06.03-06.10.2026 Pop

 

 

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POP

06.03-06.10.26

Doesn’t it seem things are really popping everywhere? Pop around to catch Pride in the CLE celebrating tolerance and pride, the maestro Carl Baldassarre conducting his classic rock orchestra to help feed our neighbors, a walk on the sunny side at Little Italy’s Art Walk and Walk All Over Waterloo and Art By The Falls in Chagrin. Pop into an early Juneteenth in Akron, Uncommon Sounds at the old Convivium 33, native plants at the Nature Center at Shaker Lakes & Mulberry Creek Herb Farm, Cleveland Ballet’s ChoreoLab at Near West Theatre, Bob Frank and friends at the Bainbridge Swing Dance, a play in Chagrin about the lingering effects of the Holocaust, a trash pickup at Big Creek & Rocky River watersheds, and Family Fishing Day at Rockefeller Park Lagoon. Everyone seems to be popping off.

Pop music is as popular as ever. And it’s free at Wade Oval Wednesdays, of course, but now also Music at Market Square on the first Thursdays of the month, the East Shore Park Club concert series every other Thursday thru 9/10, the Lakewood Front Porch Concerts on Fridays thru 7/17, and the Ben Franklin Community Garden series on the 1st & 3rd Saturdays each month, and Larchmere rocks the blocks. Pop out and find out.

We can’t define the Numbers Band as pop, rock, jazz or blues, but Jason Pruffer’s documentary film, 15 years in the making, may get close. We spoke with Pruffer and band leader Robert Kidney in our latest CoolCleveland VIDEO. Artist Liz Maugans pens a CoolCleveland CULTURATI column on how artists create habit trails or desire paths that cut across our built terrain as “new navigators” envisioning where our city really wants to go. Cut your own path and blow this pop stand.

-Thomas Mulready

CoolCleveland.com 

Photo by Thomas Mulready

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 VIDEO: ROBERT KIDNEY
AND FILMMAKER JASON PRUFFER 

Robert Kidney, the leader of 15-60-75 the Numbers Band is joined by Jason Pruffer, author and filmmaker of the new documentary, Out of Obscurity Into Oblivion: A Film About The Numbers Band, which premieres at the Cedar Lee Theatre on Sat 6/6.

In this unedited, unexpurgated interview, Thomas Mulready of CoolCleveland talks with Kidney & Pruffer about the 15-year journey of the documentary film, attempting to stay true to the 76-year legacy of the Numbers Band, its music and its followers.

 

FEATURE

 

 DESIRE PATHS 

We see a lot of experts, politicians and civic leaders hosting planning sessions and meetings to decide the paths that should be created for citizens to follow. But what if there’s a better, more organic way to shape our collective environment, muses artist/educator/arts catalyst Liz Maugans.

On Palm Sunday, my pastor Joanna Agostino offered a concept called desire paths that has lingered far beyond the sermon,” she shares, adding that the term “is commonly used in urban development which is where informal trails are worn into the ground by people choosing their own routes—organic, intuitive, human. They appear where sidewalks fail, where official plans overlook lived experience, where the body knows something the blueprint does not.”

 

NEWS

 

 RETAIL STORE OPENS AT OHIO CITY FARM 

Ohio City Farm opened in 2010, offering refugees an opportunity to translate the farming skills they brought from their old countries to a new climate. A farm stand was set up to sell their produce. Now that’s been transformed into an enclosed retail store that will offer groceries, prepared foods, cooking and gardening tools, and more, as well as veggies grown right on the land behind it.

 OUTDOOR CONCERT SERIES ABOUND

All over town—in some beautiful outdoor settings—free outdoor concert series are revving up this week. From Market Square Park to the Lakewood Public Library, from East Shore Park Club to Ben Franklin Community Gardens, between now and September, you can hear a wide range of musical genres, from classical and jazz, to hip hop and Americana, played by some of the best local bands. And these series have surprisingly few cover and tribute bands, so stop your whining!

WEDNESDAY
6/3

 

Nexus, the special exhibition of work by influential American sculptor Martin Puryear at the Cleveland Museum of Art, is a must-see. Tonight the museum will be screening two films about his outdoor public commissions, and how he’s influenced by nature and African American history. Come early, see the show, stay late and see the films.

 MORE on WEDNESDAY… 

 

THURSDAY
6/4

 

The Cleveland International Classical Guitar Festival, now in its 26th year, includes four days of concerts, talks, workshops, master classes and a competition for youth musicians. It’s a feast of activities for both serious musicians and music lovers.

FRIDAY
6/5

 

Cleveland Institute of Art’s juried alumni and faculty show is moving off campus to take place at the Museum of American Porcelain in South Euclid. It’s a chance to see some great art and explore a little-known NEO museum at tonight’s reception.

 MORE on FRIDAY… 

 

SATURDAY
6/6

 

Pride in the CLE keeps growing to epic proportions. The parade, which steps off at 11, is expected to take more than an hour to reach the festival grounds, now sprawling over Malls B and C. They’ll be filled until 6pm with entertainment, food, vendors, info booths and joy in this sea of diversity.

 MORE on SATURDAY… 

SUNDAY
6/7

 

Berea Animal Rescue Friends is a no-time-limit shelter that recently built a new facility to help even more homeless animals. One of its biggest fundraisers is its annual rummage sale, taking place at the Berea Fairgrounds.

 MORE on SUNDAY… 

 

MONDAY
6/8

 

The Cleveland Blues Society Blues hosts a monthly jam session at various venues for both musicians and blues fans to come together to enjoy music and each other’s company. Tonight at the Music Box, bassist Gene Schwartz and his G-Force Band will be hosting. 

 

TUESDAY
6/9

 

The Cuyahoga River has a long and dirty history since the white man arrived in Northeast Ohio. We all know about the famous 1969 fire which helped spur the Clean Water Act. But if you’d like to know more about its checkered past, take a two-hour boat tour with historical interpreter Doug Kusak.

 

WEDNESDAY
6/10

 

Now that Visible Voice Books has a real theater space in its new, expanded Ohio City Store, it’s hosting an array of concerts. Tonight’s Kitchen Table Songs will feature singer/songwiriter Brent Kirby with Mourning [A] BLKStar co-founder, musician and writer RA Washington.

 MORE on WEDNESDAY… 

BACKTALK

 

Pop your own cherry.-Thomas Mulready
CoolCleveland.com
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