Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Neal Coomer and Jay DeMarcus met in Cleveland, Tennessee, at Lee College (now Lee University) and decided to form a Christian pop group along the lines of Level 42 or Go West. They released two albums, East to West in 1993 and North of the Sky, in 1995, which hit No. 16 on Billboard's Top Christian Albums chart that same year. [1]
The band have opened for blues performers and rock groups including Johnny Winter, [4] Glen Schwartz, [5] Valerie Wellington, [6] Big Jack Johnson and the Oilers, Joe Bonamassa, and Duke Robillard; [7] Billy Branch, James Cotton, and Carey Bell; [8] John Mayall and Chris Duarte, [9] Jonny Lang, [10] Buckwheat Zydeco, [11] Robert Lockwood, Jr ...
[20] [21] [22] The Michael Stanley Band, intensely popular in Northeast Ohio, but virtually unknown elsewhere, set an attendance record, of 74,404, with four sold-out shows, on August 25–26 and 30–31, 1982. [23] Rock artist James Taylor was the first artist to play double nights at the amphitheater in 1979, with a combined attendance of ...
The Choir (Cleveland band) CityMusic Cleveland; Cleveland Chamber Symphony; Cleveland Orchestra; Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra; Cleveland Philharmonic Orchestra; Cleveland Pops Orchestra; Cleveland Quartet; Cleveland Women's Orchestra; Cleveland Youth Wind Symphony; Cloud Nothings; Cobra Verde (band) Colin Dussault's Blues Project ...
Radio Daze: Stories from the Front in Cleveland's FM Air Wars. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-773-6. Wolff, Carlo (2006). Cleveland Rock and Roll Memories: True and Tall Tales of the Glory Days, Told by Musicians, DJs, Promoters, and Fans Who Made the Scene in the '60s, '70s, and '80s.
From left are the members of the pop rock band COMPASS, Harrison, Johnny and Arianna Kefalas. The siblings are students in Jackson Local Schools and will compete on Feb. 3 in the Tri-C High School ...
The heavily Irish immigrant workforce that built the canal took residence on the West Bank of the Flats and neighboring Ohio City. [1] Ohio City's rise, fueled by the produce that flowed from Medina County farms along U.S. 42 to the West Side Market, was soon viewed as a threat to Cleveland's development.
The Chardon Polka Band is an American, Ohio-based, Cleveland-Style polka band.It was started by Jake Kouwe in 2003 when he recruited four other teenagers to form a polka band at Chardon High School, and the group was originally called "The Chardon High School Polka Band" and included an accordion, trumpet, saxophone, clarinet, electric guitar, and tuba.