggy With ItInvite your friends to meet you at the hottest outdoor party of the summer at WOW! (Wade Oval Wednesdays!) on Wed 6/27 from 6 – 8PM with open bar (beer) and delicious food. Get your freak on with live music by “Cats on Holiday,” a hard rockin’, swamp poppin’ outfit serving up American influenced roots, country, cajun and blues. Armed with an arsenal of tunes, the Cool Cats always make it a groovy gig. Then check out the Cleveland Botanical Garden’s 10 acres of beautiful gardens with a comp ticket for the first 200 people. See their Summer 2007 schedule here for “Gourmets in the Garden” on the Geis Terrace. Featuring “806 in Tremont’s” chef from 6-7PM on Wed 6/27. Garden tour at 7PM. Glasshouse and Gardens open until 9PM.

Live music, food, bev and discounted museum tix available every WOW! Wednesday throughout the Summer 2007 season. Visit the the three UCI institutions: Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland Museum of Art and Cleveland Botanical Gardens for the discounted tix. See the WOW! Summer 2007 schedule here. And the band line-up here. Make it a regular part(y) of your summer fun.

Invite your friends and make this the social gig of the season. Score your Cool Cleveland party tix here.

You get all this:

  • Music and dancing under the stars from 6 – 8PM in the Beer Garden
  • Delicious unlimited food and bev (beer!)
  • Comp tix to the Botanical Garden for the first 200 people
  • Live music by Cats on Holiday, a crowd fave
  • Discounted tix at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History and the Cleveland Museum of Art

Bring It Get the best discount if you order by Midnight Thu 6/7 here. Meet us 6 – 8PM at Wade Oval. See map here.
Get your tickets now: https://CoolCleveland.net/tickets/062707/index.php

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Rise and Shine, Cleveland! It’s time to celebrate! The Cavs have risen and so has the region. Our Cavs are the new 2007 Eastern Conference Champions. It’s a big step in Cavalier’s history, and for all of us. And Cleveland Plus is celebrating by giving away a Lebron James autographed and framed jersey. Enter the sweepstakes here www.clevelandplus.com. The region is ready for the spotlight! Go here and click on the video.
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Sheryl Hoffman
Art House

Sheryl Hoffman knows what kids (and their parents) like. This converted Quonset Hut on Denison near W. 25th Street offers classes year round for kids, teens and adults: a Raku workshop, a Found Object Jewelry class, Introduction to Painting. They’ve even started Fresh Stop/Studio Stop with complimentary art workshops during a farmer’s market every 2nd & 4th Thursday thru October. When Cool Cleveland’s Thomas Mulready dropped in, the kids were creating water fountain hats to wear for the upcoming Parade The Circle on Sat 6/9 at University Circle’s Wade Oval. Check their complete schedule and consider a donation which will be doubled as part of their two challenge grants this summer. Your kids will thank you, and you’ll feel great. http://www.arthouseinc.org

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A Proven Leader in Global Business Ed? With an increasing demand for professionals who can deal with complex problems in international trade and management of global enterprises, CSU’s Nance College of Business Administration has proven to be a leader in global business education, earning Ohio’s prestigious E-Award for its academic and outreach programs. CSU now offers graduate and undergraduate certificates in Global Business to enhance and complement the skills of any business professional. Learn to manage and conduct business in a complex and fast-changing global environment and increase your employment opportunities in the era of globalization. Credits earned as part of the certificate program may apply toward a bachelor’s or master’s degree. Contact www.csuohio.edu/cba or marketing@csuohio.edu for more information.
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A wild and wonderful array of hot tech and business news & events from around Cleveland and around the region. Send your business news and events to: EVENTS@CoolCleveland.com

Eric Lutzo, President/Co-Founder of Plexus
LGBT Chamber of Commerce of Cleveland

The word plexus is defined as a structure in the form of a network, often referring medically to braids of nerves, blood vessels or lymphatics. A local organization supporting the collective Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) business community in Cleveland shares the name — and appropriately so. Funded through the Civic Innovation Lab during this last round, Plexus is the Chamber of Commerce for the LGBT community and its allies serving Northeast Ohio, allowing a level of connectivity and support not previously seen in Cleveland or the surrounding region.

It’s part networking organization, part support system, part business federation. And it’s an organization that Eric Lutzo – president and co-founder of Plexus and head of the coaching/leadership development group Forward Thought – is very passionate about. “Our goal is to be a critical link to the economic development of the region,” Lutzo told Cool Cleveland during a recent interview. “We’re definitely living our namesake every day.”

“Our mission is to provide proactive business development for the LGBT business community through business advocacy. Plexus started as a networking group, but has sense become much more. “There was a gut feeling that a lot of professionals don’t necessarily go to Cleveland Pride or see a connection for them [there].” Lutzo sees Plexus as a means to “convey to them and allies of the organization that we are here, we’re not going away after Pride and that all of us should get connected and work to help one another be successful…”

Read the interview by Peter Chakerian here

Max Hayes program makes nat’l news with innovative program teaching manufacturing skills Read
CVB name change? If you’re a member of the Convention & Visitors Bureau, express your opinion here
CVB invites LGBT to NEO Gay travel is huge, and Cleveland+ is ready with a 28-pg guide & web resources. Pass it on Info
JumpStart opens IdeaCrossing to connect entrepreneurs, investors & mentors Info
Internet ad sales up 35% in 2006 now accounting for 5.9% of all ads, up from 4.7 in 05, from Interactive Ad Bureau Read
Ohio Senate passes eminent domain measure overriding “home rule” of cities & defining blight as 90% of parcels Read
20-something architects design green and get $600K from state & city for 5 homes in EcoVillage Read
Green essay required with all Gund Foundation grant applications, addressing climate change Read

Cleveland Plus hundreds of reporters Not only do CAVS home playoff games bring $3.5M each in economic impact to our region, our travel professionals are gearing up for an onslaught of international media, camping out here during the NBA Finals for games 3, 4 & 5 on 6/12-17, and you know they’ll be looking for cool things to do and favorable stories to write about our region. They’ll want to visit Akron to see LeBron’s home and high school, St. Vincent-St. Mary; they’ll visit the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, and they’ll still have time for more. The Cleveland+ brain trust is putting together a Press Plus Pass with comp admissions to area attractions, restaurants and more. They are working with the Rock Hall on a media reception; the NBA has already reserved it for 6/11. Even TeamNEO is getting in on the action, hosting a Jock Tour and a Rock Tour for visiting business site selectors in the coming months. http://www.ClevelandPlus.com http://www.ClevelandPlusBusiness.com

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Would I Lie to You? Did you know that the Cleveland Clinic heart surgery program at LakeWest Hospital achieved a stellar zero percent mortality rate for all cardiac and major thoracic cases performed in 2006? Excellent! And were you aware that the Manufacturing Advocacy and Growth Network (MAGNET) organization in Cleveland estimated that 800,000 manufacturing jobs in the Midwest will be vacated by retirements in the next six years? So innovative programs at Max Hayes High School and Lorain Community College are offering people the opportunity for training that will help them land the jobs manufacturers need to fill. The article was picked up by 8 newspapers and 64 media websites! Find these great pro-Clev stories (and more!) posted by the Greater Cleveland Marketing Alliance (GMCA) here.
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Rip Rapson Pres/ CEO of Kresge Foundation gives keynote address on philanthropy and Working Beyond the Fence-Line Wed 6/6 at noon. Windows on the River, 2000 Sycamore St. Register
Creativity in the Workplace Forum feat. Christy Gray and Joan Perch of the Red Dot Project on Wed 6/6 at 8AM Register
Meet The Champions Civic Innovation Lab Breakfast honors Jeff Griffiths and Eric Lutzo Thu 6/7 at 8AM, Trinity Commons on Euclid. Info.
COSE Future Forum w/regional, nat’l thought leaders Thu 6/7 at 4PM. Myers Univ Club, 3813 Euclid Ave. Register
Inside Business mag and Team NEO collab on celebrating economic development w/ Impact Awards Thu 6/7 at 5:30PM. Doubletree, 6200 Quarry Lane, Independence. Register
AMA Marketing Bootcamp @ Hilton Garden In D’town Thu 6/7 and Fri 6/8 Register
Mandel NPO Mgm’t holds Info Session Thu 6/7 at 5:30PM at Trinity Commons for Master of NPO Org and Cert in NPO Mgm’t. Trinity Commons- Conference Room A/B, 2230 Euclid Ave. RSVP: 368-6025 mcnoadmissions@case.edu
Investing in Ohio Through History and Heritage is subject of 2007 Luncheon Forum Fri 6/8 @ Ohio Theatre. Details
Zippity Zoo Doo, annual fund raiser doubles as YP networking event on Fri 6/8 @ 6PM http://www.clemetzoo.com.
Innovative Philanthropy Cle Social Venture Partners’ forum Mon 6/11 at 6PM, Trinity Commons. Wine and hors d’oeuvres, no cost. The Gallery at Trinity Commons, 2230 Euclid Ave. Info
Plexus Network Tuesday feat. Deborah Plummer, Ph.D. Cle Clinic @ InterContinental Hotel 9801 Carnegie Ave. on Tue 6/12 at 6PM. More
Hispanic Business Expo 2007 hits Tue 6/12 5 – 8PM at La Sagrada Familia Hall 7719 Detroit Ave. email: cdpcl@cuyahogacounty.us for info.
JumpStart CMO Thom Ruhe named IABC Communicator of the Year on Wed 6/13. First Communicator of the Year was awarded to Cool Cleveland creator/publisher Thomas Mulready. Register
Doris Koo Pres/CEO of Enterprise Community Partners speaks Mon 6/19 at 4PM Levin College of Urban Affairs Glickman-Miller Hall, Atrium at CSU 1717 Euclid Ave. Details
Bio Bootcamp @ CWRU’s Wolstein Aud., 2103 Cornell Rd. spon. by BioEnterprise on Tue 6/19 at 1PM. Register
Global Health Care Investing Conf @ InterContinental Hotel Wed 6/20 – Thu 6/21 Details

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Strictly on a Need-to-Know Basis Do you know where chipmunks sleep, what eagles feed their young or how mother bats find their babies in a dark cave? At Animal Secrets, the newest exhibition at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, now through Sun 9/9, you will learn the answers to these questions and more. Explore the secret lives of forest animals using hands-on activities to discover nature from their point of view: Play with animals at the stream, observe the sights and sounds of the meadow, pretend to be an eagle, chipmunk and raccoon in the woods, and explore the mysteries of the cave. Animal Secrets is designed for children ages 3-8 (preschool to 3rd grade) and has English and Spanish text panels. For more info contact www.cmnh.org or (800) 317-9155.
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$20 million in arts funding is starting to be distributed to arts groups in Cuyahoga County, following the passage of Issue 18 and the new cigarette tax. The group must be a Cuyahoga non-profit for at least 3 years, with a mission focused solely on the arts. Workshops explaining guidelines and application deadlines are hosted throughout the County starting Sat 6/16. First up, general operating support. Next: project grants and funding for individual artists. http://www.CuyahogaArtsAndCulture.org Thoughts? letters@coolcleveland.com

Grant Programs Part Deux To assist groups with the application process, CAC workshops are being held at the following locations: Sat 6/16 at 9:30 AM at Beachwood Library (25501 Shaker Blvd, Beachwood); Tue 6/19 at 3:00 PM at Carnegie West Library (1900 Fulton Rd.); Thu 6/21 at 3:00 PM at Holiday Inn (1100 Crocker Rd., Westlake); Tue 6/26 at 3:00 PM at Baldwin-Wallace College Strosacker College Union, Sandstone Conference Room (120 E. Grand St., Berea); and Wed 6/27 at 3:00 PM at The Free Clinic of Greater Cleveland Community Room (12201 Euclid Ave.).

Artists and Art Galleries are invited to participate in the Ingenuity Arts Market, scheduled for 7/19–22. Booths are available for individual artists, groups of artists, or art galleries within the Ingenuity Festival Village, as part of the effort to showcase the visual arts community and provide regional artists and arts entrepreneurs with business opportunities. For an application and additional information, please email: artpower@yahoo.com. The deadline for participation is 7/1.

Charles Barr was a talented young musician in the Cleveland Orchestra. He played the double bass, and liked to ride his bicycle to and from his home in Cleveland Heights to Severance Hall, the home of the orchestra. Last August, nearing his home, the cyclist was involved in a fatal collision with a pickup truck, leaving saddened friends and family behind. One such friend is violist Richard Waugh, also a talented young musician in the orchestra. The two men rode together frequently, sharing tales of riding or music or just being outdoors, enjoying the weather. Sunday, June 10, Waugh will embark on a 2½-week long ride from San Diego, California to Savannah, Georgia in honor of his friend. The trip is to raise money to assist the Musical Arts Association with the endowment of a chair in Barr’s memory. It is the first chair ever endowed by the parent body of the orchestra, and perhaps the only one to which anyone may contribute. Donations in any amount are very welcome, either directly to the orchestra (Endowment office at 231-7531) or through the website set up by Waugh for the purpose: http://www.ridingforcharles.com. Waugh also hopes to keep up at least somewhat with his blog – enabling the rest of us to know how he’s doing. Thoughts? letters@coolcleveland.com. From Cool Cleveland contributor Kelly Ferjutz artswriterATadelphia.net

Reasons to Move to Cleveland+ If you knew someone who was thinking of moving here, what would you tell them to try to pursuade them? Add your thoughts to this growing list of reasons on BFD.
Bruce Checefsky, director of The Cleveland Institute of Art’s Reinberger Galleries, has won a 2007 ArtsLink Project Award from the international agency CEC ArtsLink to produce and direct a documentary film about Polish filmmaker Andrzej Pawlowski. http://www.cecartslink.org. http://www.cia.edu. Monet to Dali in Vancouver Modern Masters installation already drew over 500K in Asia. More
“Fat Surfer” logo nixed at CWRU for something far cooler. Read.
To Masumi Organizers curating exhibition Fri 10/12 at Doubting Thomas Gallery in honor of Masumi Hayashi. Accepting images/works @ MySpace page http://www.myspace.com/tomasumi for details.
Cavaliers Win Eastern Conf Finals, Beat Detroit. Downtown denizens Sat night quoted at upwards of 100K. Witness
Spencer Tunick is at it again. Photographer emerges with more stunning images. Hullo Fotos
Texting group 80108 Media launches in Cle w/ variety of msg offerings for those on-the-go. Beantown group hits over two dozen cities. http://www.80108.com.
Cool Cleveland Podcast You know how to do it. Click here to listen: Link. iTunes or other.
To ensure you receive Cool Cleveland every week, take a moment now and add CoolCleveland@CoolCleveland.com to your address book, trusted sender list, or corporate white list.
100 miles of world-class mountain bike trails in NEO, connected to the Towpath Trail, is bike club’s vision Read
Tri-C MusicFest launches on 7/27-28 on malls B & C w/hip-hop violinist Miri Ben-Ari, Stanley Clarke, more Info
Lakewood guarantees graduates to employers & universities for 2 years, or they get comp remedial classes Read

Thoughts? letters@coolcleveland.com.

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Calling all Health Care Entrepreneurs! Report to the (no-cost) Bio Boot Camp Cleveland immediately! And you won’t even have to wake up at dawn for this opportunity to learn the secrets and hear the pitfalls to avoid in starting and growing a successful health care technology business. Some of the best in the business will walk attendees through the start-up process, from patenting technologies to raising monies. Bio Boot Camp Cleveland is a no-cost seminar scheduled for Tue 6/19 from 1-4M on the Case Western Reserve University Campus. If you have ever thought about starting a health tech business, click here to learn more and register. Did we mention that it’s at no cost to you?
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Every week, all of us here at Cool Cleveland pour through gads of fantastic things happening in CLE and NEO, all in an effort to answer that ever-nagging question: “What’s cool to do this week?” Submitted for your approval, here’s a snapshot of what we found. Got a unique event coming up? Know of something that is a totally Cool Cleveland worthy event? We want to hear from you about it; our tens of thousands of readers do, too. Be a civic and cultural activist and turn on your fellow readers.

Send your cool events to: Events@CoolCleveland.com

Out in the Courtyard Northcoast Jazz Collective returns for their 3rd year at the Cleveland Museum of Art’s Summer Courtyard Series of Live Music. They’ll play Wed 6/6 from 5:30-8:30PM and there will be grilled food, beer and live music. The museum is still closed for renovation, but you can bet the courtyard — as usual — will still be hoppin’ http://www.clevelandart.org/specialevents. http://northcoastjazzcollective.com.

HOT Ten Thousand Villages collaborates with Huntington Bank for an off-site sale at the bank’s building at East 9th St. and Euclid Ave on Wed 6/6 from 11AM – 5PM. Support global artisans and fair trade, find yourself unique handicrafts and help support an organization whose Trinity Commons location has struggled with inception of the Euclid Corridor Project. 917 Euclid Ave. Repeats Thu 6/7 at identical time. http://cleveland.tenthousandvillages.com.

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All the World Loves a Lover Romance your heart’s desire with a trip to 18th century Vienna (starting at just $15!) at Severance Hall tomorrow night, Thu 6/7 at 7PM or Sat 6/9 at 7PM. Experience “Der Rosenkavalier” by Richard Strauss with the Cleveland Orchestra’s season-ending performance. Steal someone’s heart with this semi-staged, opera-in-concert featuring international opera stars singing in German (with English subtitles above the stage). Good seats are going fast — so order tickets NOW at www.clevelandorchestra.com or by phone at (216) 231-1111 using promo code 3580. Receive a complimentary CD of Music Director Franz Welser-Möst’s Rosenkavalier lecture upon pick-up of your order at the Severance Hall Ticket Office. Link here to cool video interviews previewing these talk-of-the-town Der Rosenkavalier performances.
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Elizabeth Cunningham The author of The Passion of Mary Magdalen and the newly released prequel, Magdalen Rising reads and signs copies of her books at Mac’s Backs Books on Coventry Thu 6/7 at 7PM. Rising is an entertaining and irreverent piece of historical fiction, detailing the early meeting of Maeve and Esus. Earthy, soulful gospel stories from a radically fresh perspective. 1820 Coventry Rd., Cle Hts. http://www.macsbacks.com.

HOT Sparx Kickoff Party will be held on Thu 6/7 beginning at 6:30PM on East 4th St. downtown. Launch into another exciting summer with stiltdancers Aaron Bonk and Alexandra Underhill, breakdancing by the venerable 216 Beatriders, and experiences performances by Dr. Tango, the once France-bound Lost State of Franklin and juggler John Flower. It is an opportunity for the business community, residents and cultural organizations to celebrate the energy of the streets of downtown Cleveland. For a complete schedule and list of events and performers, visit http://www.cleveland.com/sparx.

Don Dixon and the Jump Rabbits Last week, Cool Cleveland interviewed the Canton native, who usually performs solo or as a duo with his wife, A&M Recording artist Marti Jones. This time out, he drops into town with his band, the Jump Rabbits. Don has been very well known as a producer having produced the early R.E.M. albums, the Smithereens, Marshall Crenshaw and a host of others. He hits the Winchester in Lakewood Thu 6/7 for an 8:30PM show. Open mic night will follow. 12112 Madison Ave., Lakewood. http://www.thewinchester.net.

Hot Wax and Hard Candy It’s another of the weekly series “The Red Hot Experience” this Thu 6/7 at 8PM. Features music, poetry, open-mic action and some summer soul-flow, with G Styl, F.R.E.E., and Chief Rocka Q-Nice. In The Living Room, 4828 Lorain Ave. Bless the mic, receive the flow. http://www.gstyl.com.

Der Rosenkavalier Franz Welser-Most conducts the Cleveland Orchestra in a special two-night season finale trumpeting the bliss of Strauss’ masterwork Der Rosenkavalier, sung in German with English subtitles. The performances take place Thu 6/7 and Sat 6/9 at 7PM at Severance Hall. http://www.clevelandorchestra.com.

HOT Cleveland Design Competition Check out the works on display at an exhibit and awards reception Thu 6/7 from 6 – 9PM at SPACES Gallery. The event celebrates innovative design solutions that awaken the possibilities for Cleveland’s forgotten spaces — this year’s competition focused on a 20-acre hillside along the west bank of Cuyahoga River known as Irishtown Bend. Head to McNulty’s Bier Markt afterwards for a post-event happy hour/Cavs post game in true Cleveland style. SPACES, 2220 Superior Viaduct. McNulty’s, 1948 W 25th St. http://www.clevelandcompetition.com. http://www.bier-markt.com.

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Totally Unbeatable See the new musical, “Unbeatable,” (before it heads to NY!) –in Clev on Sat 6/9, 7PM and Sun 6/10, 2PM & 7PM in the Westfield Insurance Studio Theatre in the Idea Center at Playhouse Square. Journey Projects presents staged readings of the bold new musical Unbeatable, based on the true story of a Cleveland woman’s victory over breast cancer, exploring her tale of laughter, faith, fear and survival. No cost for admission, but tickets are required. Seating is limited. Call 216.619.2380 or pick up tickets at the Playhouse Square Ticket Office. Presented through the Launch performance creation residency program of the Playhouse Square Arts Education Department. For more details contact www.PlayhouseSquare.org/arts-education.
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24-Hour Poetry People Check out the marathon poetry reading/office opening of WhatsAnotherWordFor PRESS at Lemko Hall’s Language Foundry, 2335 W. 11th #1 this Fri 6/8 beginning at 7PM. Share the words and vibes in this community event. Learn what’s on the minds of those around you and see what happens when deep thoughts, immense hope and dreams go 24 hours long. Drop in during the Tremont ArtWalk.

Power of Two Plus Two of the most acclaimed films of the year make a Cle premiere this weekend: The Iranian film Offside by Jafar Panahi and Syndromes and a Century by Thai Apichatpong Weerasethakul both played the prestigious New York Film Festival last year to great acclaim. They hit the Cleveland Cinematheque this weekend, beginning Fri 6/8. They also continue their popular “Masterpieces by Mizoguchi” series with the 1946 Utamaro and His Five Women in a new 35 mm print. Cleveland Cinematheque, 11141 East Blvd. http://www.cia.edu.

Tremont ArtWalk The venerable monthly art expo in one of Cle’s coolest neighborhoods returns Fri 6/8 at 6PM. This month’s highlights include Ukrainian Museum-Archives’ (1202 Kenilworth) special showing from the Hnizdovsky estate of Prints Jacques Hnizdovsky; Lisa Kenion, sculptor and co-owner of Cleveland’s Studio Foundry is featured at Brandy Gallery(1028 Kenilworth); the Just Art Cleveland social justice exhibition at Asterisk Gallery (2393 Professor Ave.) depicts “art with issues” pertaining to our city and beyond, and Doubting Thomas gallery has Angels and Demons. http://www.tremontartwalk.org.

Recloose It’s hard to describe what styles of music this Detroit native spins and performs. You could call it techno, nu jazz, broken beat, or any of a number of other things. You could also call it awesome. In any case, you should find out for yourself this Fri 6/8 at the Touch Supper Club in Ohio City. Andre keeps the kitchen open until 1AM with some tasty food and you can come up with your own words to describe Recloose. http://www.touchohiocity.com.

Spring is Showing at the Pinky’s Showroom with a fashion exhibition featuring indie artists from across the US including Ouvrez la Porte (clothing), TuffCooki (handbags), Laurel Wells (clothing), Jessica Pilar (home/gift accessories) and Nicole Giordano (handbags). Local artists include Feisty Handbags, clothing by Gina Dudik and prints by Cathie Bleck. The sassy event hits Fri 6/8 from 5 – 9PM and Sat 6/9 from 11 AM – 3PM and also celebrates Pinky’s new Japanese imports, including misses & ladies loungewear and dresses. 1900 Superior Ave. #329. http://www.pinkysdailyplanner.com.

A Botanical View Baycrafters Fine Art and Education Center holds their Juried Art Show opening, A Summer Celebration of the Miracles of the Plant World, beginning with an opening reception Fri 6/8 at 7PM. Works of art on all mediums will run through Sat 6/30 during normal gallery hours. Open to the public. Metroparks Reservation at 28975 Lake Rd., Bay Village. http://www.baycrafters.com for more information.

HOT Walkin’ Talkin’ Bill Hawkins: A Search for My Father This production by W. Allen Taylor and directed by Ellen Sebastian Chang explores Taylor’s adventurous search for the father he never knew: Bill Hawkins, the first black radio disc jockey in Cleveland. Using R&B, gospel and jazz as a musical backdrop, this one-man autobio has already earned critical kudos on the West Coast. Dobama Theatre premieres it Fri 6/8 at 7:30PM in Cleveland. Studio Theatre at the Cleveland Play House. Runs through Sun 6/24.http://www.dobama.org.

Johannes Fielder SPACES hosts a gallery talk with the Austrian Fri 6/8 at 7PM, exploring Exterritories, his contribution to the Shrinking Cities exhibition. Exterritorial communities are the continuation of a process that began in the late 20th century—people from expanding countries and cultures filling the voids in receding societies. No cost, open to the public. 2220 Superior Viaduct. http://www.spacesgallery.org. http://www.cudc.kent.edu. http://www.shrinkingcities.com.

Decade Project Zygote Press celebrates its first ten years as NEO’s premier printmaking facility with a group portfolio print project. 10 artists commemorate the 10 years on with an exhibition and opening reception Fri 6/8 at 6PM.Some prints will be available for sale. 1410 E. 30th St. (between Superior and St. Clair.) http://www.zygotepress.com.

Michael Jantz The singer/songwriter and former Clevelander hits the The Winchester in Lakewood for a sort of homecoming gig, as special guest to Erin McKeown. He built his reputation up song by song, eventually becoming a top local draw, and subsequently landed on tours with Paul Simon and Brian Wilson. Now in Washington DC, he supports his new record, Snapshots of the Universe. 12112 Madison Ave., Lakewood. http://www.michaeljantz.com.

HOT Exhibit Cleveland The Wooltex Gallery presents Exhibit: Cleveland Retrospective reaffirming their commitment to revitalize downtown Cleveland with art, and celebrate the efforts of committed artists in the region. This exhibition launches with an opening reception Fri 6/8 at 5PM and will feature a selection of juried pieces highlighting the first year of the Exhibit: Cleveland organization. Artists Include: Kate Geraci Brown, LaMark Crosby, Dana Depew, Michael Greenwald, Patrick Haggerty, Meat, Dana Oldfather, Damon Reaves, Jhonny Yuhas, and Tricia Zigmund. The exhibit runs through mid-July. Wooltex Gallery, Tower Press Bldg., 1900 Superior Ave. http://www.thewooltexgallery.com.

G8 Action Day InterReligious Task Force hosts “street theatre pinata” action and educational conversation on the G8 international forum for the governments that make up 65% of the world economy this Fri 6/8 at noon. Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom and the US make up the G8; learn how these countries supress and steal resources from the poor. Public Square, Downtown Cle. http://www.irtfcleveland.org.

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WCLVnotes WCLV 104.9 is in the midst of a weeklong preview of the 2007 Cleveland International Piano Competition, called “Music for 72 Hands.” Each afternoon from 1 – 4PM, we’re featuring highlights from previous competitions including performances from the 2005 Concerto Rounds with The Cleveland Orchestra. Previous winners are being interviewed, and we’re sharing comments from this year’s contestants. And take a gander at the redesigned WCLV website at www.wclv.com. There you’ll find a complete listing of WCLV’s music as well as other goodies.
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HOT Ian Hunter & The Swingin’ Neckbreakers The be-shaded author of Cleveland Rocks is being called “The British Bob Dylan,” but his decades-rich oeuvre compares favorably for its consistency. His newly-released Shrunken Heads takes on a post-9/11 America (he’s lived in the U.S. since 1976) with tracks like Soul of America, our clueless leadership (Shrunken Heads), growing up and not old (I Am What I Hated When I Was Young), and clueless capitalist consumption (Brainwashed), while remaining humble (Words (Big Mouth)) and keeping it all in perspective (Fuss About Nothin). His live gigs, featuring Joe Jackson’s bassman Graham Maby and drummer Steve Holly, who’s played with McCartney and Elton, are all-out rock shows featuring solo faves Once Bitten Twice Shy and Mott The Hoople classics like All The Young Dudes. The Swingin’ Neckbreakers and their brand of adrenalized R&B open what will be a raucous evening at the Beachland Ballroom this Sat 6/9 starting at 8:30PM. http://www.IanHunter.com http://www.BeachlandBallroom.com

Cletus Black Revue The countrified roots-rockers with that morose little twang release a brand new disc Down Those Tracks with a string of outdoor summer gigs concerts starting Sat 6/9 at 10AM at Market Square Park, located on the corner of W. 25th St. and Lorain Ave. Catch them after you bag that fresh produce and artistic stuff, The CD — reviewed by Peter Chakerian in this week’s issue — will be available at the gig. http://www.cletusblack.com.

Q-Burns Abstract Message Michael Donaldson, better known as Q-Burns Abstract Message, has grown to become one of America’s top DJs. Yet, he likes to keep his performances rare and spend as much time as possible producing and engineering in the studio. You can catch one of his rare and thrilling performances this Sat 6/9 alongside Cleveland favorite Jugoe at the Touch Supper Club in Ohio City. http://www.touchohiocity.com.

Joseph O’Sickey Closing reception and book signing with the painter, widely recognized for his popular landscape paintings, hits Sat 6/9 from 2 – 4PM. He’ll sign copies of Menageries and Other Worlds, a catalogue his 70-year retrospective exhibition, as well as give a lecture about his work and life Cleveland Artists Foundation, in The Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood. No cost, open to the public. http://www.clevelandartists.org.

True Art Gallery features the paintings and ceramics of Suzanne Gilbert and painting of Maria Winiarski with an opening reception Sat 6/9 from 1 – 5PM. 410 East 156th St. N Collinwood. 383-0230

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Catch a Sneak Peek & Meet the Producer of “Through Deaf Eyes,” a documentary exploring nearly 200 years of deaf life in America from the perspectives of deaf citizens. At the film’s heart are six artistic works by deaf media artists and filmmakers. WVIZ/PBS presents a special screening of this remarkable film on Sun 6/17 at 7PM at the Idea Center in Playhouse Square. The film’s producer, Emmy and Peabody award-winner, Larry Hott, will introduce and answer questions about the film. Seating for this no-cost event is limited, so reserve your space by sending an email to nbrown@ideastream.org. The broadcast of the film is scheduled for Sun 6/24 at 4PM on WVIZ/PBS. Visit www.wviz.org for additional information and the complete program schedule.
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Garden Party The Brooklyn Centre Community Association hosts its annual spring event at Riverside Cemetery, 3607 Pearl Rd. this Sun 6/10 at 1PM. Costumed narrators will portray famous “residents.” Local organizations such as the Metroparks Zoo, Friends of Big Creek, the Ohio Prairie Council, the Canal Corridor, and Art House will have booths on the grounds. Children’s activities, booths from local organizations, musical entertainment, and light refreshments. Call Gloria Ferris at 351-0254 for more information and advance-sale tickets. Tickets are also available day of event.

Perennial Exchange This no-cost event hits this weekend as a part of the the Kamm’s Corners Farmers Market Sun 6/10 at 10AM. Gardeners can trade their extra hostas, irises and other perennials for other gardener’s extra perennials. Perennials are expensive, and this is a great way to beautify your garden for no-cost. Plus, pick up a smashing Phoenix coffee and a Corbo’s cannoli at the Farmers Market, along with locally-grown and harvested produce. W. 168th and Lorain Rd. behind Walgreen’s. Email kcfarmersmarket@gmail.com for additional info.

Taste of Lakewood The 4th Annual Taste of Lakewood festival hits Sun 6/10 from 4 – 7PM at The Clifton Club, 17884 Lake Rd. The event showcases the popular mix of the eclectic restaurants and other food providers that Lakewood is known for. No-cost parking at Horace Mann Middle School (1215 W. Clifton Blvd.) with shuttle service to/from The Clifton Club. Rev up your tastebuds and get tickets by calling 226-2900. http://www.lakewoodchamber.org.

Chicken Paprikás Luncheon Csárdás Dance Company holds a luncheon and performance to benefit their Youth Ensemble Dance Camp Sun 6/10 at 1PM. The event features authentic Hungarian chicken paprikás, side dishes and dessert, along with a silent auction, raffles and door prizes will be available throughout the event. In addition, Csárdás Youth Ensemble will perform in authentic Hungarian costumes. St. Emeric Church, 1860 West 22nd St. (behind the West Side Market). http://www.csardasdance.com

James Apollo The roots-rock and roll eccentric and his band of wayfarin’ gents promote their latest release, Hide Your Heart in a Hive this Sun 6/10 at 8PM at Pat’s In the Flats, 2233 W. 3rd St. http://www.jamesapollo.com.

Frank Deford The highly-lauded author, sportswriter and NPR commentator leads a book discussion and signing at Joseph-Beth Booksellers in Legacy Village on Mon 6/11 at 7PM. His new work The Entitled follows Howie Traveler, an aging failure at the game of baseball until he gets one last chance to become the manager of the Cleveland Indians. A perfect summer read with a hometown twist. Event is expected to be crowded; for this reason, line numbers are required and available with the purchase of the book. http://www.josephbeth.com.

Chucklef*ck It’s the laugh sensation sweeping the west side — featuring a new slate of stand-up comics every single week. Drop in, catch a Wi-Fi signal, a coffee or beer buzz and see what all this mad laughter is really about. It might be about you…? Hosted by Jim Tews. bela dubby, 13321 Madison Ave., Lakewood. Laugh. http://www.myspace.com/beladubby.

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels Uproarious fun in a musical, Playhouse Square Center offers this gem beginning Tue 6/12 at the Palace Theatre. Set on the glorious, glamorous Riviera, the comedy follows two con artists as they take on the lifestyles of the rich and shameless. The New York Post has been raving about this production. On sale now. http://www.playhousesquare.com. http://www.dirtyrottenscoundrelsthemusical.com.

Perception vs. Reality The next Heights Community Congress forum tackles the subjects of race, class and diversity in the community Wed 6/13 at 7PM. John Hay High School. http://www.heightscongress.org.

Send your cool events to: Events@CoolCleveland.com


Gettin’ Wild
NEO a Destination for Animal Loving Kids

Can the bounding path of a backyard chipmunk rivet your children like no video game or TV show can? Do the squawks of an approaching flock of Canada geese make them crane their necks to the sky, anxious for a glimpse? Does every conversation with your child somehow meander back to what elephants eat, why lions have manes or how many teeth a shark has?

If so, you’ve got a kid with a serious animal obsession that must be fed. For those of us whose children are similarly afflicted, we’re lucky to live in an area with so many opportunities to learn about birds, animals and reptiles of virtually any species. For those of you looking for a new animal-centric family destination, I offer my list of top Northeast Ohio spots sure to satisfy even the most animal-obsessed child…

Read more from Jennifer Keirn here

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So Much Drama! Kids and teens (and grown-ups too): Hang with us for University Circle’s spectacular display of bright costumes, giant puppets, stilt-dancers, handmade masks and colorful floats at Parade the Circle on Sat 6/9 (parade at noon, activities, entertainment and food – 11AM to 7PM at Circle Village, presented by University Circle). This community arts parade has no admission fee, is open to the public and is presented annually by the Cleveland Museum of Art. Experience International and national guest artists joining with Greater Cleveland artists. This year’s parade will begin and end at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, moving in a clockwise direction. For more information on participating in the parade, contact 216-707-2483 or neisenberg@clevelandart.org. Visit www.clevelandart.org. The Cleveland Museum of Art is a Cool Cleveland Kids partner.
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Harry Potter Spoiler? Emerson Spartz, the founder and Webmaster of http://www.mugglenet.com and a sophomore at the University of Notre Dame and Ben Schoen, a high school senior and part of the senior management team at Mugglenet sign and discuss topics from their latest book, Mugglenet.com’s What Will Happen in Harry Potter 7. They drop by Border’s in North Canton Thu 6/7 at 6PM. 6751 Strip Avenue, NW North Canton. Call 330-494-4776 for details. http://www.mugglenet.com

Hoop Dreams Nearly 4 decades in the making, the Cavaliers are in the NBA Finals! Got a b-ball obsessed young one? Take ’em to the Q Thu 6/7 at 7PM at Quicken Loans Arena to watch the game! Cavalier Girls, Moondog, Scream Team, and in-arena hosts Ahmaad and Nicole will all be on hand to give the “Watch Party” the home court magic that will be felt from Cleveland to the Lone Star State! Quicken Loans Arena. http://www.cavs.com

HOT Parade the Circle and Village Summer is here, which means it’s time for Parade the Circle and the Circle Village, held in conjunction with Parade the Circle. It all launches Sat 6/9 at 11AM, delivering one of Cleveland’s most popular artistic events — replete with live music, dance and activities presented by more than 20 organizations from University Circle and across NEO. Wade Oval in University Circle. http://www.clevelandart.org. http://www.universitycircle.org. More Details.

TubaSummer returns to Akron Sun 6/10 at 7PM, featuring a summertime version of Akron’s popular TubaChristmas. It hits the Cascade Plaza on Main Street, where a small ensemble from The University of Akron Steel Drum Band will warm up the crowd at 6:15PM. Get your oompa-oompa’s out with this classy, brassy and sassy summer soiree. http://www.uakron.edu.

Greased Lightning You’re the one that they want! Revisit the Travolta/Newton-John connection with a 50s Grease party and show, featuring Johnny Contardo, former member of Sha Na Na on Sun 6/10 at 7PM. If you’re hopelessly devoted to Grease, get your leather-clad self over to the Impulse Lounge, Holiday Inn Independence. http://www.johnnycontardo.com.

Money of the World The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland’s Learning Center and Money Museum is the first organization to host Money of the World Today: A Portrait of Global Society, running now through Thu 7/12. The exhibit, containing coins, currency, and artifacts from 192 countries, is on loan from the American Numismatic Association Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Learn fascinating facts and what a country’s cash reveals about its art, geography, history and languages. No-cost, open to the public. Mon-Thu 10AM – 2PM. Call 579-3188 or click here for more details. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, corner of E. 6th St. and Superior Ave.

Summer Safari Movie Series runs beginning Thu 6/12 at Chagrin Cinemas, Hickory Ridge Cinemas, Shaker Square Cinemas, and Solon Cinemas. The exciting, no-cost series offers family-friendly films including Shark Tale (6/12-15), Madagasgar (6/19–22), Barnyard (6/26-29), Over the Hedge (7/3–6), Charlotte’s Web (7/10-13), Flushed Away (7/17-20), Open Season (7/24-27) and Ice Age 2 (7/31-8/3) A door prize of two free tickets to the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo will be given out at each screening. No-cost, open to the public. For more information on the series and updates visit http://www.clevelandcinemas.com.

Manic about those Fender Stratocasters

I stumbled upon the opening ceremony for GuitarMania the Friday before Memorial Day. Most of the 76 guitars were displayed in front of the Rock Hall, some with their artists next to them posing for pictures. At the microphone, the sponsors and organizers spoke about how the money raised by sponsorships and auctioning pays for education and how because rock is a world phenomenon, the Rock Hall Induction Ceremony should move around.

Downtown Chicago was decorated by cows and then by couches. Painted unicorns turned up on the roadways from Corolla to Buxton in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Somewhere in that menagerie, Cleveland very appropriately spiffed up Fender Stratocaster guitars. As the Rock-n-Roll capital of the world, Cleveland should have guitars and the Rock Hall’s induction ceremony…
Read more from Claudia Taller here

You don’t want to miss what 11-year-old Max has for you and your family this week. Listen here: http://www.coolcleveland.net/files/audio/CoolClevelandKids06.08.07.mp3. Click here to subscribe: iTunes or other.


BrewedFreshDaily.com, run by Cool Cleveland’s George Nemeth, scans over hundreds of area feeds everyday and provides links and commentary on a range subjects—from coffee to economic development in Northeast Ohio. Here’s an excerpt:

Team NEO will host Northeast Ohio economic development professionals for a seminar at 4 p.m. on June 7 at the Double Tree? Hotel in Independence. Topics will include how to prepare for site selector location searches, the Ohio Department of Development’s regional and local efforts and how communities can benefit from the Cleveland+ regional marketing campaign…

* Actually, there is some good focus coming out of TeamNEO. They have correctly identified the 3,000 or so professional site selection consultants nationally who make the majority of recommendations to corporations seeking locations for new or relocating facilities. This is a targeted group of powerful people who are relatively easy to reach… comment by Jonathan Murray

* Bleah. It’s an updated version of smokestack chasing. comment by George Nemeth

* What was the headline in the business section yesterday? Cuyahoga County had a net loss of how many companies from 2000 to 2005? I suppose the “success” is that more companies didn’t move out, therefore a victory for the likes of GCP and NEO? comment by Tan

* Regional marketing is the most difficult challenge in regional economic development. The reason: to be successful, the strategy requires a high level of sophistication and trust. The core issue focuses on how prospects are handled… comment by Ed Morrison

* The best marketing we have right now is LeBron. I was watching the game in Vegas, and was surprised to hear a few of the comments form the folks around me. First, a few people mentioned how great the city looks, “wow, Cleveland has a nice skyline,” and “that a lot of people of the streets, Clevelanders have a tone of pride.” I almost dropped my beer… comment by Adam Brandon

Read and add your comment here

Getting to Know Patrick Sweany
Something Old, Something New; Something Borrowed, Something Blues

On many Monday evenings a quick stroll through snow, rain, wind or moonlight ends at Akron’s most-excellent rock club, the Lime Spider, where one of Northeastern Ohio’s best musical talents holds a regular residency. A singer, songwriter, guitarist, traveler, and historian-of-sorts – Patrick Sweany taps into a rich vein of music most-often labeled ‘The Blues,’ although Sweany mines traditions spanning Soul, Country, Folk, Motown, and standards of Americana that might just be forgotten were it not for his archival spirit.

Calling in the help of Blueswax.com music critic Eric Wrisley, a pub peer of noteworthy repute, Cool Cleveland contributor Daiv Whaley talked to Sweany about his soon-to-be-released new recording, the current state of music, and his motivations as a performing musician. In the process, his ideals of rock godhood were shattered. The details follow:

Cool Cleveland: You’re a sexy guy, and you’ve got great hair. Are you a chick magnet? What’s the best pick-up line that’s been presented to you?

Patrick Sweany: Uh… um… uh… almost no one wants to wait around after you load out several thousand pounds of gear, and then wait around to get paid instead of paying attention to them. Sorry to ruin your rock God fantasies. Favorite pick up line (that didn’t work): “You’re in a band? Wanna’ go party? No I didn’t see you play. Can I borrow a coupla’ bucks?”

Seriously, an English degree?

Yep, I have an English degree from Kent State University. Me and most of the wait staff and bartenders of your favorite restaurants…
Read the interview by Daiv Whaley & Eric Wrisley here

Links to interesting NEO blogs

Pittsburgh advertises on WaPo.com Christine wonders why Cleveland isn’t.
“Will LeBron be able to drive a spike for all of us though the heart of the life-sucking vampire of Cleveland losses, disappointments, injuries, betrayals?”
“Connect the dots between land-use, transportation, and economic development” says the VP of the Brookings Institute.
The naming rights for the Euclid Corridor are being sold by RTA, but no minimum price was set.
Cleveland doesn’t crack Dice.com’s list of the top 10 metropolitan areas for tech jobs.
Congressman Tim Ryan pitches in to plant flowers during Youngstown’s StreetScape.

Check Brewed Fresh Daily here, where Peter Chakerian comments on the news of the week in the Cool Cleveland e-blast. When you’re through, add your own comments, questions and attitude. Letters@CoolCleveland.com.

Down Those Tracks
Cletus Black
Night Wax

Fast Rails
Jesse Hernandez
Ocean Media

There are two ways that acoustic guitar-based introspection can go for you in this week’s Cool Cleveland sounds: it can swirl into a gritty, bluesy, Honkytonk vibe with a darker, Nick Cave/ Leonard Cohen bent and expectedly minor falls; or it can be a more hopeful, East-Coast-Slow style filled with major lifts and a taste of 70s AM-radio magic. Either way, it’s definitely good stuff and perfect for your summer listening.

Cleveland scene luminary Cletus Black has long been known for the former style, having released a steady stream of records over the last 10 years, including last year’s In the Shadow. Jesse Hernandez has rooted his sound in that classic rock style, but decorates it with shades of walking/ 12-bar blues and pure organic energy that’s as warm as the sound of a vinyl album…

Read the review by Peter Chakerian here

Wanna get reviewed? Send your band’s CD (less than 1 year old) to: Cool Cleveland, 14837 Detroit Avenue, #105, Lakewood, OH 44107

CYO Rocks the Orchestra in Kashmir
A Night Inspired by Page, Plant, Jones and Bonham

Every year for the past seven, Cleveland’s Contemporary Youth Orchestra has rocked. CYO’s Rock the Orchestra series goes back to 2001, when it filled up the Rock Hall lobby with Riders on the Storm: The Doors Concerto, a suite of Doors songs that were arranged and orchestrated by British musician Jaz Coleman of the post-punk band Killing Joke. The orchestra was joined for that concert by the Doors’ keyboard player and composer, Ray Manzerak.

Since then CYO has done the music of Graham Nash, Jon Anderson (vocalist of Yes), and Pat Benatar, with those artists performing with the orchestra. Last year, CYO opened the Blossom season playing with the band Styx, which was recorded for a CD, DVD and an HDTV special, which was also broadcast on PBS stations. This Friday, June 8, CYO (with its youth chorus) goes back to Jaz Coleman, performing his challenging 90-minute suite of Led Zeppelin music, Kashmir: Symphonic Led Zeppelin.

Soloists for this concert are violinist and Cleveland Orchestra associate concertmaster Ellen dePasquale; Irish piper Brian Bigley, a native Clevelander who has performed at Carnegie Hall in New York with the Chieftains and toured with the Southern California Irish rock band the Fenians; and kanoon and oud player John Vartan Valentine, one of the country’s foremost experts on Middle Eastern musical instruments.

The Contemporary Youth Orchestra – a nonprofit youth orchestra in residence at Cleveland State University – is composed of more than 100 of the top high school-age musicians in the region, representing more than 40 schools and communities. Conducted by its founder and director, Liza Grossman, CYO is the first and only youth orchestra in the country dedicated exclusively to the study and performance of contemporary orchestral literature.

The concert takes place at 8PM this Friday, June 8 at Cleveland’s Masonic Auditorium (3615 Euclid Ave.). Tickets for Kashmir: Symphonic Led Zeppelin are available at by email at tickets@cyorchestra.org, or through their website, http://www.cyorchestra.org.

From Cool Cleveland contributor David Budin popcyclesATsbcglobal.net

Be a Red Artistic Supporter

Do you enjoy, appreciate or participate in the Arts? Do you think the arts should be supported by those who really dig them? Whichever, here’s a chance to put your money where your mouth is, and show a local politician how much you appreciate him in the process! Now that’s a deal you can’t refuse. Red {an orchestra} has received a pledge from Joe Cimperman, Councilman for Ward 13, for $1,500.00, but the kicker is that Red must match that amount in contributions in order to collect the $$$. Click here for more info.

Nose around their site while you’re there and see the many and varied contributions Red has made to Cleveland in their fifth season which just ended. You’ll find info about The Importance of Being Zappa featuring music that inspired the young Frank Zappa plus some of his own in a collaboration with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame & Museum; the world premiere of Music Director Jonathan Sheffer’s love song to Cleveland: Red Couch Floating on Lake Erie, plus the Virtual World Concert, in which Red was the first American orchestra to broadcast live into Second Life.

For more information or to be placed on the mailing list for next season’s schedule, call 361-1733.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Kelly Ferjutz artswriterATadelphia.net

Now, It’s time for some real solutions
… and also a few words about a troubling indictment

Thankfully a few mainstream journalists have demonstrated they have attention spans longer than that of the average gerbil by staying with the important issue of violence in inner-city communities, its causations, and the search for some answers. As I’ve stated before they need to be commended for their commitment and, at the same instance forgiven for their sometimes lack of insights, occasional shallowness of thought, and tendency to — in a few instances — give credence to Black voices that spout off like local barroom drunks on a Saturday night rant. Some of these Black people are using the opportunity to simply vent — probably because they are embarrassed by the circumstances of the poorer and untutored members of our race. They are trying to come up with humane, workable solutions to the problems and are frustrated because they often don’t know of any. But they, nonetheless, usually mean well.

However, one idea, put forth by Powell Caesar last week in Regina Brett’s column that the problem can, to some degree, be impacted on by placing billboards in Black communities admonishing young residents not to engage in negative behaviors is beyond ridiculous…

Read more from Mansfield Frazier here

Cleveland Press: Death By Greed

“We dispose of history the way we dispose of everyday household garbage.” – John MacArthur, publisher of Harper’s

It was more a newspaper of the people. It was more a working class medium. It did not have the pretensions of its competitor. It’s reporters were more of the city. It deserved to continue. It certainly did not deserve to be scuttled in a greed-ridden deal.

That, however, is what happened…
Read more from Roldo Bartimole here

Quick reviews of recent events
Going out this weekend? Take along your PDA and your digital camera. Scratch out a few notes to send us with a picture of it for our Instant Karma real-world reviews of what’s really happening. We’d love to hear from you. Send your stuff to Events@CoolCleveland.com

Lunacy @ Dobama 5/27 I’m fresh off of Dobama Theater’s performance of Lunacy, by NEO writer Sandra Perlman. This was terrific on so many levels and illustrates the power of smaller theaters. When Dobama moved to the Play House complex while working on it’s future Heights home, the potential partnerships in the Play House arts complex was promoted as an important benefits. It’s exciting to see some of those benefits emerge: Lunacy is a smartly written play by one of the members of Play House writers group, which offers support and opportunities for some of the best area writers; the Lunacy production utilizes terrific NE Ohio talent, including Bernadette Clemens and veteran Michael Regnier, and a dynamic lead role played well by Dan Hammond from the Case Theater program, which also benefits from play House synergies; and the Director, Mark Alan Gordon, faculty for the Case Masters of Fine arts program, keeps the “Lunacy” energy up and focused. The play is a dynamic blending, resulting from all of those creative resources, coming together. I am looking forward to the next works to come out of the Play House Playwrights Unit and the smaller, but dynamic professional theater groups here in Northeast Ohio.

From Cool Cleveland reader Kevin Cronin

Cleveland Orchestra @ Severance Hall 5/31 It’s such fun to have a concert as a tribute to a given composer that features works by other composers who were an influence or inspiration in some way to the younger one. And then, at the end you have a piece by the tributee that combines bits of this and bits of that and get a totally new work. Sort of like making muffins from scratch. You start with flour and milk and eggs and after mixing them all together you get something wonderful.

Red {an orchestra} did this earlier in the season with the better-known-as-a-rock-star Frank Zappa, who nonetheless considered himself to be a classical composer. Now as part of the Richard Strauss Spring Festival by the Cleveland Orchestra, we had a Haydn symphony, two Strauss waltzes (Josef, not Johann, Jr.) songs by Brahms, and finally a smallish masterpiece—Till Eulenspiegel—by Strauss himself. Smallish only when compared, size-wise, to others of that ilk – Ein Heldenleben, for instance or an Alpine Symphony. The brilliance of it is every bit the equal of anything he ever wrote.

The Haydn Symphony No. 48 in C major is a slightly tenuous connection, being as the composer named after the great Empress of the time, Maria Theresia of Austria. That is the given name of the Marschallin in Rosenkavalier, and the opera itself is set during the monarch’s reign, from 1740-80. It’s hard to believe that the Cleveland Orchestra had never performed this work prior to these concerts. It’s a charming, innocuous piece, brisk and energetic in places, light and delicate in others, and certainly worth hearing again.

Not all Strauss waltzes are by Johann, Jr., a fact that’s sometimes hard to remember. His brothers, Josef and Eduard were also composers, if not at the same degree of proficiency, and then there was Oscar who is apparently not related at all. Richard S. borrowed themes from two of Josef’s works, the middle Dynamiden Op. 173 and later Delirien Op. 212. Maybe not quite so lilting, with a touch of melancholy here and there, still they make for enjoyable listening. Dynamiden had not been done here previously, either, although Delirien had been. If you’re a devotée of the New Year’s concerts from Vienna, both of them will sound familiar.

The performances were spectacular, full-bodied and muscular—thanks mostly to the full orchestra being used. Mr. Welser-Möst has this music in his genes and gives it that extra oomph and lilt that makes it nearly impossible to sit still while listening to it. While both waltz sets were dramatic, Dynamiden was definitely on the melancholy side, while Delirien was effervescent and exhilarating.

Less impressive, although well-done, was Brahms’ Zigeunerlieder (Gypsy Songs) featuring the Cleveland Orchestra Chamber Chorus (directed by Robert Porco) and accompanied at the piano by Joela Jones. From my seat in the balcony, the acoustics were not helpful to the singers, and words were indecipherable. Ms. Jones, on the other hand, was presented with a nearly concerto-like score, and as usual, she dispatched it with great ease and finesse. The red and blue lights around the top of the stage were an unusual and added attraction.

Saving the best for last – the main Strauss on the program – was Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, about the German folk-hero of the same name. There was romance and comedy and even a bit of mystery throughout, with marvelous depictions of the title character by principal hornist Richard King. Joshua Smith added insouciant little chirps on the flute, and Daniel McKelway contributed purposely vulgar and raucous clarinet solos. Why, it was all so infectious that Mr. Welser-Möst even danced on the podium!

This week Thursday and Saturday are the Big Event. The semi-staged Der Rosenkavalier with internationally-renowned singers, the orchestra and chorus will come to life beginning at 7 pm at Severance Hall. Ticket availability is limited, so don’t wait any longer! For tickets or other information, call the Cleveland Orchestra ticket office at 231-1111, or visit the website: http://www.clevelandorchestra.com.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Kelly Ferjutz artswriterATadelphia.net

Candye Kane @ Wilbert’s 5/31 The guys in Blue Lunch have been a big part of the blues scene, as well as the whole live music thing, in Northern Ohio for a long time. One of the things they have recently started doing is producing their own shows occasionally, bringing in a national act to share the stage with them. They did it last Thursday bringing blues woman Candye Kane and her band to Wilbert’s, and it turned out to be a great night of music.

Candye Kane, for those who are unfamiliar with her, has been singing the blues since the mid-80s. Before that, she was a big part of the alternative country and punk scenes in Southern California, as well as taking a short turn as a plus size model in the adult entertainment industry. She came to town last Thursday backed by her own three piece band, which featured her own son on drums.

She can really sing, and on top of that has developed into a top-notch writer, and her performances now feature almost all original material. Her colorful past still causes her to have to wear her sexuality on her sleeve, but she really doesn’t have to, her music is that good. Her sound is a combination of Ruth Brown, Bob Wills, and Duane Eddy, and her voice can really belt out a tune.

She featured songs off her latest CD titled Guitar’d and Feathered, and the highlights including a series of swinging ballads “Back with My Old Friends Again,” “I’m Not Going to Cry Today,” and “I’m My Own Worst Enemy.” Her 16-song set featured mostly numbers that got people up and dancing, and you got the idea that most in attendance had seen her before. There were more than a few swing dancers in the audience.

Last Thursday was one of those rare nights in the Gateway area that were promised to us back in the 90’s, when we voted for the ball park and the arena. Considering that it was a Thursday night; there was an Indians game with over 30,000 in attendance; plus thousands more at Quicken Arena watching the Cavs playoff game in Detroit on the large screens, Wilbert’s had a good crowd for the show. Candye Kane played from 9PM until almost 11PM, just in time for some Tribe fans to catch the end of the Cavs game on Wilbert’s TV’s. Blue Lunch smartly delayed their post concert set until after the double overtime thriller was finished, and then was joined on stage by Candye as they ripped through a set of blues standards.

When I walked out of Wilbert’s well past midnight Huron Avenue was still packed with sports fans celebrating both the Cavs and the Indians wins over Detroit, and most of the establishments were still jumping.

For more information about Candye Kane and her music visit http://www.candykane.com. Blue Lunch will be playing all around Northeast Ohio this summer, check out their schedule at http://www.bluelunch.com. Upcoming shows at Wilbert’s include their 20th Anniversary Party on June 9 with Michael Bay and the Bad Boys of Blues, and a 6/20 date with Roomful of Blues. Check out Wilbert’s summer music line up at http://www.wilbertsmusic.com.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Greg Cielec cielecAThotmail.com

Two-headed @ CPT 6/1
Smokin’ hot: Holly Holsinger and Chris Siebert burn down the house in Julie Jensen’s feminist character study about two 19th century Mormon women — friends and arch-rivals — who live through pioneer life in the Utah desert, through the ravages of patriarchy and polygamy (“an old man’s noctural emission”). The wild-eyed Holsinger is flint to Siebert’s quiet steel; they set off sparks as the story careens through the decades, from witnessing the Meadow Mountain massacre, to Lavinia’s teenage crush on her best friend Jane, through several dismal marriages.
Check out: Lydia Chanenka’s starkly disturbing set design: a gnarled tree whose imploring arms suggest a crucifixion and a spatter-painted crimson backdrop with surreal bloodshot eye swimming in gore.
Details: Thru 6/17 @ Cleveland Public Theatre, http://www.cptonline.org.
From Cool Cleveland contributor Linda Eisenstein LindaATcoolcleveland.com

Frozen @ Beck Center 6/1 In recent years the Beck Center has become known for its quality productions and thought provoking script selections. Frozen by Bryony Lavery is another one of those stagings.

As with the company’s recent Equus and Passion, Frozen explores a psychological theme. In this case, the play asks, “Is it possible to forgive that which seems unforgivable — the abduction, a presumed unthinkable assault, and murder of one’s child? And if so, what effect could that forgiveness have on the mother as well as the killer?”

Lavery explores the subject through a series of meetings which take place 25 years after the crime between the mother, the pedophilic killer, and a psychiatrist.

Frozen was a hit in London and then New York, though the Big Apple production only played 128 regular productions. And, despite its difficult subject matter, it’s the fourth-most-produced play in the country in the 2005-06 season.

Swoozie Kurtz, who played the role of the mother in the off-Broadway and Broadway productions states of the script, “When I first read this play last summer, it knocked the wind out of me. I can’t imagine what it is to watch it. I’ve never been in a play that people say the kind of things they say about this one. It gets inside people’s hearts and won’t let go. I mean, this woman has survived 20 years of darkness and grief, navigating her way past the land mines.”

The play, besides the subject matter, is not without controversy. Bryony Lavery, the script’s author, has been accused of plagiarism by criminal psychiatrist, Dr. Dorothy Otnow Lewis and writer, Malcolm Gladwell who said that they have found at least “a dozen instances of word-for-word plagiarism in the play, as well as thematic and biographical similarities to a 1997 New Yorker profile of Dr. Lewis and a 1998 book by Dr. Lewis.” To date, there has been no resolution to the case.

Beck’s production, under the wise direction of Sarah May, has an excellent cast. Derdriu Ring as the mother (Nancy) wisely walks a tight rope of despair and depression. She does so with controlled emotions, psychiatric nonverbal reactions and total involvement in the character. This is a tour de force performance.

Jason Markouc is obsessive as Ralph, the pedophile. He is downright scary in his complete emersion into the role. It is impossible to separate Markouc from Ralph.

Liz Conway does not fare as well as Ring and Markouc. Her psychiatrist is often unbelievable. Her opening scene, when she has a panic attack, is overacted and unrealistic (side note: as a crisis counselor, I know about panic attacks). She often shouts or goes into speeches with no transitions. It is hard to accept her as a credible psychiatrist.

Don McBride’s glacier/tundra setting is chilling. It develops the script’s theme of being psychologically frozen, often below our level of awareness, in subtle, yet obvious ways.

Jenniver Sparano’s costume choices are right on. This is especially true of Ring’s frumpy English up-tight early dresses, which morph into brighter colors as the character reaches outside her traditional self.

Audiences should be aware that there is harsh language and the subject matter will upset some.

Capsule judgment: Though a little talky, and sometimes feeling overly long, Frozen is a thought-provoking script which is given an intelligent production at Beck.

Frozen runs through June 24 at The Beck Center for the Arts in Lakewood. For ticket information call 521-2540 or visit http://www.beckcenter.org.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Roy Berko royberkoATyahoo.com

Roy Berko’s blog, which contains theatre and dance reviews from 2002 through 2007, as well as his consulting and publications information, can be found at http://royberko.info.

In Byrony Lavery’s “Frozen”, two women, one the mother of an abducted child, the other a world-famous psychiatric researcher, react to the brutal fact of the mere existence and behavior of Ralph, a pedophile serial killer.

Frozen @ Beck Center 6/1 In Byrony Lavery’s Frozen, two women, one the mother of an abducted child, the other a world-famous psychiatric researcher, react to the brutal fact of the mere existence and behavior of Ralph, a pedophile serial killer.

Jason Markouc, a friendly and pleasant man off-stage, creates a creepy and sick Ralph. In an outstanding performance the energy of his disturbing portrayal is at once focused and relaxed – he makes us believe this monster is real. Playing the bad guy is a temptation to lesser actors to do a lot more acting than is necessary. Markouc, though, doesn’t make that mistake. He frightens with ordinariness that frightens all the more for being so ordinary. But neither does he make the mistake of trying to play a pedophile serial killer for sympathy or thrills. This is no Hannibal Lecter enjoying his evil. Markouc’s Ralph is a human-looking animal with a few human-looking social tricks, but that’s all. Ralph is missing the humanity we in the audience would want to sympathize with, and Markouc shows us, in an excellent and nuanced performance, what’s missing. The play’s not about him; the play’s about Nancy, the mother of one of his victims.

That mother, Nancy, is the central character in this play. It’s she who is frozen by Ralph’s deeds, and she who has to find a way to unfreeze. Nancy’s life, not Ralph’s, constitutes the play. Ralph is the horrible accident that happens to Nancy, and Derdriu Ring, in a brilliant performance, makes us care intensely. Ring’s capacity to capture and embrace the entire emotion of each scene through Nancy’s progress from black devastation through to triumph of a sort is amazing. Ring is the reason to see this production. Her work is insightful and her connection to the audience is gripping. She plays through a range of emotions from busily dowdy through despairing rage to calm triumph and a lot more besides. Pay attention especially to her last scene with Ralph, where Nancy comes in sincerely prepared to forgive, and Ring plays Nancy’s rising realization of the true situation with an amazing restraint. Watch for the small changes in body language, and that even smaller smile of triumph that comes, and goes, almost before you see it. This is Derdriu Ring’s play, and you’ll be missing the outstanding performance by a female actor in Cleveland this season if you miss it.

Liz Conway plays Agnetha, a psychiatrist whose interviews of Ralph support Markouc’s depiction of the killer, and Kevin Coughlin plays the prison guard who is letter-perfect in his lines. Andrew Narten is the voice of the other psychiatrist.

The set by Don McBride is excellent – it invites us to imagine we’re frozen in ice with the characters: jagged lines and muted greys and silvers. The lighting by Jeff Lockshine helps create McBride’s illusion, and the costumes by Jenniver Sparano, especially those for Nancy, are character-illuminatingly excellent. In an 84-seat theater as intimate as the Beck’s Studio Theater, it’s extremely difficult to get the set, lighting, and costumes right, but this team of designers got it done with style.

See Frozen at The Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood. The production runs through June 24. For tickets, call 521-2540 or visit http://www.beckcenter.org.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Marcus Bales marcusATdesignerglass.com

Apollo’s Fire @ Baroque Music Barn 6/1 One of the definitions of hootenanny (from my Webster’s Collegiate Tenth Edition dictionary) is: A gathering at which folksingers entertain often with the audience joining in. To be sure, the Apollo’s Fire audiences are generally too well-mannered to join the Scarborough Fayre players in performing. However, there was a good bit of foot stamping, hand-clapping and general shouts of approval at Saturday evening’s presentation at the Baroque Music Barn in Hunting Valley, so the term hootenanny is maybe not too far-fetched for the occasion.

With a loosely contrived story line – the little troupe of seven players has just been released from debtor’s prison in London – and are trying valiantly not to return there, so they embark on a wee tour to various fayres in the old and new worlds. For the most part, the music is from the early 1600s through the early 1800s, but it does require a bit of imagination on the part of the audience to travel through time with the players…

Beginning with the Scarborough Fayre in England, they then go north to the Perth Fayre in Scotland, and using the intermission for a longer journey, on to Inverness Fayre in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. Finally, they end up at (in?) the Appalachian Fayre in the mid-southern US. It’s a marvelous trip, and one well worth the effort.

The players are all very talented, even if they’re not overly successful in their wanderings. Sandra Simon, the local singing actress; David Greenburg, fiddler extraordinaire (who lives in Nova Scotia, so knows that aspect of the music at first hand); Tina Bergmann, local hammered dulcimer player; Kathie Lynne Stewart – flutes and penny whistle; Reinmar Seidler, cello; Paul Shipper, lute and guitars and Ms. Sorrell at the harpsichord, make up the wandering ones.

Much of the music is traditional and indigenous to the region visited, but Ms. Sorrell did a good bit of arranging, as well. Of course, she also provided the balance for the troupe with her tasteful and enthusiastic accompaniment on the harpsichord. Mr. Greenberg was credited with having provided a fine medley for his own instrument.

Ms. Simon was playful or saucy or sad as required by the various songs in which she was featured, her clear voice soaring to the rafters of the Baroque Music Barn. It was fun to watch Mr. Seidler hold his cello on his lap, strumming it like a slightly overgrown guitar during Jockey Loves his Moggie, while in Perth. Ms. Stewart had already serenaded us with wistful songs of Flowres, and while there, she and Ms. Simon also gave us a plaintive Down in Yon Bank.

Mr. Shipper portrayed the role of the rogue, always on the lookout for an extra pence or two, but also displayed his capability on the various instruments he toted around with him. Tina Bergmann is an absolute wonder on her delicate and whimsical hammered dulcimer. The hammers are hardly that, being not much bigger than chopsticks, but if dulcimer comes from ‘dulce’ or sweet, that’s an entirely accurate choice of word to describe the sounds she produces.

Much of the second half—that of the New World—was given over to the marvelous fiddling of Mr. Greenberg. If you’ve never heard this kind of music-making, you’re missing an extraordinary treat. He makes it look so easy, as though just anyone could do it. That is far from the truth. He played jigs and laments and strathspeys and reels with such emotion and musicality the audience could hardly wait to jump to its feet, cheering and clapping. The response was entirely appropriate, and the entire troupe basked in our approval.

A good bit of this music is available on the CD titled Scarborough Fayre (Koch 3-7577-2HI). We can but hope they’ll do another live version next summer. In the meantime, the 16th season for Apollo’s Fire (2007-08) will be announced soon, and information will be available at the website http://www.apollosfire.org or by calling 320-0012 or 800-314-2535.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Kelly Ferjutz artswriterATadelphia.net

Guys and Dolls @ Ohio Theatre 6/3
Warms Your Heart: I don’t take in many high school shows, but there’s one I try never to miss: the annual All-City Musical, put on by the Cleveland Municipal School District in partnership with an armful of area professionals and supported by the generous folks from the Human Fund. Cleveland may be the nation’s poorest city, but from the sharp look of this weekend’s Guys and Dolls, the young talent is thick on the ground. Director Tony Sias and Music Director William Woods took kids from 19 city schools – 40 of whom had never been in a show before – and made them look like they belonged up there on a Playhouse Square stage.

Rising Stars: With her impeccably Brooklynese diction and Betty Boop squeak, comic diva Imani D. Thomas walked off with the show under her able arm as the eternally-engaged Miss Adelaide. She was well-matched by the dapper Joseph Figueroa, whose Nathan Detroit looked like he’d just strolled out of the Rat Pack. And high-stepping Lavell Sean Demonbreun, Jr. brought down the house with Sit Down, You’re Rocking the Boat‘.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Linda Eisenstein LindaATcoolcleveland.com

The Musical of Musicals (The Musical) @ Actors’ Summit 6/3
A Stitch: The more you know musicals, the funnier you’ll find this punny send-up of 5 musical theater artists & styles. The goofiest: the Rodgers & Hammerstein parody Corn (“What’s stuck in my tooth?/It’s a kernel of truth”), with its dopey dream ballet. Cleverest: the Kander & Ebb knockoff Speakeasy and faux-Fosse dancing.
Watch for: MaryJo Alexander’s 5 distinct “old broad” characters, from Jerry Herman diva to dissonant Sondheim lush in “We’re All Gonna Die”.
Details: Thru 6/10 @ Actors Summit, Hudson. http://www.actorssummit.org
From Cool Cleveland contributor Linda Eisenstein LindaATcoolcleveland.com

Most clicked
Here are the Top 5 from last week’s issue, with one more chance for you to click.

1) Tough Times at Trinity Commons Tensions running high with Euclid Corridor project, Cafe Ah Roma? owner arrested for protesting.
www.BrewedFreshDaily.com

2) Previews Kamm’s Corners Farmers Market.
http://kammscorners.com/farmersmarket.htm

3) Previews Resonance – A World Music Festival.
www.ParishHallCleveland.com

4) Interview Cuy Co Commish Peter Lawson Jones.

www.CoolCleveland.com

5) Open-Source Fitness in Cle no-cost outdoor workouts with the goal of educating the public about fitness and how it can be achieved by everyday people.
http://clevelandcrossfit.com

Nothing But Net Do you hear that? It’s the sound of a 30-foot Hard Corps shot from downtown. Thanks to Peter Chakerian, T.L. Champion, George Nemeth, Kelly Ferjutz, Roy Berko, Claudia J. Taller, Jennifer Keirn, Daiv Whaley, Marcus Bales, David Budin, Roldo Bartimole and Linda Eisenstein. And lastly, though certainly not least, thanks to our readers and everyone who partners with us. Go Cavs!!! Want to volunteer and contribute your writing to Cool Cleveland? Send your reviews, articles, or story ideas to: Events@CoolCleveland.com.

Download the Cool Cleveland podcast each week at http://www.CoolCleveland.com. Join the conversation at Brewed Fresh Daily here. Listen to Cool Cleveland on WCLV-FM 104.9 twice each Friday during drive time. Send your cool events to: Events@CoolCleveland.com, and your letters to: Letters@CoolCleveland.com. For your copy of the free weekly Cool Cleveland e-zine, go to http://www.CoolCleveland.com.

Make Your Three-Point Play, Cleveland,
–Thomas Mulready
Letters@CoolCleveland.com

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